Total Rating: 
*3/4
Opened: 
July 31, 1999
Ended: 
July 25, 1999
Country: 
USA
State: 
Minnesota
City: 
Minneapolis
Company/Producers: 
Producers: Nicholas Howey, Dallett Norris, Thomas J. Lydon, and The Rockabye Company, in association with Columbia Artists Theatricals, Inc.
Theater Type: 
Regional Touring
Theater: 
Ordway Music Theater
Theater Address: 
345 Washington Street
Phone: 
(651) 282-3000
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 45 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book: Francis Essex & Rob Bettinson
Director: 
Bill Castellino
Review: 

 This biography of a performer still beloved by those of a certain age was, inexplicably, a winner of London's Olivier Award as best musical. It must have been a really poor season for musicals, because Jolson is a shallow, grating formula show. It asks audiences to believe in a performer's greatness without providing evidence to back up its claims, and then tries to convince us that a character who has demonstrated nothing but bullying and manipulation all evening long is actually a benevolent softy underneath the tough exterior. Al Jolson was a mighty star in the 1920s and 1930s, and according to all reports, his onstage charm was more than balanced by his offstage ego.

If the authors of Jolson wanted their central figure to be sympathetic, it was perhaps not the wisest decision to open with a scene in which he barges late into a rehearsal and then appropriates for himself a song that a struggling sister act has commissioned for their own use. (Of course, these fictional Rooney Sisters remain devoted to him for the rest of their lives.)

And the authors are more than willing to distort history. Jolson's divorce from Ruby Keeler was legendary in its bitterness, but the show has her remaining a supportive friend even after Jolson's embarrassment at merely dubbing his own voice to Larry Parks' performance in "The Jolson Story" (which, of course, offered its own distorted version of history). It might have helped if Mike Burstyn's performance in the title role helped us understand Jolson's enormous appeal.

But Burstyn is tough, slick, and charmless, and doesn't even sound very much like his model. Under Bill Castellino's direction, the whole performance is very broad and generic; an exception is Harry A. Winter, who has some touching moments as Jolson's longtime agent. Heather Mazur sings and dances (Busby Berkeley forgive me!) better than the real Ruby Keeler ever managed, but her acting choices become increasingly affected until you wish she would just get the line out without all the pauses and sighs and extraneous gestures.

The sets and costumes are okay, but hardly live up to the show's presumptuous subtitle. The familiar songs (the score consists basically of Jolson favorites; there are no original musical numbers) are performed competently, aided by some inventive staging by Joey McKneely. The most effective scene in the show is the final concert sequence, which at least offers a succession of bright musical numbers, uninterrupted by the book, that rouse the audience. But it is too late to save a floundering show that fails to bring its leading character, not to mention the era he illuminated, to convincing life.

Cast: 
Kenny Morris (Harry Akst), Brian W. West (Pat Levin), Tina Stafford (Julia Rooney), Helen A. Holliday (Mattie Rooney), Caroline P. Stewart (Josie Rooney), Mike Burstyn (Al Jolson), Harry A. Winter (Louis Epstein), Jeff Richards (Frankie Holmes), Heather Majzur (Ruby Keeler), etc.
Technical: 
Sets: James Fouchard; Costumes: Bruce Harrow; Lighting: John McLain; Orchestrations: David Siegel; Musical Supervision, Dance & Vocal Arrangements: Steven M. Bishop; Musical Director: Art Yelton; Choreography: Joey McKneely. Producers: Nicholas Howey, Dallett Norris, Thomas J. Lydon, and The Rockabye Company, in association with Columbia Artists Theatricals, Inc.
Critic: 
Michael Sander
Date Reviewed: 
July 1999