Westchester Broadway Theatre , Dinner Theatre



OUR CAST
Guido Contini..................... Robert Cuccioli*
Guido at an early age........ Travis Ramirez^, Zach Rand^
Luisa Contini...................... Glory Crampton*
Carla Albanese.................. Julie Tolivar*
Claudia Nardi..................... Lauren Blackman*
Guido's Mother................... Emily Zacharias*
Liliane La Fleur................. Dana Moore*
Lina Darling....................... Karen Webb
Stephanie Necrophorus..... Erin O'Neill
Our Lady of the Spa Jesmille Darbouze*
Mama Maddelena,Chief of Chambermaids................... Terry Palasz
Saraghina.......................... Cari Chrisostomou
The Italians
Maria................................. Shannon Lee Smith*
Giuletta.............................. Leah Landau*
Diana................................. Crystal Kellogg
Renata............................... Natalie Newman*
The Germans  
Olga Von Sturm Lanene Charters*
Heidi Von Sturm Haley Swindal
Gretchen Von Krupf Terry Rakov*
Young Guido's Schoolmates  
Ryan Jones^ John Carlos Lefkowitz^
Adrian C. Nobile^ Troy Tripicchio^
~Standby for Guido Contini Nolan Muna
Non-performing swing Amanda Pulcini
Dance_Captain Shannon Lea Smith*
*Members of Actors' Equity Association
^Children Alternate performances

NINE Guido, Guido, Guido...
Reviewed by: Sandi Durell
March 12, 2010

Guido Contini's mid-life crisis isn't very unusual, unless, of course, you're being chased and haunted by a bevy of beauties all clamoring for love and affection. Ah, poor Guido! Even running off to a Spa in Venice can't calm his inner struggle to act his age...40 as opposed to nine. Based upon Federico Fellini's film classic "8 ½", this Kopit/Yeston musical endeavors to untangle the blocks to his creative film making.

The big surprise is the elaborate production values that flow from the Westchester Broadway Theatre in Elmsford, NY. The production is cleverly directed and choreographed by Jonathan Stahl using much of the original 1982 staging with sets that include large cubes and a long ramp. The cast, some 20+ strong of remarkably talented singers and actors, is also outstanding for the costuming of Michael Bottari and Ronald Case, exact duplications-all black in the first act and all white in the second-adding to the sophistication.

Robert Cuccioli is a mature Guido perfectly suited for the role with his caressing vocals reminiscent of his Tony Award nominated role in the Broadway production of "Jekyll & Hyde." It's a very physical role as he springs up and about the moveable cubes, rolling on the floor and obviously enjoying every moment. His big number "I Can't Make This Movie" does not disappoint. He's still very much the leading man.

Louisa (Glory Crampton) is the patient wife possessing a lovely warm and adaptable voice. Women are constantly in and out of Guido's tormented life especially sex kitten Carla (Julie Tollivar) who is not only physically striking in animal print body suit, but has a sweet vocal quality. Guido's mother is pragmatically played by Emily Zacharias. Movie producer Liliane La Fleur (Dana Moore) struts her stuff in "Folies Bergere." Zach Rand as Young Guido performs seamlessly throughout in his youthful soprano.

A bit unnerving, is "Ti Voglio Bene/Be Italian" which in and of itself is upbeat and fun but uncomfortably performed by Cari Chrisostomou (Sarraghina, Guido's boyhood whore). The suggestive references of the tambourines to the young boys in this production number make for some uneasiness.

"Nine" is one of the theater community's best kept secrets. Westchester Broadway Theater is an Equity theatre located under an hour off the Saw Mill River Parkway. The ticket price of $75 includes a full dinner and a production with values that could rival many shows on Broadway. Seating and sight lines are very comfortable. I have a feeling this high level prevails in most, if not all, of the shows produced at this venue.

