The second act moves between their popular national tour and Effie’s efforts at self-reinvention, which only arrives when C.C.-who has fallen in love with Effie’s replacement Michelle (Aeriel Williams)-realizes what an idiot he has been to follow the untrustworthy and unbending Taylor and returns to his sister, bringing with him the emotional ballad that will resurrect her career: “One Night Only.” (To underscore what a total scumbag he truly is, Taylor has the Dreams record an unsanctioned, upbeat, competing version and does his best to bring Effie’s version down.) (Denzel DeAngelo Fields) succumbs to the lure of fame and fortune and abandons her for the Dreams’ rising star. Of course, Deena and the Dreams become a hyper-successful national sensation, while Effie returns to Chicago alone. So he switches his affection to Deena, rebranding the group as “Deena and the Dreams,” and sends his former lover and lead singer packing. When it comes time to break with the undeniably talented but unpredictable and self-destructive Early and go on their own, though, Taylor decides that Effie, whose powerful voice has been the foundation of their sound, has become as unreliable as Early and that her physical appearance won’t play on TV. They find it thanks to Taylor (who had glommed onto the needy Effie in order to attach himself to them) and end up singing backup on tour with established soul star Jimmy “Thunder” Early (Ben Toomer). This moving, provocative moment is the culmination of the first half of Dreamgirls’ story, a tale that mirrors that of Diana Ross and the Supremes (despite protestation from its author, Tom Eyen, that its sources are far more diverse than that).Įffie had traveled from Chicago to New York with her friends and fellow “Dreamettes” Deena (Taylor Marie Daniel) and Lorrell (Mariah Lyttle) looking for a chance to break into the music business. (Lorenzo Rush Jr.), is a self-interested cad who is utterly unworthy of such devotion. Despite his infidelity and painful professional betrayal, Effie wants him to know that she is sticking around: “Tear down the mountains/ Yell, scream and shout/ You can say what you want/ I’m not walkin’ out.” Sadly, as we already know and Effie will learn, the man she has tied herself to, Curtis Taylor, Jr. Near the end of Act One of Dreamgirls, the character Effie (I saw Naima Alakham but Breyannah Tillman also plays the part) has one of the most powerhouse numbers in theatre history, “And I Am Telling You,” in which she declares to the man she loves that she is going nowhere, even as he tries to dump her.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |