• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 7, Sunday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Gossip

‘Schmigadoon!’ review: Tired parody of Broadway’s Golden Age is been there, ‘doon that

Story Center by Story Center
April 21, 2026
Reading Time: 6 mins read
0
'Schmigadoon!' review: Tired parody of Broadway's Golden Age is been there, 'doon that


Theater review

SCHMIGADOON!

Two hours and 30 minutes, with one intermission. At the Nederlander Theatre, 208 West 41st Street

In the early aughts, it was all the rage on Broadway for musicals to send up other musicals.

First there was “Urinetown” and “The Drowsy Chaperone,” two nerdy parodies that were very funny and had teeth. In 2005, “Monty Python’s Spamalot” had David Hyde Pierce sing “You won’t succeed on Broadway if you don’t have any Jews!” And much later in 2015 the Renaissance-set “Something Rotten” put a Shakespearean spin on the sub-genre. After that, the musicals-about-musicals moment felt finally kaput.

Well, wait a Schmig. The formerly dormant trend is active once again with “Schmigadoon!,” the blinding new show at the Nederlander Theatre based on the cancelled Apple TV comedy series about a New York couple whose relationship is put to the test when they become trapped inside a musical.

ADVERTISEMENT
Alex Brightman stars in “Schmigadoon!” as Josh, a man who gets trapped inside a musical. Matthew Murphy

Can’t say I missed it. Been there, ‘doon that.

More From Johnny Oleksinski

“Schmigadoon!” is pleasant — incessantly so — with a cast full of skilled comics like Ana Gasteyer, Ann Harada and Maulik Pancholy from “30 Rock.” Familiar theater faces Max Clayton and Isabelle McCalla are wonderful, too.

Old-fangled to a fault, the show will hold some appeal for the traditional set who bristle at this season’s revivals only winding the clock back as far as 1975.

But the musical with a book, music and lyrics by Cinco Paul is confused as to what it’s supposed to be.

If it’s an ode to Golden Age classics, why does it make them seem so cloying and stupid? If it’s a cutting parody of the likes of “Brigadoon,” “Oklahoma!,” “The Music Man,” “Guys and Dolls” and “The Sound of Music,” why is the tone Hallmark schmaltzy and the jokes surface-skimming, basic and unclever? Maybe on TV, mocking musicals for merely containing singing and dancing is enough to get laughs. On 41st Street, you’ve got to do a lot better than that.

“Schmigadoon!” sends up Golden Age classics such as “Oklahoma!,” “The Music Man,” “Carousel” and “Brigadoon.” Matthew Murphy

Yet that’s Paul’s go-to gag: “Here they go again!” He has one of the displaced main characters, Josh (Alex Brightman), whine every time he hears the pit orchestra strike up.

“Oh no! It’s a song. You just started another song!,” Josh moans before the annoying company number “Corn Puddin’.”

Listening to one of a huge catalogue of unmemorable-but-insistent tunes that have been crammed in — an entire television season’s worth of “Shipoopi”s — I was inclined to agree with him.

Melissa (Sara Chase) and Josh learn that to escape Schmigadoon, they need to find true love. Evan Zimmerman

Judgy Josh winds up far, far away from the five boroughs with girlfriend Melissa (Sara Chase) when they walk across a mysterious bridge in a Catskills forest that leads them to Schmigadoon, a little Land of Oz where the aesthetic is 1890s Easter egg and the lingua franca is watered-down Rodgers and Hammerstein ripoffs.

Long together but unmarried, the couple is already on the rocks. The twee town of Schmigadoon only piles on the tension. Melissa is a Broadway buff, so she’s in heaven. Josh, however, is in a 5-6-7-8th circle of hell. He likes the Yankees — not “Damn Yankees.”

The alarmed pair, unable to leave, learn from a mysterious leprechaun that the only way out is if they find true love, a k a learn an important lesson. It’s as if “Groundhog Day” was made into a musical. Oh, wait…

Isabelle McCalla is touching as school teacher Emma. Evan Zimmerman

Chase and Brightman are dry and sarcastic, if with rather safely written parts, and make personable guides through this Pleasantville of amped-up loons.

Funniest is “SNL” alum Gasteyer as a stern and ambitious reverend’s wife named Mildred who gets the best number: “Tribulation,” a winning spoof of “Trouble” from “The Music Man.” And I wish Afra Hines hadn’t arrived so late in Act 2 — she’s a snooty delight as Countess Gabrielle Von Blerkom, a send-up of “Sound of Music”’s frigid Baroness.

