NEW YORK, NY.- When 8:30 p.m. was a typical curtain time for Broadway musicals, the main characters biggest number, crystallizing the crisis and ensuring an ovation think Roses Turn in Gypsy often came at 11.
The curtain for Wednesday nights opening of the Encores! revival of The Tap Dance Kid went up at 7:30, so the so-called 11 oclock number came closer to 10, but it was still recognizably the main event. Thats when Joshua Henry, playing William Sheridan, the conservative father of a Black family thrown into chaos by a son who wants to be a dancer, let loose with a tirade that ripped the fabric of the rest of the show to pieces, expressing with fury and unbridled terror the characters disdain for what he sees as the performative Blackness of tap.
I keep on smilin through the worst of times, he snarls while shucking and jiving monstrously. Lettin the white man toss me his nickels and dimes.
Its an astonishing performance, in the best way hard to watch. If only William were the main character, it might even make sense at the end of a mostly lighter-hearted story. But hes not, and it doesnt, and the biggest number, whenever it comes, should not be his.
That The Tap Dance Kid is never sure which of the members of the Sheridan family its about the focus seems to change every 10 minutes is just one of the oddities afflicting this tonally bewildering but intermittently appealing 1983 musical, which Encores!, in its return to live production after a two-year pandemic hiatus, is offering through Sunday at New York City Center.
Is the main character, as the title leads you to expect, Williams 10-year-old son, Willie (Alexander Bello), the one who wants to dance despite his fathers prohibitions? Or is it Emma (Shahadi Wright Joseph), Williams 14-year-old daughter, who wants to be a lawyer like him but can barely get his attention because shes a girl?
What about Williams wife, Ginnie (Adrienne Walker), who must tap dance around her husbands temper while trying to make things right for her children? Or Ginnies brother, Uncle Dipsey (Trevor Jackson), a dancer and choreographer? Dipsey, depending on your point of view, is either leading Willie astray by teaching him the shim-sham-shimmy or upholding the joyful traditions of an art form mastered by men like his late father, Daddy Bates (DeWitt Fleming Jr.).
Yes, even a ghost gets two big numbers.
The musical was always something of a hodgepodge. The original book, by Charles Blackwell, based on the bracingly dour young adult novel Nobodys Family Is Going to Change by Louise Fitzhugh of Harriet the Spy fame, never resolved the problem of making peppy entertainment out of such downbeat material.
The score by Henry Krieger and Robert Lorick fully absorbed that confusion of tone, offering songs that are either purely high-spirited (Fabulous Feet) or baldly prosaic (Four Strikes Against Me) with little in between. There are times when you dont know why someone is singing or dancing, and other times when you do but wish you didnt.
The Encores! production, directed by Kenny Leon, does not solve those problems. Lydia Diamonds concert adaptation (although the production is amply staged) does make some improvements, moving the story, which in the 1983 production was said to take place in the present, to 1956, where it in some ways makes more sense. The familys interpersonal and often gender-based conflicts Emma wants to wear pants, Ginnie chafes under her husbands authority feel more apt in the earlier period, as does Kriegers swingy music, which is oddly retro for the composer of Dreamgirls. Still, its beautifully performed by the 24-piece Encores! orchestra under the direction of Joseph Joubert.
But in further revising the jumbled tunestack used for the original productions national tour, Diamonds adaptation exacerbates the shows scattershot approach. (At the start, we get three establishing numbers in a row, for Willie, Dipsey and Emma, thus establishing little.)
And the heavy cutting of spoken scenes that is part of the Encores! brief is especially detrimental to such a busy yet unfocused story. In one scene, I realized that Willie was on a bus only after checking the program to find that the number was called Crosstown. Id thought he was in a dream sequence.
The choreography by Jared Grimes is suitably spectacular in the ensemble numbers, and the demonstration of the changing styles of tap as they pass from Daddy Bates to his children and then, via Dipsey, to more familiar Broadway versions, is fascinating to watch. Jackson (along with Tracee Beazer as his girlfriend, Carole) is an especially exciting dancer, and an appealing crooner as well. And Bello, in a tradition of Willies that includes Alfonso Ribeiro, Dulé Hill and Savion Glover, makes a charming show of learning and then quickly personalizing the steps that are part of his heritage.
I wish that were the focus of the story or that there were a focus at all. If the musical numbers are sometimes hard to grasp visually, the staging of the book scenes is too often undifferentiated. And at least on opening night, after just 11 days of rehearsal, the technical elements were not yet cohering. For a show about the excitement of dance, the pace is strangely languid.
Thats partly built into the haziness of the original material. Although one of the things Encores! is designed to show us is what musicals, for better or worse, felt like when they first opened, Im not sure this production, the first under Lear deBessonet, the new artistic director, succeeds.
Perhaps it shouldnt. That The Tap Dance Kid tells the story of an upper-middle-class Black family (Dont you buy all of your clothes on the Upper East Side? William asks his wife rhetorically) made it somewhat ahead of its time in 1983. That it was mostly the work of a white creative team makes it somewhat behind the time now. Letting Black artists take a new look is the only sensible thing to do except for leaving it be. Not every historical relic needs to be on display.
The Tap Dance Kid
Through Sunday at New York City Center, Manhattan; nycitycenter.org. Running time: 2 hours, 30 minutes.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.