logo
Review: In ‘Just In Time' on Broadway, Bobby Darin's story gives Jonathan Groff a chance to shine

Review: In ‘Just In Time' on Broadway, Bobby Darin's story gives Jonathan Groff a chance to shine

Chicago Tribune27-04-2025

NEW YORK — Watch out, Hugh Jackman! Jonathan Groff is coming for your crown as Broadway's greatest showman.
And he's got the slickest attraction in town as ammo.
Groff's new vehicle, 'Just in Time,' a jukebox trot through the life of mid-century crooner/songwriter Bobby Darin, doesn't tread new formative turf but benefits exponentially from some major advantages over your common or garden-variety Broadway biography.
No. 1: Darin's life is far more interesting than most.
He had fast, fraught relationships with two very famous women in Connie Francis (Gracie Lawrence) and Sandra Dee (Erika Henningsen). And having long suffered from a weak heart, he was dead at 37, still in his prime. Ergo, there's a baked-in sense of urgency to the show and no slow decline with which to wrestle. And there are surprises in his life story that those who know Darin only as the man who sang 'Mack the Knife,' if at all, likely won't know.
No. 2: Groff is working at Circle in the Square and he has combined with director Alex Timbers to emphasize the intimate possibilities of that unique Broadway space. High-priced cabaret tables are in the middle of the room upon which Groff/Darin can sit, preen and even twirl to the palpable delight of the fat-cat customers.
No. 3: Nothing says classy, big Broadway night out like Art Deco — still — and the designer Derek McLane has created a simply gorgeous environment for this show, oozing glamor from every bandstand, sheer drape and chandelier. The effect is to summon a retro room so rich in hue and seductive in ambiance that you find yourself not wanting to go back outside. They tried and failed to do this at 'Cabaret.' Here, every sequin shimmers. You could see dates all over the place warming up to whomever paid for their tickets.
I wouldn't claim there is anything extraordinary about Warren Leight and Isaac Oliver's book, which starts out by embracing Groff's own identity ('I'm Jonathan') and then mostly, and mostly weirdly, drops that convention as Darin takes over. Might have been fun to go all the way with the fusion.
But aside from offering lots of stage time to the excellent Lawrence and Henningsen, not to mention Michele Pawk, who essays the woman who raised the star, the show also plays to Groff's unusual strengths. He's a dynamic, live, in-the-moment actor, far more so than many of his peers, and as anyone who saw him in 'Merrily We Roll Along' well knows, he has more than a passing acquaintance with life's darker tones. He doesn't brood as Darin, which is just as well, but he also doesn't deify either, and neither does the show as a whole.
Add in exceptional arrangements of the Darin songbook from Andrew Resnick, a stunningly extensive parade of fashionista costumery from Catherine Zuber and some high-energy choreography from Shannon Lewis (who concentrates her work on three killer-glam back-up dancers, sizzlingly played by Christine Cornish, Julia Grondin and Valeria Yamin) and you have the kind of show that can please with its pizzazz but also make the average Broadway punter feel like they had a more personalized kind of experience than is on offer down the street.
It's hard to convey cabaret-style intimacy with this level of production values and that sweet spot will be very much occupied by 'Just in Time,' most likely for as long as Groff is willing.
In the end, people will come mostly to see Groff, as well they should. He's fabulous. Plus the timing is just right as this musical-theater actor, shy all those years ago in 'Spring Awakening,' now takes up the vital mantle of big Broadway star, a status he has approached before but never fully inhabited. Not until Bobby Darin came along to help.
Toward the end, Darin, having been through the wringer but not quite yet met his maker, takes his preferred stage at the Copacabana and shouts, with the cathartic joy of a man who has found his way home, 'I am a creature of the nightclub.'
On the night I was there, the audience roared, thinking that also of Groff and yet also well aware he's a talent who will just as easily roam elsewhere.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Tennessee's boozy history inspired speakeasy culture in Nashville neighborhoods
How Tennessee's boozy history inspired speakeasy culture in Nashville neighborhoods

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How Tennessee's boozy history inspired speakeasy culture in Nashville neighborhoods

