Pubdate: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 Source: Strand, The (CN ON Edu) Copyright: 2006 The Strand Contact: http://www.thestrand.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3546 Author: Johnnie Walker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) REEFER MADNESS IS SMOKING HOT! Go see Reefer Madness, the satirical musical opening this season at Hart House. It isn't just a good piece of student theatre, it's a good piece of theatre and definitely the best thing I've ever seen at Hart House. Also, it's the Canadian premiere of one of the funniest, smartest musicals to come out in recent years. Based on the 1930s anti-marijuana film of the same name, Reefer tells the story of Jimmy, a wholesome sixteen-year-old kid who gets drawn into a seedy world of sex, hit-and-runs and baby-selling after he becomes addicted to that most deadly of narcotics: marijuana. You might have caught the Showtime movie version which came out last year starring Alan Cumming, Neve Campbell and Kristen Bell (aka Veronica Mars). The original film was produced by a church board and told the story as a sincere warning against the dangers of cannabis, but was so absurd and over-the-top that it became a cult favourite. Reefer Madness: The Musical broadly expands on the skeleton plot of the original film and turns it into a deliciously campy, wickedly funny romp. Jimmy (played by Benjamin Mehl) is a typical teenaged boy who wants only to impress his girlfriend Mary Lane (Jennifer Walls), whether by attempting to quote Shakespeare or showing off his dance moves. But his life is changed forever when he meets Jack (Leonard Elias), a smooth-talking stranger who promises to give him swing-dancing lessons, at a five-and-dime. Jack introduces Jimmy to Ralph (Adam Barrett), a cackling brain-dead pothead, Sally (Dawn-Luv MacNaughton), a sex-crazed floozy with a baby she's too stoned to name and Mae (Christine Aziz), Jack's washed-up squeeze. Lampooning the reactionary paranoia of the 1930s film, all it takes is one puff of one joint for Jimmy to be transformed into a crazed drug fiend who robs poor boxes, steals cars and has Arabian Nights-inspired bisexual fantasy sequences. Jimmy's downward spiral is framed by a series of scenes with a narrator (Andrew Moyes), a lecturer who is telling Jimmy's story as part of a PTA meeting. He announces: "Creeping like a Communist, it's knocking at our doors/ Turning all our children into hooligans and whores!" The cast of the show is completely phenomenal; there is not a weak link. Even the chorus members are enthused, funny and very talented, whether playing high school students, zombie-like reefer fiends or dancing brownie ingredients. Andrew Moyes probably has the hardest job on stage as his narrator makes frequent appearances within the story as everything from a soda jerk. to the devil to FDR and he is definitely up for the challenge. Benjamin Mehl brings a tooth ache-inducing sweetness and accomplished physicality to the central role of Jimmy. As bored nymphomaniac Sally, Dawn-Luv MacNaughton oozes thrift-store sexuality, like Marilyn Monroe's sleazier little sister who wound up on skid row. David Pereira almost steals the show as Jesus, who appears to Jimmy in visions, urging him to return to the flock and give up the pot. He has a lovable yet smarmy quality that somehow make him entirely believable as the old J.C. But it's Jennifer Walls who shows the greatest potential as the musical's leading lady. She infuses the stupid and sweet-natured Mary with genuine pathos and hilarious comic timing. Plus, she has a fantastic singing voice. But, that's the thing about this show. Everyone has a great singing voice. Everyone can dance. Everyone's funny. The technical aspects of the show were mostly laudable. The multitude of costumes were beautiful, the choreography was snappy and fun, the sets functional and actually technically impressive and the lighting effective yet not obtrusive. This is the fourth year in a row Elenna Mosoff has directed a musical for Hart House and this is certainly her best one yet. One can see the journey she has been taking (this show combines the main character from Godspell with the kinkiness of The Rocky Horror Show and the traditional musical theatre aesthetic of A Chorus Line. In many ways, Reefer Madness is the ideal campus musical. It's hip and funny and bound to appeal to the typical university student's sense of humour (not that there's anything any student of Victoria College would possibly know about smoking pot). It's full of clever dialogue and genuinely catchy songs (you can hum them as you leave!). It's also not too ambitious. This is a solid little show that knows what it's about and is unpretentious. I really think you should see this show. Campus theatre of this quality is a rare delight. I don't want to seem overly gushing - I'm not the kind of person to throw excessive praise onto any old show that goes up at UofT. But outside of some minor technical difficulties that the company have probably dealt with since opening night and the odd sight gag that didn't quite fly, I don't have anything bad to say about this play. If you want to see an accomplished piece of musical theatre, check it out. If you want to see a satire of conservative American religio-politics, check it out. If you just want to see Benjamin Mehl's bum in a jock strap, check it out. Like a smooth high, this show will leave you content, giggly and a little bit hungry. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek