NEW YORK (AP) There are different ways to make it to the top. You could start at the bottom and work hard, or breeze into the family business or you could try murdering your way to success, as in the dazzlingly funny new musical comedy "A Gentleman's Guide
Review: Merry mayhem in 'A Gentleman's Guide'
Subscribe to listen
Reflecting the family's careless, privileged attitude, he pompously performs "I Don't Understand the Poor" as insensitive, cropper-snapping Lord Adalbert D'Ysquith Jr. ("to be so debased is in terrible taste"). Turning boyish, a beaming Mays sails around on a scooter as an effete country squire, who delightfully yearns for Monty as they suggestively duet on "It's Better With A Man."
An especially memorable number finds Mays as a self-promoting, do-gooder dowager whom Monty relentlessly dispatches to danger zones the world over. Gleefully, Mays leads the dowager's travel-battered, increasingly beleaguered entourage in "Lady Hyacinth Abroad" ("the hottentots and pygmys may appall us/but even they are part of God's design!")
Not content with helping numerous D'Ysquith heirs speedily "congregate underneath the sod," Monty also divides his affections between two lovely ladies. His beautiful, shallow mistress, Sibella (Lisa O'Hare, svelte and pouting), who rejected him when he was poor, clashes with his naive new fiancee, distant cousin Phoebe D'Ysquith (a charming Lauren Worsham, who tremulously warbles Phoebe's innocent love.)
Tresnjak brilliantly stages their love triangle in a scene in which Pinkham, barricaded between two doors keeping the suspicious ladies apart, swings back and forth between them while all three sing "I've Decided to Marry You."
The music hall atmosphere is enhanced by Alexander Dodge's colorful scenery and a sumptuous variety of period costumes by Linda Cho. Pinkham's surprised delight in each of Monty's deadly successes is a fine counterpart to Mays' rollicking embellishment of his off-kilter characters.
___
Online:
http://www.agentlemansguidebroadway.com