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'Mid-Life' winningly obsessed with inevitable01:45 PM CDT on Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Also Online What do you want from a musical revue? Great singing? Big laughs? Mid-Life! The Crisis Musical has it all – if you're over 40 or so. Theatre Three is hoping that the new show in its basement space, reviewed Saturday, will find some of the same success that its long-running hit I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change! brought the company. This piece by writer-actor brothers Bob and Jim Walton doesn't deal with contemporary courtship and marriage, though. Instead, it obsesses about baldness, menopause and prescription-drug side effects. B.J. Cleveland has the audience in stitches as he reads the instructions on a medication that a new doctor has given him. Doug Jackson is almost as funny when singing about his vanishing hair. A revue is not built on yuks alone, however. Sally Soldo and Jenny Thurman have two of the best voices in town: Ms. Soldo caresses the closest thing the show has to a ballad, "When He Laughs," with a velvet larynx, and Ms. Thurman belts the up-tempo songs with a brassy buzz. Terry Dobson, who doubles as stage and music director (and accompanies from the onstage keyboards), has a knack for bringing out the best in performers. Randy Pearlman looks particularly relaxed and comfortable here, and Amy Mills is delightfully irrepressible. Here's a litmus test for whether you'll enjoy Mid-Life! If you ruefully find yourself comparing medical histories when you get together with old friends, you'll love it. If you're the one at the table rolling your eyes over such a conversation, wait for another show to come along. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow.
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