DAVIDSON COUNTY, Tenn. (WKRN) — Speakeasy-style bars may be a hot trend in Music City, but their roots trace decades back into Tennessee's past of Prohibition. The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club on Gallatin Pike in East Nashville is one of dozens of speakeasies nestled in neighborhoods across Nashville. 'I think the first thing you're going to notice is, we're tricky to find,' explained Brandon Archilla, beverage director at The Fox. 'We're in a basement, essentially. Very similar to speakeasies of old that would've been in places that are most clandestine, out of the prying eye.' Archilla said the hideaway is one of the neighborhood's original cocktail bars. The intimate space has a tight-knit staff and seats just 40 people for drinking and dining by candlelight, about the smallest footprint you can have legally. 'We leaned on local companies to do the Art Deco styling you see in the metal work and the woodwork beneath the bar. The tables were handmade,' Archilla said. With hundreds of bottles of liquor from all over the world, and an exotic cocktail menu embracing a wide variety of flavor profiles, word of The Fox travels fast — although this talk of the town is more like a whisper. 'A lot of our regulars will tell me they do still 'speak easy' of us, and only tell certain people about this bar,' said Caleb Young, the speakeasy's head bartender. News 2 On Tour | Explore the communities that shape Middle Tennessee Speakeasies like The Fox are an ode to the Prohibition-era history of Tennessee. 'Tennessee was the first state to pass state-wide Prohibition in 1909. So, 11 years before the federal government did away with the sale and manufacturing of alcohol, Tennessee did. And that caused a controversy at first,' explained David Ewing, historian and ninth-generation Nashvillian. Ewing said in Nashville, the crackdown really came in 1915 when the mayor who didn't believe in enforcing Prohibition was thrown out of office. That was the start of what Ewing described as a 'cat-and-mouse game' between police, bar owners and whiskey makers. 'While you could not technically sell alcohol, they created locker clubs, where you could kind of bring your own and have your bottle stored in a locker,' Ewing said. Then, when Prohibition was repealed in 1934, Congress gave the power to write alcohol laws back to the states — so Tennessee put wine and beer back up for sale, but not liquor. 'Legally, you could not have a mixed drink in Nashville at a bar or restaurant until 1967,' Ewing said. Neighborhood News: Stories impacting your community | Read More Ewing explained Nashville's growth stalled with few developers wanting to invest in hotels and restaurants that couldn't sell mixed drinks. But, letting liquor flow in the 1970s and '80s led Nashville's nightlife to becoming what it is today. 'I guess it's kind of one of those things where it's like 'don't touch the cookie jar' — you want to touch the cookie jar!' Young said with a laugh. It's a time bartenders at The Fox can hardly imagine, but they keep that speakeasy spirit alive in every sip. 'The way that I embrace that Prohibition-style history, and that legacy, is making people feel special when they're here. That's the most important part of service for me,' Archilla said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Livestreamed Concert Tonight Marks Mabel Mercer Foundation Anniversary
Livestreamed Concert Tonight Marks Mabel Mercer Foundation Anniversary

