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A NOT-SO-SHINING `CAMELOT'.


Byline: Evan Henerson Theater Critic

The ``one brief shining moment'' eternally prophesied for Lerner and Loewe's ``Camelot'' still hasn't arrived.

And don't think people aren't still waiting for it. A King Arthur King Arthur: see Arthurian legend.  musical born of -- and inspired by -- the Kennedy era, great songs, classic tale, recognizable characters, a sword called Excalibur ... Robert Goulet Robert Gerard Goulet (born November 26 1933 in Lawrence, Massachusetts) is an American entertainer.

Goulet rose to international stardom in 1960 as Lancelot in Lerner and Loewe's hit Broadway musical, Camelot.
 tours with it every so often. There's not a high school or dinner theater in America that hasn't tried it.

Is the time ripe for a newer, better incarnation? McCoy Rigby Entertainment clearly thinks so. With Michael York Michael or Mike York may refer to:
  • Michael York (actor), actor
  • Michael York (field hockey player), field hockey player
  • Mike York, ice hockey player
  • Mike York (MLB pitcher), major league player
  • Dr.
 heading the cast and a $2 million budget, you'd figure that the producers had another shining city Shining City is a play by Conor McPherson, set in Dublin which was first performed in London's West End at the Royal Court Theatre in June 2004.

It opened at the Biltmore Theatre on May 9, 2006. External links
  • http://arts.guardian.co.
 in its sights when it launched its touring revival of ``Camelot'' from the La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts The Theatre for the Performing Arts is a 7,000 seat theater located in the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. History
The Performing Arts Center or the Aladdin Theatre for the Performing Arts
. (Next stop: San Jose.)

These are, alas, resources badly deployed. Director Glenn Casale and the Alan Jay Lerner Noun 1. Alan Jay Lerner - United States lyricist who collaborated on musicals with Frederick Loewe (1918-1986)
Lerner
 estate have not solved the musical's clunky book, and the production -- as conventionally pretty as it often looks -- is frequently dull and fatally miscast mis·cast  
tr.v. mis·cast, mis·cast·ing, mis·casts
1. To cast in an unsuitable role.

2. To cast (a role, play, or film) inappropriately.
.

York is buyable as a good-hearted statesman thrust upon a throne for which he's not ideally suited, but he's nobody's best choice for a non-thinker.

As Guenevere, Rachel York (no relation to Michael) has no vocal difficulties, and she can weave her way around a ballad (``Before I Gaze at You Again'') or an upbeat flirty number (``Take Me to the Fair'') with equal brio. Rachel York's forte, however, is musical comedy. (Her Reno Sweeney of Reprise's! ``Anything Goes'' positively killed.) Asking her to be the tortured queen -- in love with one man, in lust with another -- is no better a fit than the Michael York/Arthur assignment.

Come to think of it, there's a certain universal discomfort that overhangs Casale's entire endeavor; nearly everybody seems out of place or a step behind. The first act -- an extended set-up during which not much happens -- runs long, while the action-heavy finale passes quickly.

Meanwhile, we're stuck waiting for a downfall that everybody knows is coming. It's ``Titanic: The Musical'' all over again: The iceberg is coming.

I refer, of course, to the Guenevere-Lancelot hook-up. He's ultra-conceited and virtuous to a fault. She's young, lusty lust·y  
adj. lust·i·er, lust·i·est
1. Full of vigor or vitality; robust.

2. Powerful; strong: a lusty cry.

3. Lustful.

4. Merry; joyous.
 and very tempting, and the fate of the kingdom hangs in the balance of their union. These circumstances should be enough to keep an audience pinned and needled for a couple of hours, no?

No. James Barbour has played Lancelot before, and, like Rachel York, he has an amazing voice. In this ``Camelot,'' however, he's saddled with a bizarre French accent and frequently walks around as though his armor's strapped on too tightly.

The overhangs and pre-Raphaelite-inspired decor of John Iacovelli's sets make for some comely come·ly  
adj. come·li·er, come·li·est
1. Pleasing and wholesome in appearance; attractive. See Synonyms at beautiful.

2. Suitable; seemly: comely behavior.
 scenery, and Marcy Froehlich's costumes have a certain colorful opulence. McCoy Rigby, a theatrical company that has made a cottage industry of ``Peter Pan,'' clearly couldn't resist spiriting Eric Anderson's Merlin out of the action via flight and wires.

In this ``Camelot,'' to paraphrase a lyric, ``That's how conditions are.'' Would that they were better.

Evan Henerson, (818) 713-3651

evan.henerson@dailynews.com

CAMELOT - Two stars

Where: La Mirada Theatre for the Performing Arts, 14900 La Mirada Blvd., La Mirada.

When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 and 7 p.m. Sunday; through Jan. 28.

Tickets: $37.50 to $45. (562) 944-9801 or visit www.lamiradatheatre.com.

In a nutshell: Snores and sorcery sorcery: see incantation; magic; spell; witchcraft.
Sorcery
Sorrow (See GRIEF.)

sorcerer’s apprentice

finds a spell that makes objects do the cleanup work. [Fr.
 and miscast leads.

CAPTION(S):

photo

Photo:

Michael York, left, Time Winters, Rachel York and James Barbour resurrect Lerner and Loewe's ``Camelot'' for a national tour with the eventual goal of bringing it to Broadway.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jan 19, 2007
Words:609
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