Wong
Does It Right
A theatremania.com review of 'The Unexpected Drama of Pop
Music', BD Wong's one man show at Joe's Pub.
Article by Barbara
& Scott Siegel
(January 18, 2001)
There are essentially two
schools of cabaret performance art. One is the revelation
of personality, that intimate sharing of oneself with an
audience best exemplified by the likes of Andrea Marcovicci
and Charles Cermele. The second school is the presentation
of a character or characters that create an intimate
theatrical experience. Proponents of this approach range
from Tommy Femia as Judy Garland to Michel Hermon singing
the Edith Piaf oeuvre. And now, add someone else to this
latter group of cabaret performers: B.D. Wong, who recently
completed a series of three sold out performances at Joe's
Pub in a show called Wailin' on Pop that had the
provocative subtitle "The Unexpected Drama of Pop Music."
Until recently, Wong was perhaps best known for his
starring role in M. Butterfly on Broadway. Then came his
role of Linus in the Broadway revival of You're a Good Man,
Charlie Brown, and theatergoers suddenly realized that Wong
could sing.
In his show at Joe's Pub, he combined his acting and
singing talents to exquisite effect in an act he himself
conceived and wrote. Focusing on contemporary pop tunes
that were written for the radio rather than the stage, Wong
nevertheless found their theatrical underpinnings. Time
after time, he took a song and gave it not only voice, but
also character. We mean that literally; Wong created
different characters and then had each person he invented
sing a different song in a different scenario, from Paul
Simon's "The Homeward Boxer" to Sting's "Seven Days." In
essence, these pop tunes were thereby transformed into a
series of one-act musicals.
The variety of characters Wong created was nearly matched
by the multitude of musical styles he embraced. From Tracy
Chapman to Billy Joel to Macy Gray, this actor/singer
displayed a range of skills one rarely gets to see on any
stage, be it in a theater or a nightclub. Nor does one
often get to hear so many sophisticated arrangements in a
cabaret show.
Orchestrator Curtis Moore and music director Dan Lipton
came up with fresh settings of familiar songs, played by a
five-piece backup band. In particular, Carly Simon's
"That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be" was
heartbreakingly underscored with a cello, hauntingly played
by Laura Bontrager.
Later, Wong noted: "There's always room for a cello."
There's always room for improvement, as well. Not every
song Wong performed was worthy of the effort. Then, again,
our own prejudice is for the Great American Songbook; some
of the tunes he chose to theatricalize just weren't up to
that "standard, " if you know what we mean. But when he did
chose the right song-and he did so often enough - Wong
galvanized the audience and these critics. By way of
example, his rendition of "Karen by Night" (Jill Sobule)
was such a dramatic, passionate tour de force that it could
readily stand as a Broadway show's eleven o'clock number.
Wong is not a charismatic stage personality who glows with
the aura of stardom. Rather, he's a chameleon with the kind
of talent that lasts.