Wed. Jul 3rd, 2024

‘Bad Cinderella’ on Broadway: Sadly, the Title Says It All<!-- wp:html --><p>Evan Zimmerman</p> <p>All through Andrew Lloyd Webber’s inane mish-mash of a <a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/some-like-it-hot-on-broadway-goes-all-out-to-razzle-dazzle">Broadway</a> musical <a href="https://badcinderellabroadway.com/">Bad Cinderella</a><a href="https://badcinderellabroadway.com/"> (Imperial Theatre, booking to Sept 23)</a> the nagging question is: what makes this <a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/what-we-can-all-learn-from-cinderella">Cinderella</a> “bad” in any interesting, intriguing, meaningfully different way? The answer: not much. The title of the musical is a nonsense and marketing stunt—in London’s West End the same show was called Cinderella, and with more honest reason.</p> <p>This Cinderella (Linedy Genao in her <a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/inside-the-new-museum-of-broadway-a-musical-theater-fans-paradise">Broadway</a> debut; she writes in the production Playbill that she is the first Latina performer to originate a leading role in a Lloyd Webber musical) and her true love Prince Sebastian (Jordan Dobson) are modern-ish facsimiles of fairly traditional characters. The story isn’t that much changed, despite the insistence that Bad Cinderella is a punk and rebel. </p> <p>She really isn’t. As a character she swaggers and stomps around and looks angry, but she’s a victim-y drip at heart, albeit one dressed in a cool jacket and tight trousers. So is Sebastian. These whining characters deserve each other, but not for the reasons the show intends.</p> <p><a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/bad-cinderella-on-broadway-sadly-the-title-says-it-all">Read more at The Daily Beast.</a></p><!-- /wp:html -->

Evan Zimmerman

All through Andrew Lloyd Webber’s inane mish-mash of a Broadway musical Bad Cinderella (Imperial Theatre, booking to Sept 23) the nagging question is: what makes this Cinderella “bad” in any interesting, intriguing, meaningfully different way? The answer: not much. The title of the musical is a nonsense and marketing stunt—in London’s West End the same show was called Cinderella, and with more honest reason.

This Cinderella (Linedy Genao in her Broadway debut; she writes in the production Playbill that she is the first Latina performer to originate a leading role in a Lloyd Webber musical) and her true love Prince Sebastian (Jordan Dobson) are modern-ish facsimiles of fairly traditional characters. The story isn’t that much changed, despite the insistence that Bad Cinderella is a punk and rebel.

She really isn’t. As a character she swaggers and stomps around and looks angry, but she’s a victim-y drip at heart, albeit one dressed in a cool jacket and tight trousers. So is Sebastian. These whining characters deserve each other, but not for the reasons the show intends.

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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