Editorial Assistant Franki Weddington attended the opening night performance of Spamalot last night. Here's her wrap:
Last night, I went to Tampa Bay Performing Arts Centers opening performance of Monty Python's Spamalot, the Tony-winning Broadway musical ripped off from Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Like most people, I thought that Grail had perfected the fart jokes, killer bunnies, and not-yet-dead schtick, but that was before I saw Spamalot and that shit was downright side-splitting. Maybe even better (gasp!) than the movie. Pictured: Richard Chamberlain as King Arthur, and Jeff Dumas as Patsy; photo by Joan Marcus
My boyfriend, who is regularly dragged along to various theater events and musicals, even liked it. Which just goes to show that even if you dont get all the Broadway-people-are-stuffshirts jokes, youll still appreciate the irreverence, candor, and modern humor Spamalot has to offer.
The musical borrows heavily from Monty Pythons most popular scenes, including a number called I Am Not Yet Dead, where a stack of plague victims leap from their cart into a rip-roaring song and dance. Later, Always Look on the Bright Side of Life becomes a pep talk to King Arthur, who is having terrible trouble finding a shrubbery for the Knights Who Say Ni.
This article appears in Mar 4-10, 2009.
