Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Previews: 
May 21, 2013
Opened: 
May 29, 2013
Ended: 
June 30, 2013
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Center Theater Group
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Ahmanson Theater
Theater Address: 
135 North Grand Avenue
Phone: 
213-972-4400
Website: 
centertheatregroup.org
Running Time: 
1 hr, 45 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Score: John Kander & Fred Ebb; Book: David Thompson
Director: 
Susan Stroman
Choreographer: 
Susan Stroman
Review: 

”History begins in tragedy and ends in farce.” The saying pretty much sums up the essence of The Scottsboro Boys,the slick new musical by Kander & Ebb which just opened at the Ahmanson after productions in New York, San Francisco and San Diego. Based on the 1931 true story of nine young Black men wrongly accused and convicted of raping two white girls in Scottsboro, Alabama, the musical dramatizes the event by poking fun at it, in a savagely satirical way.

Kander & Ebb, with the help of director/choreographer Stroman, have taken the show trial of the framed Scottsboro boys, who were quickly sentenced to death by an openly racist judge and jury, and turned it into a minstrel show replete with a white Interlocutor (Hal Linden) and his tambourine-shaking sidekicks, Mr. Bones (Trent Armand Kendall) and Mr. Tambo (J. Montgomery). The defendants become part of the show themselves, singing and dancing to such songs as “Southern Days” and “Chain Gang.” They additionally impersonate a rogue’s gallery of other characters: sheriffs, attorneys, women, preachers and politicians.

Mr. Tambo also takes on the role of the white lawyer (Samuel Leibowitz, hired by the Communist Party) who helped save four of the Scottsboro boys by appealing their convictions. Denied pardons or even parole, most of the boys spent nearly two decades in prison. Some died there, others finally walked free and, in the case of Haywood Patterson (Joshua Henry), wrote an autobiographical book (in 1950). It wasn’t until April of this year that the state of Alabama officially pardoned the Scottsboro Boys.

Using the stereotypical conventions of a coon show to attack an inglorious travesty of justice might have backfired in lesser creative hands. But Kander & Ebb’s score is so sharp and telling, so clever and tuneful, that it’s hard to be churlish about The Scottsboro Boys. Stroman must be credited, as well, for her crisp, expert direction and choreography; she really makes the story fly.

As for the sixteen-person cast, it performs in dynamic, flawless fashion – led by Henry as the deeply suffering, always-yearning Haywood Patterson.

Cast: 
Gilbert L. Bailey II, David Bazemore, Ayanna Berkshire, Shavey Brown, Christopher James Culberson, Joshua Henry, Trent Armand Kendall, Max Kumangai, Hal Linden, JC Montgomery, Justin Prescott, Clinton Roane, Cedric Sanders, Deandre Sevon, Christian Dante White, C.Kelly Wright.
Technical: 
Set: Beowulf Boritt; Costumes: Toni-Leslie James; Lighting: Ken Billington; Sound: Jon Weston; Orchestrations: Larry Hochman; Musical Arrangements: Glen Kelly; Vocal Arrangements: David Loud; Fight Director: Rick Sordelet; Production Stage Manager: Evangeline Rose Whitlock; Casting: Mark B. Simon
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
June 2013