Total Rating: 
***1/2
Opened: 
October 5, 2001
Ended: 
January 6, 2002
Country: 
France
City: 
Paris
Company/Producers: 
Opera Comique; Jerome Savary
Theater Type: 
International
Theater: 
Opera Comique
Theater Address: 
5 rue Favart (Place Boieldieu)
Phone: 
08-25-00-00-58
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 30 min
Genre: 
Musical Comedy
Author: 
Music: Marguerie Monnot & Raymond Legrand; Book: Alexandre Breffort; Epilogue: Jerome Savary
Director: 
Jerome Savary; Music Dir. & Orchestrator: Gerard Daguerre
Review: 

 If ever a musical froze a time and place, it's the one about the prostitute idealizing love in an era when women were either supposed to be mamas knowing best or stirring with thoughts of becoming independent. In `50s Paris, Irma the fille de joie of Montmartre, used what society deemed immoral means to become one of its moral members. She gave France its first international musical hit, though naughtier in Paris than later on Broadway or in Hollywood. The show remains -- like Irma -- funny and sexy.

Surprisingly, the production stresses the men who surround and get her "involved," as only two supporting women play everything from scantily- dressed tarts to cherubic nurses. Just as director Savary has been economizing with the number of musicians, here he uses scenery and effects to rival the multi-level interiors/exteriors of "Sunset Boulevard" while having actors play multiple roles. When Irma sings "Je cherche" on a bridge, isn't the whole Seine below? In a way, doubling deepens the irony of the plot, where Irma's lover goes on trial for killing her rich client who disappeared. (It was really himself in disguise, since he gave her money at each rendezvous which he was bound to get back from her "after work.")

The raunchiest scene is the comic "dance of death" in the tropical prison, with decidedly up-to-date sexual mimicry. A special treat for Anglophones involves a British (great white?) headhunter and natives speaking pidgin English who make possible The Great Escape. "Irma's Song" by a very pregnant heroine is overheard when lover Nestor returns, plays for the police the lover who disappeared, and bribes his own way to freedom. Irma delivers on Christmas Eve, brought in like a Bouffe de Noel.

The holiday ending is Savary's icing on this musical fruitcake. It's full of good cheer and winning good cheers.

Parental: 
smoking, adult situations
Cast: 
Clotilde Courau (Irma), Arnaud Giovaninetti (Nestor, Oscar), Patrice Bornand, Denis Brandon, L. Delvert, P. Jacquemont, G. Janeyrand, P. Leroy, Frederic Longbois, J. Maurel, M. Mirtchev, Parick Rocca, V. Schmitt, F. Steenbrink, Corinne Grandjean, Alma de Villalobos; Musicians: G. Daguerre, Antoine Millet, Christian Orane, Jean-Luc Pagni, R. Romanelli, Didier Sutton, Bernard Tessier
Technical: 
Choreography: Friederike Betz; Scenery: Jean-Marc Stehle; Costumes: Michel Dussant; Lights: Alain Poisson; Sound: Jean-Marie Glaudeix; Collab. Art.: Leonidas Strapatsakis
Miscellaneous: 
The current production was created April 200 at the Theatre National de Chaillot, then under Savary's artistic direction.
Critic: 
Marie J. Kilker
Date Reviewed: 
November 2001