Highly recommended! Westchester Broadway Theatre 914 592-2222

LIMITED TIME ONLY!
Purchase two tickets for dinner and show on a Thursday or Sunday evening for only $99.99 plus tax. 
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starring

Robert Cuccioli

Glory Crampton

“NINE” is a vibrant and provocative musical that follows the life of world famous film director Guido Contini as he reaches a creative and personal crisis of epic proportion, while balancing the numerous women in his life including his wife, his mistress, his film star muse, his confidant and costume designer, an American fashion journalist, the whore from his youth  and his mother.
The original 1982 Broadway production of “NINE,” with music and lyrics by Maury Yeston,and book by Arthur Kopit won five Tony Awards including Best Musical. The
2003 Broadway revival won two Tony Awards, including best revival.
Mr. Kopit and Mr. Yeston also wrote WBT’s most successful and highly acclaimed show, PHANTOM.  Get swept away with this enchanting musical on stage until April 24th.

Act I
  • Overture Delle Donne
  • Not Since Charlie Chaplin
  • Guido's Song
  • Coda di Guido
  • The Germans at the Spa
  • My Husband Makes Movies
  • A Call From the Vatican
  • Only With You
  • The Script/Folies Bergeres
  • Nine
  • Ti Voglio Bene/Be Italian
  • The Bells of St. Sebastian
Act II
  • A Man Like You/Unusual Way/Duet
  • The Grand Canal: Every Girl in Venice/Amor/Only You/Finale
  • Simple
  • Be On Your Own
  • I Can't Make This Movie
  • Getting Tall
  • Nine/Long Ago/Nine (Reprise)

Polished "Nine" Sparkles in Elmsford: You'll Love the cast and the guy named Guido in this musical.  Peter D. Kramer, The Journal News

In a winter of shoveling discontent, there are at
least nine reasons to see “Nine” at the Westchester Broadway Theatre.

Cast White
Reason 1: Robert Cuccioli’s performance is just
the thing to soothe nerves frazzled by winter-storm warnings and power outages.

Cuccioli, a WBT favorite in past productions of
“Phantom” — also by “Nine” creators Maury Yeston
and Arthur Kopit — delivers a human, thinking flesh -and-blood Guido Contini.

Guido has plenty to think about. He used to be a successful film director — writing the scripts, the scores, directing and acting — but he has had three flops in a row and now he has a crippling case of writer’s block.

Add to this the demands of his producer, his wife, his mistress and his muse and Guido’s in a full-blown midlife crisis.

Guido can be petulant, impossible, fearful and lustful and Cuccioli finds each of these and adds layers of complexity that are positively endearing. We may not care for the way Guido does things —
there are lots of women in his life — but this enfant terrible is downright charming.

Cuccioli is in excellent voice and his vocal control is noteworthy. Watch as he sings through director-choreographer’s Jonathan Stahl’s challenging choreography, holding notes as he jumps and as he reclines, no easy feat.

He finds the humor and the confusion in songs ranging from the manic “Guido’s Song” to the creative odyssey of “The Grand Canal.”

But the voice is only half the role. Cuccioli fully acts the part, taking his time to listen (or as Guido would say, “leeesten.”) This impossible coincidence of writer’s block and midlife crisis is happening to him, in his head, in view of the paparazzi.

Reason 2: Glory Crampton — as Guido’s long-suffering wife, Luisa — is simply radiant, with a clear and beautiful voice. An actress who sings, Crampton conveys the heart and the heartache in a woman who understands her role in life.

Crampton’s Luisa knows her husband better than he knows himself. She fills “My Husband Makes Movies” — a haunting and lovely song about living with an artist — with love and longing and anguish. Yes, he’s impossible, she seems to say, but this is what I signed on for.

Well, to a point. To a breaking point, which she reaches in “Be On Your Own,” another exceptional vocal performance.

Reason 3: Jonathan Stahl’s pitch-perfect casting and direction demonstrate a light touch and an appreciation for pace. With one notable exception (the “Folies Bergeres” number that inexplicably slowed the action down to a crawl), Stahl’s direction is fluid and smart. The production is stylish and sleek but Stahl also manages to plumb the musical’s thoughtful moments, building nicely to Guido’s breakdown in the song “I Can’t Make This Movie,” a song that is the Italian cousin of “Rose’s Turn” in “Gypsy.”

