Total Rating: 
***
Ended: 
February 12, 2000
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Cameron Mackintosh
Theater Type: 
Regional Touring
Theater: 
Ahmanson Theater
Theater Address: 
135 North Grand Avenue
Phone: 
(213) 628-2772
Running Time: 
3 hrs, 30 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book: Alain-Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg, based on French text by Boublil and Jean-Marc Natel, based on novel by Victor Hugo. Music: Claude-Michel Schonberg. Lyrics: Herbert Kretzmer. Additional material: James Fenton. Adapted by Trevor Nunn and John Caird.
Director: 
Trevor Nunn & John Caird
Review: 

 The 1985 musical, back in L.A. for the third time, holds up more than well. Combining spectacle with social consciousness and historical relevance, the show manages to remain a crowd-pleaser by dint of its powerful performances, stirring music and savvy staging (annoying turntable and all). Ivan Rutherford as Valjean and Stephen Bishop as Javert make formidable enemies and handle their respective arias with impressive chops. Joan Almedilla (Fantine) and Aymee Garcia & J. P. Dougherty (as the Thenardiers) also provide vocal fireworks over the course of the 3 1/2 hour-long dramatization of the French Revolution (it always tickles me when a bourgeois-to-the-core American audience cheers the waving of the red flag on the Parisian barricades).

The poster boy urchin Eponine (Sutton Foster) and Marius (Tim Howar) are equally effective delivering the sentimental, heart-tugging songs that come as a welcome change of pace from all the marching, fighting and drinking ballads that fill the evening so noisily and rousingly. Kitschy and over-simplified as it is, Les Miserables still has a humanity and heart that time has not withered.

Cast: 
Sutton Foster (Eponine), Tim Howar (Marius), Joan Almedilla (Fantine), Aymee Garcia, J.P. Dougherty (Thenardier), Ivan Rutherford (Valjean), Stephen Bishop (Javert).
Technical: 
Musical Director: David Andrews Rogers; Sound: Andrew Bruce/Autograph; Design: John Napier; Lighting: David Hersey; Costumes: Andreane Neofitou.
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
December 1999