Total Rating: 
***
Previews: 
June 13, 2013
Ended: 
July 13, 2013
Country: 
USA
State: 
Texas
City: 
Dallas
Company/Producers: 
Theater Three
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Theater Three
Theater Address: 
2800 Routh Street
Phone: 
214-871-3300
Website: 
theatre3dallas.com
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book: Larry Gelbart. Music: Cy Coleman. Lyrics: David Zippel
Director: 
Bruce Richard Coleman
Review: 

Dallas’ Theater Three opened City of Angels at the Norma Young Arena Stage. Set in Los Angeles in the late 1940s, this musical comedy by Cy Coleman (Sweet Charity, The Life), David Zippel (The Goodbye Girl) and Larry Gelbart (A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum),ran on Broadway from December 1989-January 1992 and won Tonys for Gelbart (Best Book of a Musical) and Coleman (Best Original Score).

City of Angels is a play within a play. Stine, a writer (Alexander Ross) is trying to turn his detective novel into a screenplay but has to keep re-writing it to suit the whims of the producer (Jackie L. Kemp) in order to make it politically correct. Since the screenplay is already in rehearsal, this necessitates many comic moments as the cast has to constantly re-learn the lines.

In the screenplay Detective Stone (Gregory Lush) is hired by a glamorous socialite (Whitney Hennen) to find her missing, flighty step-daughter (Nikki McDonald). As in all good detective stories nobody is quite who they seem. The convoluted plot that vacillates between the real play and the screenplay has more twists and turns than a mountain road, but all reach their destination safely and tie everything up in a neat bow.

City of Angels is an ensemble piece with 18 cast members playing almost double the number of characters, and there's not a bad actor or singer in the cast. However, I wonder if Mr. Lush is capable of acting without a cigarette in his hand or mouth. He chain smoked throughout the play, at one point leaning against a railing and puffing smoke mere inches from a number of patrons. Fortunately for both of us I was not one of them or I would have been tempted to reach over and snatch the cigarette out of his mouth.

When we see a play, all we see is its face, i.e. the actors. What is at least as important is what happens behind the scenes that makes all this possible. Bruce Coleman's triple-threat roles as director, set and costume designer are impressive on all three counts. The same is true of T3 veteran musical director, Terry Dobson.

Sound designer, Richard Frolich did not take into account the small space of Theater Three's arena stage, allowing the music to blast at uncomfortable levels. I found myself spending the entire play inserting and extracting my earplugs depending on whether the music was blaring or the appropriately modulated dialogue was being spoken.

Vocal coach Vonda K. Bowling has directed the cast's accents and inflections to perfection. Ashley White and Jeff Colangelo have staged some of the best fight choreography I've seen in many years.

This production is a comic pastiche with universally excellent acting, singing, and staging.

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Cast: 
Christopher J. Deaton, Anthony Fortino, Jonathan Garcia, Sergio Antonio Garcia, Whitney Hennen, Lee Jamison, Jackie L. Kemp, Gregory Lush, Nikki McDonald, Kassiani Menas, Grace Neeley, Scott Nixon, Ken O'Reilly, Darius-Anthony Robinson, Alexander Ross, Dustin Simington, Sarah Elizabeth Smith, and Sam Swanson; Press:Kimberly Richard.
Technical: 
Set/Costumes: Bruce Richard Coleman. Music Dir: Terry Dobson. Lighting: Carl Munoz. Sound: Richard Frolich. Fight Choreog: Ashley White & Jeff Colangelo.
Critic: 
Rita Faye Smith
Date Reviewed: 
June 2013