(As for “Folies Bergeres,” Dana Moore as producer Liliane La Fleur lingered so long over it that the number and the show lost its energy and focus temporarily.)

Reason 4: Lauren Blackman as Claudia, Guido’s muse and frequent film star, positively nails her character, an actress who wants to grow and who is tired of being put on a pedestal. Her confusion and frustration is laid bare in the Act II opener “A Man Like You”/”Unusual Way.”

In her real-world life, Claudia lives in Paris, with an investment banker. She’s not his muse.

Blackman is another excellent singer, showing the control and power behind the fed-up actress.

Reason 5: “The Call from the Vatican,” in which the slinky, wonderful Julie Tolivar — practically poured into her costume — delivers a comic gem with gusto and passion. Later, her feather-light touch on the song, “Simple,” shows the actress’ extraordinary range.

Reason 6: Cari Chrisostomou, as the lusty, funny prostitute, Sarraghina, who teaches a young Guido the key to being irresistable in “Ti Voglio Bene”/“Be Italian,” the musical’s lively anthem.

Chrisostomou chooses to play Sarraghina without the air of menace others have, making the memory sweeter for Guido, devoid of the judgment of his mother and the nuns at St. Sebastian. The actress gives the role everything she has, in a performance that lingers in the mind.

Reason 7: Michael Bottaria and Ronald Case — pulling double duty as set and costume designers — create a stark, all-white canvas upon which Stahl paints the production.

A long ramp bisects the stage with nine boxes one one side and eight on the other. Soon enough, the boxes are occupied by the 17 women in Guido’s life. (Yes, 17.)

The costumes, stylish and chic, give the production a gloss that is entirely winning.

Reason 7 1/2 is Andrew Gmoser’s lighting, including an effective illumination of the boxes from within, making interesting stage pictures all the more compelling.

Reason 8: The ensemble, asked to do much, does more. From the overture’s first notes to the largest production numbers, this is the strongest ensemble the dinner theater has had in years, hard-working actresses who sing and dance without drawing too much focus, who understand the material and have the powers to bring it to life.

Reason 9: Croton-on-Hudson’s Travis Ramirez and Yorktown’s Zach Rand — who alternate as Young Guido — and their St. Sebastian schoolmates: West Nyack’s John Carlos Lefkowitz, Harrison’s Troy Tripicchio, White Plains’ Adrian Noble and Ryan Jones of Darien, Conn.

Simply by their presence, the boys capture Guido’s emotional age, 9, and remind us that Guido suffers from a severe case of arrested development.

Sure, he needs to grow up — to “get tall” as young Guido sings — but Guido at 40 seems too charming to judge too harshly. After all, emotionally, he’s nine.

And who wouldn’t want to stay nine?

What: “Nine”

Where: Westchester Broadway Theatre, 1 Broadway Plaza, Elmsford.

When: Through April 24. Performances are Thursdays through Sundays, with select Wednesday matinee and evening performances. Wednesday and Thursday matinees: lunch at 11:30 a.m., show at 1 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday evenings: dinner at 6 p.m., show at 8 p.m. Sunday matinees: lunch at noon, show at 1:30 p.m. Sunday evenings: dinner at 5 p.m., show at 7 p.m.

Tickets: $62 to $75, plus tax. (Discounts for groups of 20 or more, children, students and senior citizens at selected performances.)

Call: 914-592-2222.

 

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Song List
Our Cast
Production Photos
Reviews

photos by Jerry Ruotolo
First Look: NINE Set Model for Westchester Broadway Theatre; Show to Include Film Song(s)


BroadwayWorld.com is proud to present a sneak peek at the great looking set models (design by Michael Bottari & Ronald Case) for the upcoming production of NINE which begins its run at the Westchester Broadway Theatre in Elmsford, New York on February 18th and runs through April 24th.

We have also learned that the production will be the first to also include "one or two of the new songs" that Maury Yeston wrote for the NINE film, though there's no word yet on which one(s).

