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WPCNR ON THE AISLE. Theatrical Review by John F. Bailey. July 7,2012:
You’re watching the ingeniously-conceived Rock Island passenger car rattle and chug, carrying fast-talking traveling salesmen jittering with every clack across old-time turn-of-the-century America to River City on the Westchester Broadway Theatre stage.

Scott Bierko as The Music Man.
Photos by Eli Silverman, Courtesy The Family Theatre Company
It’s the Family Theatre Company’s traditional non-Equity production of Meredith Willson’s 1957 MUSIC MAN, as the fantastic living rail car “sshhhhes, hisses, and huffs” to a rollicking start with fast-talking Charlie Cowell and his salesmen conversation matching railcar rhythm you know it’s going to be a great night:
Never heard of any salesman Hill
Now he dosen’t know the territory
Dosen’t know the territory?!?
What’s the fellow’s line?
Never worries bout his line
Never worries bout his line?!?
Or a doggone thing. He’s just a bang beat, bell ringing,
Big haul, great go, neck or nothin, rip roarin,
every time a bull’s eye salesman. Thats Professor Harold Hill, Harold Hill
What’s the fellows line?
Whats his line?
He’s a fake, and he doesn’t know the territory!
The full-house on opening night Friday shifted into high spirits by the signature song of the overture, 76 Trombones, then knew they were in for a rollicking evening. They reconnected with an America long gone. Harold Hill played by Yorktown Heights music teacher, Scott Bierko, is coming to River City to start up a band. Winner of 5 Tonys in 1957, including Best Musical, and a Grammy for Best Original Cast Album, The Music Man is pulling into the WBT for a run through August 29.

Victoria Lauzun, (far right) American Musical and Dramatical Academy graduate, wins admirers at first-sung words, casting her spell, her glittering luxurious soprano singing Goodnight My Someone. When she sings, everyone in the audience listens, transported. To borrow from Byron, to describe this ingenue’s voice, “she sings in beauty like the night.” Left to right, the “Board of Education Quartet,”: FaTye, Martin Bonventre, Jimmy Tate, Brian Conlin; Brandon Singel as Winthrop,Lexi Staub as Amaryllis, Bierko and Victoria Lauzun.
Lauzun plays librarian Marion with engaging primness, intelligence and propriety, suspicioning the charming Hill (Bierko) is not what he claims to be. Will she turn him in? Will she spoil her dreams, her townspeople’s hopes, the stuff dreams are made of? Not in this musical! At the very end, theatre lovers, the heart of this old-time America saves the day.
Ms. Lauzun’s My White Knight, stirs women and men to dream again with a voice of unique emotional connection singing ”My white knight, not a Lancelot, nor an angel with wings Just someone to love me, who is not ashamed of a few nice things.
My white knight who knew what my heart would say if it only knew how.
Please, dear Venus, show me now.”
Mr. Bierko, in sporty patent leather shoes,flashy suit with gift of glib, bluster and blab, paints a community-pride picture of 76 trombones leading a big parade. He wins instrument purchasers by the score. He’s selling community spirit, pride, everything we are all suckers for.
He convinces River City residents Ya Got Trouble (In River City) with the enterprising Mayor Shin is opening a pool hall that will, Hill says, corrupt youth. His pitch – the citizens need to keep their youth out of the pool den by starting a community band, buying instruments and uniforms, and he, Hill will teach their children to play with his “Think Method.”
Star turns” step up this American musical morality tale of Midwestern values and good old hucksterism.
Peter Ackerman playing the Mayor, his pool hall threatened, asks the Board of Education to investigate Hill’s “credentials.” Hill charms the Board of Education by recognizing the potential of their voices, and creates a Board of Education quartet.
The Board of Ed interludes are a “Greek Chorus of harmony” guiding us through the melodrama going on. The four (FaTye, Jimmy Tate,Brian Conklin, and Martin Bonventre) stop the audience who hang on their every harmony from Ice Cream and Sincere in Act I and come back for Goodnight Ladies in Act One, and charm us some more Board of Ed Harmony in Act II even dueting with Ms. Lauzun on It’s You and Lyda Rose and Will I Ever Tell You
Not to be outdone in another recurring show favorite, are the ladies of the ensemble: White Plains own University of Mississippi Fine Arts grad, Christina Tompkins as Mayor Shin’s wife (delivering high chuckles, leading her town dance group in a hilarious Greek Fountain dance—she is a comic in the making),Rene O’Neal, Molly Brown, Jeana Foreman, and Jill Twiss (think I have them all) tell us all we need to know about spinsterish Marion the Librarian, (Ms. Lauzun) and small town gossip with the tongue-clucking, “Pick a little, talk a little, pick a little, talk a little,
cheep cheep cheep, talk a lot, pick a little more
Mr. Hill wins over the citizens with the exception of Ms. Marion, flirting with her in the library doing his very coy and amusing Marion the Librarian. Ms. Lauzun, executing a coy piece of pantomimed “can’t stand you – can’t you see that-ism” fights her attraction for the charmer. In a solo lament, Bierko laments he cannot get Marion to fall for him, singing of The Sadder But Wiser Girl. Mr. Bierko demonstrates convincing male frustration. The chemistry between the two grows in Act Two.
Act II, we find Marion growing fonder of the con-man, Harold Hill, because her non-communitive brother, Wintrop brother of Marion, played with aplomb masterfully by 10 year old Brandon Singel, literally stops the show after he delivers Gary Indiana, precociously with flare so you hear every word.
The show had to stop for a good minute the audience giving Brandon the loudest most sustained cheers this reviewer has heard in a decade of reviewing these shows. Well, done kid…see you on Broadway! His mom, Regina Singel is a comedienne considerable as Marion’s mother, lamenting her daughter’s aloofness with pointed barbs and observations that brought the laughs
And all this before you even get to hear Ms.Lauzun deliver a spectacular performance of Till There Was You. Now I have never liked this song, but her voice, her style, her sincerity put it over. She decides not to betray Harold Hill, declaring her love. But wait, salesman Charlie Cowell spills the beans. The townspeople are outraged.
As Hill is brought before the town court, what can save their love and the spirit…perhaps the band that can’t play? I’m not telling.
You’ll have to see the show to see how it all comes out!
John Fanelli directed the worthy hard-working company superbly. Timing was good. Set changes smooth, and the railroad car scene is a must-see, Ms. Lauzun is a must-hear
A good part of the cast is comprised of actors who are professional in the sense that they are paid and make their living performing. The only distinction is that they are non union actors. This company blends those “professional” adult actors with young aspiring actors. And those adults act as their mentors. Judging what this observer saw Friday night it works splendidly!
Costumes by Maria Castaldo and George Croom were colorful and made you feel if you were looking in on turn-of-the-century America. The orchestra under Kurt Kelley delivered enough of the big brass band sound to carry that 76 Trombones standard.
Come on home, Americans to the America that used to be!
Paul Harvey would have loved it!
The Family Theatre Company production of The Music Man plays through August 29 and is a 2 and a half hour show with 30-minute intermission, very entertaining for kids and adults alike. The Box Office may be reached at (914)592-2268, extension 804, or check in at www.BroadwayTheatre.com.