Clayton, a terrific dancer, turns Billy Bigelow from “Carousel” into dumb-hunk Danny, a carnival barker and innuendo machine who hits on Melissa.

It’s too bad that Harada, a phenomenally funny actress who reprises her role from the TV series, wasn’t given more to do as the mayor’s airheaded spouse. And McKenzie Kurtz is over-caffeinated playing Betsy, an Ado Annie type who comes off too modern for this milieu — more “Shucked” than “Schmig.”

There’s a lot of hyperactivity here, not least from director and choreographer Christopher Gattelli, who throws in fast, aerobic dancing wherever he sees the smallest gap. Why such an abundance? You feel exhausted for the ensemble. And I guarantee you there is not a single Golden Age musical with this many dance numbers. Gattelli’s best contribution, and most in the spirit of whatever this is, is a dream ballet in Act 2.

Max Clayton, a terrific dancer, plays Danny. Matthew Murphy

As the second half leaps to a close, “Schmigadoon!” shifts from a cotton candy freight train to a sentimentality dump truck. But the touching McCalla, as Marion-the-librarian-inspired Emma, makes the change-up work by giving one of the few performances with some intellect and nuance behind it. Playing Emma’s shy younger brother Carson at select performances, little comedian Ayaan Diop steals the show.

In the end, it turns out it’s the naive townsfolk who have learned a thing or two from Melissa and Josh — what a shock — and they unleash a bunch of facade-busting secrets. A couple guys come out of the closet for some cheap crowd cheers and one woman owns up to being socialist.

Melissa and Josh are ready to leave Schmigadoon. And so are we. I walked away contemplating if somewhere buried in there is a smart, hilarious musical that questions, and not so sappily, the point of old musicals today.

But what’s the use of wond’rin?

RELATED POSTS

HBO’s ‘Half Man’ Has A Race Problem

Tom Hanks makes surprise visit to to Bay Area typerwriter store

Seth Meyers Undercuts His Own Damning Trump Supercut In The Most Hilarious Way

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source celebrity.land ’

Tags: BroadwayentertainmentmusicalsTheatertheater reviews
Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Richard Gadd stars in "Half Man."
Gossip

HBO’s ‘Half Man’ Has A Race Problem

June 7, 2026
Tom Hanks makes surprise visit to to Bay Area typerwriter store
Gossip

Tom Hanks makes surprise visit to to Bay Area typerwriter store

June 6, 2026
Seth Meyers Undercuts His Own Damning Trump Supercut In The Most Hilarious Way
Gossip

Seth Meyers Undercuts His Own Damning Trump Supercut In The Most Hilarious Way

June 6, 2026
Get last-minute 2026 ACDC Power Up tickets with a discount
Gossip

Get last-minute 2026 ACDC Power Up tickets with a discount

June 5, 2026
Chris Lake exclusive interview: Under The K Bridge Brooklyn concerts
Gossip

Chris Lake exclusive interview: Under The K Bridge Brooklyn concerts

June 5, 2026
How to watch the Lorne Michaels doc on Peacock for free
Gossip

How to watch the Lorne Michaels doc on Peacock for free

June 5, 2026
Next Post
Madonna claims her costume was stolen at Coachella - Celebrity News - Entertainment

Madonna claims her costume was stolen at Coachella - Celebrity News - Entertainment

Jenna Bush Hager Shares How She REALLY Feels About People Saying She Looks Like Her Dad

Jenna Bush Hager Shares How She REALLY Feels About People Saying She Looks Like Her Dad

Recommended Stories

Walt Weiss savors a special debut as Braves manager in a 6-0 win over the Royals

Walt Weiss savors a special debut as Braves manager in a 6-0 win over the Royals

March 28, 2026
A man in a black vest, beige shirt, and dark pants strikes an action pose, aiming a blaster pistol with one arm extended and the other bent. He has brown hair and wears a holster on his hip, standing against a plain background.

16 Famous People Who Got Their Big Break Because Someone Else Said No at the Last Minute

June 2, 2026
Yahoo entertainment home

Olivia Wilde’s Latest Look Might Be Her Boldest Yet

September 12, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

#celebrity #seanstrickland #dana #ufc #shorts

#celebrity #seanstrickland #dana #ufc #shorts

June 7, 2026
A man in a black suit and a woman in an embellished floral gown smile together at a Netflix event

Jennifer Lopez Sets The Record Straight On Brett Goldstein Dating Rumours

June 7, 2026
Mike Tindall with Mia and Lena Tindall at the wedding of Harriet Sperling to Peter Phillips at All Saints Church

Lena Tindall is the new Prince Louis with rebellious umbrella dance at Peter Phillips’ wedding

June 7, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land