The show's schedule is: Wed. & Thurs. Matinee: Lunch: 11:15 AM Show: 1:00 PM. $62.00 per person plus tax Wed, Thurs, Fri, & Sat. Evening: Dinner 6:15 PM. Show: 8:00 PM. $75.00 per person plus tax Sunday Matinee: Lunch: 11:45 AM Show: 1:30 PM. $75.00 per person plus tax Sunday Evening: Dinner: 5:15 PM. Show: 7:00 PM. $75.00 per person plus tax

Beverage Service & Gratuities are not included in the ticket price. Please arrive at least one hour prior to curtain. There is no food service once the performance begins. No cash or credit card refunds. All sales final.

NINE premiered on Broadway in 1982 to critical acclaim (winning five Tony Awards, including Best Musical), and was successfully revived in 2003 (winning another two Tonys, including Best Revival).

The sharp, stylish and altogether engaging musical "Nine" at Westchester Broadway Theatre in Elmsford, N.Y., asks a poignant question: Where are your buddies when you need them?

Poor Guido, the central character and only adult male in the cast of this sophisticated show, is on his own on stage with a couple of dozen sexy ladies for the whole evening, and they're all clamoring for his attention.

Most men would probably consider this a macho fantasy come true, but when you consider that one woman is his mother, one his demanding producer, one his long-suffering wife, and others a mistress or two or four -- including a famous film star and even the town whore -- you might be looking for a pal or two to help you keep things under control.

"Nine" is the 1982 Tony-winning musical by Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit, who also wrote "Phantom," arguably the best and most popular show in this dinner theater's illustrious history.

Based on the fascinating and undisputedly autobiographical film "8 1/2" by Italian film director Federico Fellini, the story introduces us to Guido Contini (Robert Cuccioli), Fellini's alter ego, who is suffering a mid-career crisis and creative block just as he's about to begin his newest film.

Since his last three movies have been box office flops, he's understandably under a great deal of pressure. And that's just the professional side of his tumultuous life!

In an effort to stabilize his emotions and creative output, Guido runs off with his nearly estranged wife, Luisa (Glory Crampton), to a spa in Venice, unprepared for the other ladies of his life to follow him -- if not in the flesh, in his memory.

The Westchester production, under the very skillful direction of Jonathan Stahl, who also choreographed the show, is visually as stimulating as are the book and score.

The design team of Michael Bottari and Ronald Cast provided the sets and costumes -- simple but classically elegant white blocks and columns that eventually reveal the Grand Canal of Venice as a backdrop.

The costumes start out starkly black but evolve into fantastic displays of color and imagination during carnival time.

In scenes that range from musical ensembles to lavish song-and-dance numbers, and move from the past to the present, Guido eventually comes to terms with his less than mature relationships with women, especially Luisa.

Moral: Little boys finally do grow up -- except in Italy they have more fun doing it.

Cuccioli and Crampton also starred in "Phantom" at this theater, and they are sterling performers who bring strength of voice and nuance of character to their roles.

While Cuccioli yields the stage to the talented ladies in the cast as each one gets her show-stopper, he is the primary force on view and radiates the masculine charm and little-boy-lost elements of the man's personality.

Julie Tolivar is fiery and funny as Carla, a sexpot mistress, while Lauren Blackman as Claudia -- a movie star who owes her fame to Guido but is no longer willing to be his pawn -- is most winning.

Dana Moore as the high-voltage Liliane LaFleur, Guido's film producer, cuts a vivid swath across the stage in high heels and high camp, while Emily Zacharias hits sympathetic notes as Guido's mother.

Cari Chrisastomou has the best number,"Be Italian!" -- in which she initiates young Guido (Travis Ramirez) into the ways of the flesh.

If there is a misstep, it's the three German women who are meant as comic relief. While I don't favor caricature, they aren't funny nor are they that different from the vibrant Italians with whom they compete.

Please accept my praise that this is a thinking man's show as a sincere compliment. It's rare that a musical can both delight one's senses with music and decor and also prompt the old gray matter to stay awake as well.

Yeston's music and Kopit's book and lyrics are first rate, with my favorite being the haunting "A Most Unusual Way," not a bad theme song for this musical.

 

 
 
 
 
  
 

 

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