
From there, Christopher Ashley really finds his own pacing, with the appropriately charming "Suddenly," followed by the impressive non-disco rhythms of the slow jazz "Whenever You're Away From Me" and '40s/'80s clash on "Dancin'." Unfortunately, the helium runs out shortly after "Strange Magic" (which, like most of the show is really only held aloft by the strong, energetic voices): while the sight gags improve (roller skates and leg warmers are joined by Pegasus, a Cyclops, and a centaur), the music starts getting repetitious. The glitzy, catchy finale, "Xanadu" only manages to remind the audience that it's just watched something glitzy and catchy, but doesn't feel like a real ending. Douglas Carter Beane's played the show so much for laughs that he really doesn't have anywhere to go beyond the Broadway jokes.
Let's call a disco ball a disco ball: Xanadu is a giant in-joke that's supported by some truly gifted performers, particularly Curtis Holbrook. (Cheyenne Jackson is dead-on as a vapid Venice Beach artist, but he overplays it into a hokey, homegrown monotony.) But when the jokes pile on the shallow spine of the film, and numbers with Tony Roberts remain resolutely flat (being old and famous does not get you a free ride), it's not really much to watch. Hilton Als (of The New Yorker) calls the show anti-Broadway, but while that may have been true for the old days of Broadway, this self-referential pomp and substanceless circumstance is no different from a Mel Brooks vehicle, or, say, Spamalot, across the street.
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