Images: 
Total Rating: 
***
Opened: 
February 16, 2018
Ended: 
March 15, 2018
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
Frank Marshall, Rich Entertainment Group, Anita Waxman, Grove Entertainment
Theater Type: 
Broadway
Theater: 
Marquis Theater
Theater Address: 
210 West 46 Street
Phone: 
877-250-2929
Website: 
escapetomargaritavillemusical.com
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 15 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Music: Jimmy Buffett; Book: Greg Garcia, Mike O’Malley
Director: 
Christopher Ashley
Choreographer: 
Kelly Devine
Review: 

If “Why Don’t We Get Drunk (and Screw)” is your idea of an idyllic Escape to Margaritaville, this is the show for you. If you’re a Parrothead and can sing along to all the Jimmy Buffett songs offered here (as many in the audience apparently are), you’ll be right at home. Despite a talented cast and the obvious technical expertise it took to put on this production, I found myself yearning for The Band’s Visit and Come from Away, musicals with real heart and better tunes.

What I do like are summer books, mindless fluff to read at the beach or in the serenity of an air-conditioned room on a scorching hot day. The plot is always the same: a successful woman, with something she needs to change about her dreary life, finds herself somewhere more exotic, on the water, and falls for the local bad boy. The attraction is fast and physical, even though he puts her down, and the whole affair is illogical, even to her. But wait…it turns out the poor slob is actually a wealthy and successful author or Duke or owner of a fabulous fleet of yachts, not the hapless loser he first seemed to be. This scenario is about as close as you can get to the plot in this show, but not quite as much mindless fun.

Dedicated environmental scientist Rachel (Alison Luff) wants to save the world, but first, she has to save her best friend, Tammy (Lisa Howard), who is about to marry a shallow jackass. Obviously, they need to get away, so why not a glamorous resort on a Caribbean island (Monserrat?).

Unfortunately, the place turns out to be a total dive, not to mention that the local volcano is about to blow. The scene at Margaritaville is, in the Hawaiian phrase, very “hang loose and suck ‘em up.” Tully Mars (a greased-up Paul Alexander Nolan), is the singer/songwriter with a guitar and no visible means of support, so of course, he’s irresistible to Rachel. Tammy is equally drawn to Brick (Eric Petersen), a bartender whose major job is to shoo away the chicks who foolishly think they’ll be seeing Tully again after their week-long affair is over.

Of course, in typical summer-reading fashion, Tully becomes a wealthy rock star, and Rachel realizes she’s made a terrible mistake in choosing potato technology over the erstwhile beach bum. Will Tully take her back? You bet he will!

Strangely enough, the major problem with MU is that rather than settle for being a goofy, light-hearted fantasy, it takes itself too seriously. There is a grinding, almost used-car salesman desperation in the hard sell of the gyrating dancing, pounding music, and purposely seedy atmosphere.

“Cheeseburger in Paradise”? No thanks, I’d rather have a steak.

Cast: 
Paul Alexander Nolan (Tully), Alison Luff (Rachel), Lisa Howard (Tammy), Eric Petersen (Brick), Rema Webb (Marley), Don Sparks ( J.D.), Andre Ward (Jamal), Matt Allen, Tessa Alves, Sara Andreas, Tiffany Adeline Cole, Marjorie Failoni, Samantha Farrow, Steven Good, Angela Grovey, Albert Guerzon, Keely Hutton, Justin Keats, Mike Millan, Justin Mortelliti, Ryann Redmond, Jennifer Rias, Julius Anthony Rubio, Nick Sanchez, Ian Michael Stuart, Brett Thiele
Technical: 
Sets: Walt Spangler, Costumes: Paul Tazewell, Lighting: Howell Binkley
Critic: 
Michall Jeffers
Date Reviewed: 
March 2018