Archive for April 11, 2008

Don’t Take My Heart!

What if someone took away your heart? You would stop breathing and die. Think about what makes you happy, what wakes you up in the morning, what brings purpose to your life? Think about who/what motivates you to be more than you are. That’s your heart. If someone takes away your heart then you might as well die, because without your heart, you can never truly live.

In Return Of The Wiz, Dorothy is a bratty materialistic 22-year old. She expects to be pampered with the finest clothes, jewelery, and shoes. Although her parents came from humble beginnings, Dorothy Marlene grew up in wealth and prosperity. Dorothy has no true reality of who she is, all she can identify with is her material possessions.

We see it everyday in Hollywood, in film, entertainment, sports and the lifestyles of the rich and famous. They live a lavish life, but have you ever wondered what would happen if they lost it all? What would become of them? How would they react to loosing the very thing that makes them popular culture icons?

They would realize a very harsh reality; all I have left is me. They had everything they ever wanted, the materialistic possession defined who they were. Apart from their materialistic possessions they are mere shallow shells of the person who they are really meant to be. Until they come to the end of themselves, material possessions, will forever take the place of their heart.

The Wiz Reviews

Hi Wiz Fans We will list the Reviews for, “The Wiz,” productions from the stage play (s) to the actual movie (s). Since 1975 The Wiz has graced the presence of many viewers, and their have been reviews from movie critics to everyday people enjoying the production. We would like to see what made this production a cultural favorite or movie disaster.

The Wiz-Stageplay Production-(2006) La Jolla

It’s been over 30 years since a hip Dorothy first landed in an all-black Oz in the musical The Wiz. Now, director Des McAnuff and his team at the La Jolla Playhouse have re-imagined the Tony Award-winning show for the new millennium with a multi-cultural cast and other modern updates. For example, Aunt Em’s farmhouse here comes with a satellite TV dish, the Tinman is comprised mostly of junked computer parts, and the Lion is a bag person. But amidst all these new trappings, The Wiz has lost its heart, soul, and magic.

Willliam F. Brown has updated his book for the musical with lots of current street lingo and jokes about emergency rooms and ADD. The production is as high-tech and dazzling as can be, thanks to Robert Brill’s scenic and environmental design, Paul Tazewell’s colorful but often odd costumes, Howell Binkley’s blinding lighting, and Peter Fitzgerald’s souped-up sound. But less would have been much more; the show is so over-produced that the human element gets lost in the razzle-dazzle. (On Wednesday night, the cast had to begin the performance again after the tech crew solved the annoying problem of “white noise” at the top of the show. Later, the need for a computer reboot of a keyboard before the start of the second act contributed to a 35-minute intermission.)

Charlie Smalls’ award-winning score — even with new musical direction, vocal arrangements, and incidental music by Ron Melrose — is the show’s saving grace. Here, the soft-rock melodies sometimes roll over into hip-hop, but the score still snaps, crackles and pops. The cast is in great voice, from the charming Nikki M. James as Dorothy right on down to the lowliest Winkie. James really delivers throughout the show, and her singing of the finale, “Home,” deservedly brings down the house. Valarie Pettiford’s Glinda is a vision of a Follies Bergere showgirl, and she makes “If You Believe” into a true power ballad. Heather Lee milks all the comedy from her brief role of Addaperle, the inept witch with ADD. On the male side of the equation, Tituss Burgess is a crowd pleaser as the cowardly, sissified Lion, and he and James have the right chemistry to sell “Be a Lion.” David Alan Grier’s Wiz is better in his quieter moments than his louder ones, while Rashad Naylor’s Scarecrow and Michael Benjamin Washington’s Tinman don’t make much of an impression.

For all its 21st-century innovation, the original production’s swirling black drape of a tornado had more theatricality than anything on display in this new version, which looks like it consists of bits and pieces of other Broadway shows. The swirling cows, pigs, and grass during the tornado recall The Lion King, and the Munchkin trios — each a human with two puppets at his or her side — remind one of the cheerleaders in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. The cast often eases on down the road that extends into the audience on ramps and platforms, as in Harold Prince’s revisionist staging of Candide — although here, at least, the audience can watch the action on big-screen monitors above the playing area when sight lines are an issue.

Add some Cirque du Soleil-like aerialists, a break-dancing, roller-skating Toto (Albert Blaise Cattafi), and an over-amplified Evillene (E. Faye Butler) who wears out her welcome long before her first real scene. What we have here is a mess of a show trying to pass as a hopped-up rock concert. This Dorothy would have been better off getting into that storm cellar with Aunt Em and Uncle Henry rather than venturing into McAnuff’s strange new world.

Finding The Courage

In Return Of The Wiz, Lion is a cowardly character from the Congo. He was born to be strong, courageous and fearless, yet he was afraid of his own shadow. The very strength that he was made to possess is the weakness that held him back from being who he was meant to be the great and mighty Lion of the Congo. Every person deep down inside knows they were made for a specific purpose. But, we find the very strength that we possess can also hinder us from moving forward and keep us trapped in fear so we never move into our purpose.

When we were born into this world we arrived with an invisible backpack that included all the qualities that make-up the inner strengths and qualities that we already possess. We should never fear the qualities that we possess because those are the vary qualities that brings purpose and meaning to our life.

If you ever find yourself fearing a task that’s ahead of you, search within your invisible backpack of personal qualities and pull out your greatest strengths and be A LION!