Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Opened: 
January 7, 2020
Ended: 
January 19, 2020
Country: 
USA
State: 
Pennsylvania
City: 
Philadelphia
Company/Producers: 
The Shubert Organization & Broadway Philadelphia
Theater Type: 
Regional, Touring
Theater: 
Academy of Music
Theater Address: 
240 South Broad Street
Website: 
kimmelcenter.org
Running Time: 
90 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book: Itamar Moses adapting Eran Kolirin screenplay. Score: David Yazbek.
Director: 
David Cromer
Review: 

The Band’s Visit is a delicate, intimate show about the power of music, told with an exceptional musical score. The story about an Egyptian band has mostly-Arabic music composed by the half-Lebanese David Yazbek.

It’s the first time this ethnic genre has been heard on Broadway, and I’m happy to see the show on its national tour. The catchy songs are played by the on-stage band which adds an energetic instrumental encore. These melodies make this a must-see event.

A police band from Alexandria Egypt is engaged to perform at an Arab Cultural Center in the Israeli city of Petah Tikvah. Instead, a member of the orchestra buys bus tickets to the tiny isolated town of Bet Hatikvah. They’re stranded in the desert village and are dependent on the hospitality of its residents. The local café owner named Dina tells the men, "There is not Arab Center here. Not culture, not Israeli Culture, not Arab, not culture at all.”

The Band’s Visit is based on a small-budget 2007 Israeli movie by the same name. This musical version was mesmerizing off-Broadway and in the 1058-seat Ethel Barrymore Theater on Broadway. The national tour in the 2500-seat Academy of Music still delivers a musical wallop, but the story has lost some of its appeal.

Many attendees will still be swept away while critics, like my colleague Anne Siegel, feel that the small-scale musical gets lost in a cavernous theater and the plot seems “ploddingly slow.” The problem is partly that all the characters speak broken English with foreign accents, and the amplification has reverberation that obscures many words.

No fault lies with the excellent company. The café owner is attractively played by Janet Dacal (known for In The Heights) who has just joined the production. The leader of the band is the courtly Sasson Gabay, who was the star of the original movie.

The hilarious supporting role of a shy Israeli is played by Adam Gabay, who is the real-life son of Sasson Gabay and who was a troubled adolescent in the HBO drama “Our Boys.”

The script by Itamar Moses emphasizes the importance of music as Dina reveals that as a child she would listen to music on Egyptian radio stations, and a widower recalls the favorite music of his late wife (“Love starts on a downbeat”), and the band’s clarinetist keeps trying to compose a concerto.

Another theme is the human connections made by dissimilar people from alien cultures. But the story is basically a fairy tale, with no hint of the tensions that exist between Arabs and Israelis. Some attendees will be moved by the connections, and by a hint of incipient romance. Others will agree more with the description at the show’s opening and closing, “It wasn’t very important.” That was an intentional aim.

It’s 90 minutes are filled with infectious music. I just wish that the songs were longer (most of them are three minutes or less.) And the closing jam could have been twice as long. It’s that affecting!

Cast: 
Janet Dacal (Dina), Sasson Gabay (Tewfig), Pomme Koch, Joe Joseph, Mike Cefalo, Ronnie Malley, David Studwell, Jennifer Apple, Marcc Ginsburg, Kendal Hartse, Sara Kapner, Loren Lester, Ahmad Maksoud, James Rana, Nick Sacks, Or Schraiber, Hannah Shankman, Bligh Voth
Technical: 
Set: Scott Pask; Costumes: Sarah Laux; Lighting: Tyler Micoleau; Sound: Kai Harada.
Critic: 
Steve Cohen
Date Reviewed: 
January 2020