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Review: Long-Lost ‘Love Life' Still Has a Lot to Say About America

Review: Long-Lost ‘Love Life' Still Has a Lot to Say About America

New York Times27-03-2025
In recent years, Encores! has presented productions of musicals with good name recognition, including 'Into the Woods,' 'Titanic' and 'Urinetown.' With its latest offering, 'Love Life,' the series returns to its original mission statement by presenting an obscure show, one devoid of standards at that — nothing in it would start a singalong at even the most hard-core piano bar.
Kurt Weill and Alan Jay Lerner's musical opened on Broadway in 1948, ran for 252 performances and over the years has developed a cult following largely thanks to its daring storytelling. It touched on what constitutes the fabric of American life and integrated vaudevillian interludes, thus paving the way for the likes of 'Cabaret' and 'Chicago.'
Yet the show has been absent from New York stages in the intervening decades. There wasn't even an original cast recording to help popularize the score. There is grainy footage of one of its original stars, Nanette Fabray, performing 'Green-Up Time' on 'The Ed Sullivan Show,' and some numbers have popped up on various albums, like Bryn Terfel's cover of 'Here I'll Stay.' But for the most part, 'Love Life' is fairly unknown these days.
Naturally, this made it a desirable target for Encores!, which is presenting a semi-staged production through Sunday at New York City Center.
As directed by Victoria Clark, this 'Love Life' gives us only glimpses of the musical's potential. The vocals are top-shelf, with particularly thrilling ensemble singing and harmonies, especially on 'Susan's Dream,' which almost gets within reach of the Encores! high-water mark of 'Sing for Your Supper' in its 1997 production of 'The Boys From Syracuse.' (Rob Berman conducts the onstage orchestra.)
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