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Peter Pan panto panned

Source: Toronto Star
Date: November 30, 2007
Author: Richard Ouzounian

Peter Pan

1.5 stars (out of 4)

By Chris Earle. Directed by Susan H. Schulman. Until Jan. 6 at The Elgin Theatre, 189 Yonge St. 416-872-5555




Did you ever get a bright, shiny present on Christmas morning only to find it so disappointing that you wound up playing with something from the dollar store?

That's how I felt about Peter Pan, which opened last night at the Elgin Theatre.

This is the sleekest of all the shows that Ross Petty has presented in the past dozen years, but, ironically, it's also the least fun.

I should've guessed things were in trouble when Petty insisted his show was no longer a "panto" but a "family musical." Then he hired a director (Susan H. Schulman) with numerous Broadway/Stratford credits and gave the script to Chris Earle, known for his envelope-testing plays.

Do you know what my 90 year-old prairie mother-in-law would call this? Puttin' on airs.

I sat there last night drinking in the politically correct jokes (Tiger Lily and her Indians are now Southeast Asian businesswomen), the blandly homogenous pop score (did anyone want to hear the theme song from The Greatest American Hero ever again?) and watching the bland parodies of even blander TV shows (Do we care who's dumber than a fifth grader?).

Before the show was over, I was longing for the corny, tacky pantos of yesteryear.

Where were the drag-queen dames? How about the finale singalong where the littlest kid always thought he'd been cheated out of a stuffed animal until the last minute when he got the biggest one? Or Petty himself belting through an old Broadway tune he'd never gotten to sing in his more legit days?.

Admittedly, Kurt Browning has a winning personality, and when he finally dons skates for his duel with Captain Hook it makes for some droll moments, but he can't really sing, his acting is minimal and you wonder if he's been hired just so Petty's annual joke about being married to a ballerina (the legendary Karen Kain) can be topped by a reference to Browning's wife (The National Ballet's Sonia Rodriguez).

Chris Earle's script starts out with some promise, making John a computer freak, giving Michael an asthma puffer and letting Wendy have dreams of pop glory, but before too long it fades into limp topicality.

In fact, things get so loosey-goosey in the second act (which is largely taken up with a ludicrous talent show) that I wanted to hold up a sign saying "It's 9;00 PM; do you know where your plot is?"

The vivid personalities of the old days are gone as well, with only old faithful Eddie Glen to remind us of the amusing ancient style.

A sparkplug-like Jennifer Waiser is wasted by a useless conception of Tinker Bell and even Petty's Hook is so bland this year that he comes across like Ozzy Osbourne after rehab.

A lot of this must be laid at the feet of director Schulman, whose work has never been known for its madcap comic touch.

It's like inviting your maiden aunt to watch Kenny vs. Spenny and then wondering why she doesn't get the jokes.

Dear Ross Petty, please bring back the good old, bad old days. After this Peter Pan has been Schulmanized and Earled, there are just not a lot of laughs left.