| Out in the Arts
by D.L. Groover
Takin’ a Bite Outta Love
The off-Broadway cult musical hit Bat Boy joyously
swoops into Stages Repertory Theatre, and there’s
no need to wave your arms over your head for protection.
It burrows right under your skin in the most infectious
way possible. When it’s over, you feel like
flying.
This camp musical romp, written by Keythe Farley
and Brian Flemming, with ingenious music and lyrics
by Laurence O’Keefe, based upon those bogus
“news” articles in the equally camp
supermarket rag Weekly World News, is the spirited
Pygmalion-like story of a half boy/half bat found
in the caves of West Virginia. Brought up by the
sensitive wife of the local veterinarian, little
bat boy soon outclasses the yahoos and falls in
love with the doctor’s daughter. What can’t
be taught out of him, however, is his pedigree.
His taste for blood is cause for alarm, and this
classic outsider is soon blamed for all the town’s
woes, as well as provoking the doctor’s
jealousy over the motherly affections of his alienated
wife.
This trailer-trash My Fair Lady has sniping references
to Jerry Springer and Oprah and even Shane, and
yet there’s room in this goofy spoof for
it to be read as a parable of AIDS. This subtle
undercurrent gives Bat Boy needed heft and much
more heart than simple parody. The musical’s
main message that even freaks need love, or “don’t
deny your beast inside,” is pure Hallmark,
but the telling of it is hip and cool Charles
Addams.
The entire production—sharp as a fang and
slick as a pool of blood—has magnificent
vigor due to the exemplary cast and the prickly
direction of New York theater import, director
Brian Jucha. He gives the show true Broadway moxie.
From the very first image of spelunkers descending
by ropes from the flies, we know we’re in
professional, capable, and loving hands. We’re
in for a ride, and Jucha pulls out all the staging
tricks to keep us tapping our toes and smiling
at all the cleverness.
The ensemble performers are above reproach. As
Bat Boy, Scott Sowinski (pictured)—another
Broadway import—raises the bar. His performance,
assured and polished, gleams. It’s riveting,
full of showbiz know-how and a textbook case in
how to hold an audience. Kara Greenberg, now living
in L.A., returns to Houston for this engagement,
and it’s about time. It’s wonderful
to once more see (and hear) her own professional
magic in the Donna Reed-with-an-edge role of doctor’s
wife. In his Stages debut, Ben Grimes brings a
punk muscular attitude to the daughter’s
low-rent boyfriend, and we hope he stays in town—he’s
a natural, a musical’s best friend. Jonathan
McVay, last seen in Theatre LaB’s hilarious
Top Gun! The Musical, fleshes out his local-yokel
diptych of Bud and Daisy to perfection and then
gets to stop the show as an ithyphallic Pan in
the jubilantly obscene “Children, Children.”
David L.J. George, as both bosomy country mama
and gospel-wailing evangelist, huffs and puffs
with the best of them, while Brandon Peters chills
blood as the demented doctor. Erin Simpson seems
more farmer’s daughter than doctor’s,
and her edgy voice is not helped by the overly
insistent amplification.
Someone please tell me: In Stages’ Yeager
Theater, the size of a Christmas cookie tin, why
amplify? You could easily take away the Madonna
microphones from the exemplary cast, and no one
would notice. They all belt their lungs out anyway,
with voices carrying all the way out to Waugh.
They don’t need electronic help. It adds
an extraneous shrill layer that’s not needed—or
wanted.
Bat Boy (through January 11) is an exemplar of
contemporary musical theater. It shows what this
much-decried form of entertainment is capable
of. Though the show is not sung completely through,
the music carries the plot forward, not the dialogue.
Great hunks of exposition are described through
songs. That’s what made Oklahoma so famous
for its time—although everybody conveniently
forgot all those preceding, old-fashioned operettas
and grand Hollywood musicals that did exactly
the same thing. And the music and lyrics of O’Keefe
are grand indeed, covering the bases from gospel
to rap to soaring anthems. It’s all easy,
splendid listening.
Granted, Bat Boy is no Oklahoma, or even Rent,
but there’s life, wicked humor, a cool sensibility,
loads of laughs, and a big sloppy heart in it.
Once it gets its teeth in you, it won’t
let go. For that it should be celebrated—and,
more importantly, seen.
D.L. Groover writes monthly on the arts for OutSmart
magazine.
If you have any comments about this article,
please email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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