Bye Bye Birdie
June 18–27, 2010
Carpenter Performance Hall
Irving Arts Center
Based on the play GREEN GROW THE LILACS by Lynn Riggs
Music by Charles Strouse
Book by Michael Stewart
Lyrics by Lee Adams
Originally titled Let's Go Steady, Bye Bye Birdie is set in 1958.
The story was inspired by the phenomenon of popular singer Elvis Presley and his draft notice into the Army in 1957. The rock star character's name, "Conrad Birdie," is word play on the name of Conway Twitty. Twitty is best remembered today for his long career as a country music star, but in the late 1950s, he was one of Presley's rock 'n' roll rivals.
Charles Strouse and Lee Adams’ score includes the classic songs Put on a Happy Face, A Lot of Livin’ to Do, and Kids. BYE BYE BIRDIE is tops in good old fashioned fun. Lyric Stage’s production featured a full orchestra playing Robert Ginzler’s original Broadway orchestrations.
The original 1960–1961 Broadway production was a Tony Award–winning success. It spawned a London production and several major revivals, a sequel, a 1963 film, and a 1995 television production. The show also became a popular choice for high school and college productions due to its variable cast size and large proportion of ensemble numbers.
Bye Bye Birdie: Will Arbery review for D Magazine
Wonderful Cast, Retro Romance Boost Lyric Stage’s Bye Bye Birdie
It’s easy to forget that Bye Bye Birdie is more than a commentary on 1950’s rock and roll culture, manifested in Conrad Birdie and his adoring throng of adolescent females. It is, at heart, a lovely, if out of place, romance. The central characters are Albert Peterson and Rosie Alvarez, originated on Broadway by Dick Van Dyke and Chita Rivera. Albert is a music industry executive and Rosie his secretary girlfriend, and a huge portion of the musical is devoted to their fumbling relationship. This is both good and bad. In this case, Lyric Stage was able to hire the immensely talented and likable Steve Barcus and Catherine Carpenter Cox to play the roles, but, by its very nature, the production is still the most entertaining and explosive when dealing with the rock star Birdie and his hilariously devoted fans.
Lyric Stage, performing at the Irving Arts Center, has somehow managed to develop an extremely devoted fan base in the city—the Saturday showing of Bye Bye Birdie was completely packed in the 700 plus theater. The audience was overwhelmingly older, and the production values of the performance—wonderful set pieces and full orchestration—suggest that a good number of these audience members are patrons. Whatever is going on at Lyric Stage, it’s working, because the cast that director Cheryl Denson managed to round up is overwhelmingly talented. In addition to wonderful performances by Barcus and Cox, Mary McElree as Kim and Mike Gallagher as her father were wonderfully retro, and Charlotte Franklin as Albert’s dramatic mother was hilarious. The real stand-out, however, was Mackenzie Orr, a high school student from Coppell, who played Kim’s boyfriend. He brought a refreshing sincerity to his role. Amongst a throng of hammy musical theater acting, Orr seemed the most like a real person.
He had competition with Cox, though, whose Rosie was fierce and complex, despite her rather unchanging arc. Nevertheless, these two characters, Hugo and Rosie, are repeatedly linked throughout the play—Rosie is having a hard time getting Albert to pay attention to her, let alone leave the music industry and run away with her to live a simpler life of teaching English; and Hugo is distraught that his girlfriend Kim has been chosen to receive Conrad Birdie’s “one last kiss” before he goes away to war. These parallel plotlines lead to the darkest and most interesting scenes in the play: Hugo getting drunk to drown his sorrows, and Rosie engaging in a bizarre and hilarious orgy (it’s undeniable) with the members of the town’s men’s club.
The darker elements of the show—fear of teenage promiscuity in “Kids,” racism in “Spanish Rose,” media lies in “A Healthy, Normal American Boy,” and the obsessive desire for fame in “Hymn for a Sunday Evening” (whose lyrics are mostly “Ed Sullivan, Ed Sullivan”)—are deceptively persistent, and surprisingly relevant. Whereas Conrad Birdie was clearly based on Elvis Presley, there are still several adolescent musical acts out there (Bieber, Cyrus, Jonas, etc.), whose media image is based simultaneously on wholesomeness and orgy-inducing fandom. The “o” word is used again purposefully—the fear of one between Birdie and his frenzied fans is pervasive in the show. I’m glad the show goes there—it adds texture and complexity to an otherwise simple plot, and it gives the play’s parents something concrete to play in a teen-dominated show. Bye Bye Birdie was a huge hit when it came to Broadway in 1960, for its ability to combine searing social commentary and exhilarating fun. It still works. It’s still enjoyable, and Lyric Stage put on a flawless production.
So what to do with the central and often-forgotten plot of Albert and Rosie? When Dick Van Dyke filmed the movie, he was reportedly very upset that all of the screen time was being re-routed to Ann-Margaret, who played Kim. But it’s easy to see why that choice was made—the images that stick out from Bye Bye Birdie all have to do with the hysteria surrounding a pop star—in one memorable dance sequence, the whole town faints as Birdie thrusts his hips—and the dangers of growing up. Albert and Rosie, unfortunately, seem strangely out of place by the end. And yet the end is overwhelmingly devoted to them, who have decided to run away to Iowa to teach junior high, away from the throngs of shrieking teens and into a classroom— with bored ones.
Bye Bye Birdie: Lawson Taitte review for Dallas Morning News
Lyric Stage captures retro essence perfectly
Lyric Stage’s ‘Bye Bye Birdie’ captures retro essence perfectly… No cast has ever sung Charles Strouse and Lee Adam’s songs more confidently, and the 32-piece orchestra under musical director Jay Dias allows us to hear the snazzy orchestrations – something no other fully staged production has had since the original closed nearly 50 years ago. [ Unfortunately the rest of this review is not available since its online source at Dallas Morning News has been removed. ]
Bye Bye Birdie: Mark Lowry review for TheaterJones
More than just a night at the theater, it’s an event
Lyric Stage ups the ante, again, for musical theater in North Texas… It’s becoming a little embarrassing to keep heaping such praise on Lyric Stage, but this production, directed by Cheryl Denson, is deserving of it.
Every time Lyric puts something on stage, it is generally so above other local productions of musicals that going to the Irving Arts Center for a Lyric show is more than just a night at the theater, it’s an event. If you haven’t discovered Lyric yet—why the hell not? [ Unfortunately the rest of this review is not available since its online source at TheatreJones has been removed. ]
Bye Bye Birdie: Gary Cogill review for WFAA
A funny, refreshing, well-staged revival
Lyric Stage in Irving knocks it out of the park with their current production of the 1960′s stage musical, “Bye Bye Birdie.” It’s a funny, refreshing, well-staged revival… [ Unfortunately the rest of this review is not available since its online source at WFAA has been removed. ]