The abundance of jukebox musicals on Broadway in recent years seemed reason enough to bring back for another round Grease, the 1973 megahit by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey, that had paved the way to the trend and made rock’n’roll acceptable on the musical theatre stage. The protagonists, this time around, were Max Crumm as Danny Zuko and Laura Osnes as Sandy Dumbrowski, both selected during a television contest by director Kathleen Marshall. With additional songs interspersed within the score, it was hoped the show would have a long life on the boards, after it opened on August 19, 2007. It hung around for 554 performances, demonstrating at least that Rydel High and its denizens still exerted a popular attraction.
On the first day of school. Rizzo, Frenchy, Marty, and Jan, who constitute the wise-cracking, boy-crazy Pink Ladies gang, meet goody-two-shoes newcomer Sandy Dumbrowski, and press her for details of her recent romance. Meanwhile, Danny Zuko, leader of the Burger Palace Boys, boasts to Kenickie, Doody, Roger, and Sonny about the girl he met (“Summer Nights”). But when Danny and Sandy meet again, Danny is too cool to admit he has fallen for a square chick like her
Doody has been taking guitar lessons, and in “Those Magic Changes” we find out that those magic changes aren’t confined to romance – they’re also about his imagination. Doody sees himself as a rock-and-roll idol.
Eager to fit in during a pajama party at Marty’s, Sandy undergoes classic rites of passage: she smokes a ciggie-butt, guzzles cheap wine, gets an ear pierced. The worldly Marty reveals that she is engaged to a Marine. Though his absence makes her grow fond, his presents make her grow fonder (“Freddy, My Love”).
To the other guys, Kenickie’s new car looks like a hunk of junk, but to him it’s “Greased Lightnin’,” a hot-rodding boudoir on wheels. Rizzo offers a rather more clear-eyed assessment of Kenickie’s wheels.
During cheerleader tryouts ("Rydell Fight Song"), Sandy and Danny manage a rapprochement. To impress Sandy, he even promises to try out for the track team. Preening, pushy Patty Simcox comes between the two.
Things are going more smoothly for Roger and Jan. He’s the mooning champ of Rydell High – he hangs his bare butt out of car windows and so on. He confesses to Jan that he’s been “Mooning” for her.
After a spat with Kenickie, Rizzo asks Danny to take her to the dance. She mocks the virginal Sandy with “Look at Me, I’m Sandra Dee.” Sandy shows her mettle when she attacks Rizzo for lampooning her. Still, she’s too hurt by Danny’s seeming indifference to see him any more (“Since I Don’t Have You”). Everyone – except Sandy – heads to the dance (“We Go Together”).
While her friends dance up a storm to “Shakin’ at the High School Hop,” Sandy bemoans the bitter pill pride has forced her to swallow (“It’s Raining on Prom Night”). Celebrity deejay Vince Fontaine judges the dance contest (“Born to Hand Jive”) which Danny wins partnering Cha-Cha Degregorio, the “best dancer at St. Bernadette’s.”
Frenchy has dropped out of High School in order to become a beautician. But she’s already quit beauty school. What to do? A guardian angel offers soulful advice in “Beauty School Dropout.”
Sandy and Danny finally patch things up at the Twi-Lite Drive-In ("Sandy"), but he moves too fast for her. “Just because you give me your ring doesn’t mean we’re gonna go all the way,” she fumes.
During a party in Rizzo’s rec room, Doody and Kenickie sing “Rock-and-Roll Party Queen.” Rizzo is worried that she might be pregnant, but when Sandy expresses sympathy, Rizzo responds with the stinging “There Are Worse Things I Could Do.” Sandy clues Rizzo in to a few things about herself, and the two come to an understanding (“Look at Me, I’m Sandra Dee” – reprise).
At Burger Palace Danny shows up wearing a letter sweater. To please Sandy, he has joined the track team. Sandy enters wearing skin-tight slacks, big earrings, a plunging neckline, and a kitten-with-a-whip hairdo. To please Danny she’s transformed herself into a greaser’s dream date ("You're the One that I Want"). Rizzo is relieved to learn that she isn’t p.g. after all – false alarm. She and Kenickie reunite. Happily-ever-after time for all ("We Go Together" – reprise).
Danny Zuko: Max Crumm
Sandy Dumbrowski: Laura Osnes
Kenickie: Matthew Saldivar
Sonny Latierri: Jose Restrepo
Roger: Daniel Everidge
Doody: Ryan Patrick Binder
Betty Rizzo: Jenny Powers
Marty: Robyn Hurder
Jan: Lindsay Mendez
Frenchy: Kirsten Wyatt
Patty Simcox: Allison Fischer
Eugene Florczyk: Jamison Scott
Miss Lynch: Susan Blommaert
Vince Fontaine: Jeb Brown
Cha-Cha DiGregorio: Natalie Hill
Teen Angel: Stephen R. Buntrock
Ensemble: Josh Franklin, Cody Green, Natalie Hill, Emily Padgett, Keven Quillon, Brian Sears, Christina Sivrich, Anna Aimee White
Swings: Matthew Hydzik, Amber Stone
Orchestra:
Conductor/synthesizer: Kimberly Grigsby
Piano/synthesizer/Associate Conductor: Chris Fenwick
Drums/conga: John Clancy
Electric bass/acoustic bass: Michael Blanco
Acoustic guitar/electric guitar: Michael Aarons
Tenor sax/woodwinds: John Scarpulla
Baritone sax/woodwinds: Jack Bashkow
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