There is no Intermission
This musical does deal with adult issues and language.
A CHORUS LINE is a celebration of those unsung
heroes of the American Musical Theatre - the chorus dancers, those valiant,
overdedicated, underpaid, highly trained performers who back up the star
or stars and often make them look even more talented than they are. It
is also a celebration of the American Musical itself.
A CHORUS LINE is also
about competition, and competition might easily be the common denominator
that grabs the audience and holds it by the collective heartstring until
the final, ultimate choices are made. For everyone, at one time or another,
puts his life on the line. We all compete, no matter what business we're
in, for promotion, for attention, for approval and for love.
Specifically,
A CHORUS LINE takes the audience through the final grueling audition run
by the director, Zach, for a new Broadway musical. At the beginning of
the show, Zach, a driven, compulsive worker, has assembled thirty semi-finalists
and is putting them through a vigorous series of dance combinations, including
ballet and jazz. Soon he thins this group down to the final sixteen, eight
boys and eight girls. They and the audience know that eventually this number
will be cut in half and Zach will choose only four boys and four girls
to be in his new musical.
Instead of having them read a short audition
scene, Zach wants to elicit a personal history from each one: how they
got into "show
business," why they became dancers, what their hopes, fantasies and aspirations
are. As he calls upon them individually, they react in every possible way, from
bravado to reticence. From childhood on, their memories emerge, blending into
a seamless series of musical numbers and monologues, some humorous - Dance:Ten;
Looks:Three, some poignant - At the Ballet, some group reminiscences
when they all share their adolescent experiences - Hello
Twelve, Hello Thirteen, Hello Love and some intimate when he calls upon
Cassie, his former lover who has returned from California to ask for a chorus
job after having been a featured performer - The Music and
the Mirror.
As their individual stories pour out in song - Nothing and in
spoken words (Paul's monologue), interspersed by learning dance routines
that reveal their ability to perform as a faceless drill team - One,
the audience, as well as Zach, gets to know each one of these ambitious entertainers
individually, so that by the show's end, they can identify and root for their
favorites as well as empathize with all of them because-they all need the job,
they all want to work at their craft.
A CHORUS LINE departs from the usual
glossy backstage musical by presenting a true picture of what it's like to
be in the theatre: glamorous-yes, at times, but also tough, heartbreaking
and sometimes even tragic, in the case of Paul who is knocked out of the
competition by an injury sustained during a dance number - The
Tap Combination.
After these brave dancers explain why they go through
a life filled with rejection and injury - What I Did
for Love, Zach makes
his selection, eliminating the last group who reluctantly leave the stage.
The lights soon fade on the remaining eight ecstatic dancers as they are
told to prepare for rehearsals of their new Broadway show. They fade only
to come up as each performer, now dressed in full, shimmering finale costume,
reappears to receive an individual bow before joining together to perform
the brilliant dance finale and showing exactly the talent it takes to make
it into - a chorus line. |