Forbes

time13 hours ago

  • Forbes

Livestreamed Concert Tonight Marks Mabel Mercer Foundation Anniversary

The Mabel Mercer Foundation—which is dedicated to preserving and performing the art of cabaret—tonight is celebrating two milestones: its 40th anniversary and the 125th year of its namesake, the legendary singer, Mabel Mercer. Singer Mabel Mercer performing at a nightclub. (Photo by) The celebration will include a party and concert at 54 Below, the Broadway supper club in Manhattan. The party is sold out, but the concert will be livestreamed at 6:45 p.m. ET, with tickets available for $29. Artists performing will include those supported by Donald Smith, who established the foundation, and others who knew Mercer personally. They will include Carole J. Bufford, Natalie Douglas, Bryan Eng, Jeff Harnar, Karen Mason, Madalynn Mathews, MOIPEI (Mary, Maggy, and Marta), Lee Roy Reams, Steve Ross, Craig Rubano and KT Sullivan, the foundation's artistic director. They will be accompanied by Jon Weber on piano and Steve Doyle on bass. The non-profit Mabel Mercer Foundation's activities include serving as a central source of information for artists, presenters, promoters and the general public; sponsoring performances and broadcasts by new and established singers and entertainers; and presenting the annual New York Cabaret Convention at Frederick P. Rose Hall at Jazz at Lincoln Center. The foundation's outreach beyond New York City includes partnerships in the Cayman Islands and Durango, Colorado. The foundation also offers a number of educational programs, including a 12-week cabaret workshop led by its education director, Natalie Douglas, at the Professional Performing Arts High School in Manhattan; teen cabaret showcases (the next is scheduled to take place in January 2026); and an American songbook competition, meant, the foundation said, 'to inspire young performers to explore and celebrate the Great American Songbook,' with three prizes ranging from $1,000 to $2,500. According to the foundation, Mabel Mercer 'helped shape the American songbook and inspired iconic artists like Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday and Tony Bennett.' It also called the American Songbook 'one of our national treasures. Thus, the art of cabaret is a gateway to an eternal appreciation of such geniuses as George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart, Oscar Hammerstein II, Jerome Kern, Dorothy Fields, Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer, E. Y. Harburg, Burton Lane, Duke Ellington, Leonard Bernstein, Frank Loesser, Cy Coleman, Betty Comden and Adolph Green, Jule Styne, Jerry Herman and Stephen Sondheim, among many others. That American popular music and cabaret should — and must — thrive is the avowed declaration and dedication of The Mabel Mercer Foundation. As such, (its) efforts continue on a daily basis to promote the traditions so eloquently and unforgettably exemplified by Mabel Mercer, arguably the supreme cabaret artist of the twentieth century.' In an interview this week with Sullivan said Mercer wasn't 'just singing songs, just hitting notes. They are stories. I've noticed young people who are used to pop songs, when they get into the stories, they love it and they want to do more of them. That's great.' Sullivan has appeared in every New York Cabaret Convention since the inaugural event in 1989, and has performed at the Oak Room in the Algonquin Hotel and at the Neue Galerie's Café Sabarsky, both in New York, as well as at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., the London cabaret Crazy Coqs and many music festivals worldwide.

Glee Reunion: Chris Colfer and Darren Criss Bring #Klaine to the Tonys, 10 Years After Series Finale
Glee Reunion: Chris Colfer and Darren Criss Bring #Klaine to the Tonys, 10 Years After Series Finale

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Glee Reunion: Chris Colfer and Darren Criss Bring #Klaine to the Tonys, 10 Years After Series Finale

The 2025 Tony Awards was a big night for a lot of people — but mostly for the cast of Glee. Where do we even begin? Perhaps with Jonathan Groff (aka Jesse St. James) getting everyone on their feet with a performance from the Bobby Darin musical Just in Time? Or maybe Lea Michele (Rachel Berry) presenting an award while celebrating her own impending return to Broadway in the revival of Chess? Or how about Darren Criss (Blaine Anderson) taking home his first-ever Tony Award for his role in this year's Best Musical winner Maybe Happy Ending? More from TVLine Ratings: Tony Awards Surge 38% to Biggest Audience Since 2019 Patti LuPone Skips Tony Awards Amid Audra McDonald Controversy - Watch Oprah Winfrey Joke About It On-Air Tonys 2025: Hamilton's Original Broadway Cast Reunites for Sleek Medley - Watch These were all very exciting moments, sure, but we're actually here to highlight an off-camera incident that will make you feel like you're living a teenage dream: Chris Colfer (Kurt Hummell) posted a picture on Monday from a Tonys afterparty where he celebrated Criss' big win alongside his former TV hubby, giving Gleeks one more sweet hit of #Klaine. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Chris Colfer (@chriscolfer) Several of Colfer and Criss' former co-stars chimed in to celebrate the reunion, as well as Criss' win. Heather Morris (Brittany S. Pierce) and Amber Riley (Mercedes Jones) were among those who dropped supportive emojis under the photo. Coincidentally, the 2015 series finale of Glee also took place at the Tonys, with Rachel's now-husband Jesse cheering her on from the audience as she took home her first statue. And did we mention that Rachel also became a surrogate for Kurt and Blaine? That finale really did give us everything. Did seeing Colfer and Criss together again give you — as we used to say back when Glee was airing — all the feels? Drop a comment with your thoughts below. Glee's Not-So-Guilty Pleasures: 10 Songs We Still Listen to Regularly View List Best of TVLine 'Missing' Shows, Found! Get the Latest on Ahsoka, Monarch, P-Valley, Sugar, Anansi Boys and 25+ Others Yellowjackets Mysteries: An Up-to-Date List of the Series' Biggest Questions (and Answers?) The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store