‘MJ’ review: Michael Jackson Broadway show sanitizes his life and music

It’s not a easy musical.

The troubles over at “MJ: The Musical,” the brand new present about Michael Jackson that opened Tuesday evening on Broadway, are a lot larger than the controversy surrounding its topic — though the 2 are carefully linked. 

Whereas the lifeless script is written by Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage of “Ruined,” the pat dialogue feels as if it was co-authored by a lawyer for the Jackson property — one of many producers — with Wite-Out and a Sharpie. 


Theater overview


MJ

Operating time: 2 hours, half-hour, with one intermission. Neil Simon Theatre, 250 W. 52nd St.

When Michael (Myles Frost, terrific) isn’t talking in hokey motivational phrases — “An elephant is at all times able to go as a result of he sleeps standing up” — he’s giving obscure p.r. statements of innocence about unspecified infractions. 

“It doesn't matter what I do, it at all times will get twisted,” he says to an MTV documentarian (Whitney Bashor) through the 1992 rehearsals for his “Harmful” tour, the place “MJ” is about. What he’s referring to is the “Wacko Jacko” nickname newspapers gave the singer — who died in 2009 — due to his continuously unusual conduct.

No allegations of sexually abusing youngsters had been introduced in opposition to Jackson till Jordy Chandler did so in 1993 (the case was settled for $23 million). So these common slumber events with 8-year-olds on the dwelling of the world’s most well-known man that the press so “twisted” don't come up within the musical. Superb.

Nonetheless, the singer retains decrying “the fixed noise, the media, the lies.” 

Myles Frost and the cast of "MJ."
Myles Frost (heart) performs Michael in “MJ: The Musical.”
Matthew Murphy

Michael complains to MTV about journalists and to his enterprise supervisor about tour prices. He lists off his charity work (once more, attorneys), giggles rather a lot, takes painkillers and tells his dancers to do higher. Then the forged performs one other quantity in exercise garments.

We be taught subsequent to nothing a couple of deeply fascinating determine aside from a surface-level examination of his troublesome childhood through the Jackson 5 days with monster dad Joe Jackson (Quentin Earl Darrington, who additionally performs tour supervisor Rob) and the way that knowledgeable his tireless value ethic.

In skipping over essentially the most dramatic components of his life, Nottage seeks to disconnect the artist from the artwork. That’s been efficiently performed earlier than with Jackson: in Cirque du Soleil’s music-centric present “Michael Jackson: One” in Las Vegas and “Thriller” in London. 

Michael Jackson (Myles Frost) performs "Smooth Criminal."
Michael performs “Clean Prison.”
Matthew Murphy

Specializing in his wonderful songs is the appropriate tack. Who doesn’t love Jackson’s catalog? I definitely do. “Thriller” and “Billie Jean” are within the present, together with some 30 others, corresponding to “Beat It,” “Clean Prison” and “Don’t Cease ’til You Get Sufficient.” So, make them explode off the stage.

However “MJ,” directed and choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon, doesn't match or actually strategy the electrical energy of the King of Pop, who was an unparalleled dwell performer. The rehearsal-room setting and narrative randomness, notably within the winding second act, tamps down the live performance vitality. 

That’s not the fault of Frost, the absurdly proficient newcomer who captures Jackson’s voice and physicality properly. Quite the opposite, we really feel fortunate to be witnessing the delivery of a brand new Broadway star. The identical is true of the great Tavon Olds-Pattern as “Thriller”-era Michael who, beaming, transports us again to the Eighties, even when the manufacturing across the actor doesn't. As mother Katherine Jackson, Ayana George has the present’s greatest musical second when she duets on “I’ll Be There” together with her son.

All, nonetheless, are hobbled by an indecisive script — the documentary plot and backstory are clumsily mixed, and the cartoonish characters are straight outta “Scooby-Doo” — and low-energy, unattractive staging.   

Michael Jackson (Myles Frost, center) and his dancers rehearse the "Dangerous" tour in "MJ."
Michael and his dancers rehearse for the King of Pop’s 1992 “Harmful” tour.
Matthew Murphy

Derek McLane’s units are principally grey, identical to these of Wheeldon’s “An American in Paris,” probably to permit the dancing to pop in opposition to them. Doesn’t work. Michael wears black and white much more typically than purple, and the colorlessness of the stage flatters no person.

The one flicker of Jackson’s (and Wheeldon’s) genius comes earlier than Michael performs “Clean Prison,” when stand-ins for Bob Fosse, Fred Astaire and the Nicholas Brothers take the stage, and we see how these icons affect Michael’s motion.  

The sequence is novel, invigorating and sensible — precisely what the remainder of “MJ” isn’t.

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