Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,291,098 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

`High School Musical': Now on ice, too


"High School Musical" in the ice rink: The possibilities tease the brain. Tonya Harding as blond mean girl Sharpay? Nancy Kerrigan as dark-haired sweetheart Gabriella? Oops. We're like, TOTALLY dating ourselves.

Anyway, the tween audience isn't here to see medal-worthy double axels, triple salchows and camel spins. They're here to sing along with every word of every song, by now irreversibly implanted in their brains.

But it must be said that the skating in "High School Musical: The Ice Tour" is perfectly enjoyable, as is the choreography, faithfully transplanted from film to ice. So if the kids don't notice, the adults probably will _ that is, if they can get over the price of the pre-packed cotton candy topped by a plastic bowler hat (15 smackeroos, at Madison Square Garden's kickoff performances last weekend).

The ice tour is just one tentacle of the huge HSM franchise, which has included a concert tour, a current stage show and a wide merchandising net. (The original movie soundtrack was the top-selling CD of 2006.) Produced by the film's director, Kenny Ortega, and Feld Entertainment, it consists of three companies: two domestic and one international.

On premiere night, Ortega whipped his young fans into readiness, shouting repeatedly: "What team?" The crowd roared back: "WILDCATS!" (And if you didn't know the answer to that one, you likely don't have a kid _ especially of the female variety _ between 6 and 13.)

The songs are punctuated by just enough snippets of dialogue to make the plot clear, not that most kids need any help with the, um, plot thing. Their favorite moments happen when they can show they know what's coming next, as when Kelsi, the songwriter, begs them to think up a title for her new song _ the one that starts "Na na na na. ..." (You know.)

The show clears up at least one mystery: Can you dribble a basketball on ice? Why, yes _ a slew of them fall to the rink for the catchy "Get'cha Head in the Game." The surface also allows the Esther Williams-style bathing beauties in Sharpay's "Fabulous" to glide around on inflatable pool floats.

And you could argue that Troy's defiant "Bet on It" anthem is actually more palatable here than in the movie, where he looked kind of silly (well, some of us adults think) dressed in all black on a sun-drenched lawn, swinging a golf club for dramatic emphasis.

Speaking of clothes, the brightly colored costumes are fervently faithful to the original, down to Sharpay's cute pink suit. But maybe one of them could have been a little less faithful. Those ankle-length scarves worn by Ms. Darbus, the flamboyant drama teacher? TOTALLY scary on the ice.

Copyright 2007 AP News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:JOCELYN NOVECK
Publication:AP News
Date:Oct 1, 2007
Words:452
Previous Article:Feds claim U.S. cocaine supply drops
Next Article:The Plaza hotel celebrates 100 years



Related Articles
Mediawatch.(MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT)(Statistical table)
'SCHOOL' IN SESSION DISNEY'S MUSICAL HITS RIGHT NOTE WITH REGIONAL THEATERS.(U)
'HIGH SCHOOL' COOL HOW CHOREOGRAPHER CHARLES KLAPOW GOT HIMSELF OFF THIN ICE.(LA.COM)
THE HIGHLIGHTS - AND LOWLIGHTS - OF L.A.'S THEATER SEASON.(LA.COM)
`High School Musical' hits the ice
Golden Globes set new faces on road to stardom
'High School Musical' star Zac Efron has appendix removed in Los Angeles, publicist says
'High School Musical' star Zac Efron has appendix removed in Los Angeles, publicist says
Zac Efron has emergency appendectomy

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles