Pantages Theatre
I’ve seen the musical Spamalot several times but I realized, sitting in the Pantages for opening night for the national tour resurrecting the 2023 Broadway revival, it’s been almost 20 years since my last viewing when it opened with great glitz and added splendor at the Wynn in Las Vegas.
What has changed? Well, certainly not the outrageously irreverent humor that first saw light of day in the 1975 film parody Monty Python and the Holy Grail, loosely—in the extreme—based on the legend of King Arthur and the mythical kingdom of Camelot.
The musical adaptation, originally starring Tim Curry, directed by Mike Nichols, choreographed by Casey Nicholaw, with music by John du Prez and Python’s fearless leader Eric Idle and featuring lyrics and book by Idle, debuted on Broadway in 2005 and went on to be nominated for 14 Tony Awards, winning three—including Best Musical.
Simply, Spamalot has been a global cultural phenomenon, from its beginning at Chicago’s Schubert in 2004 to its subsequent New York run the following year that ran for 1,575 performances and was seen by two million people.
It played both in London’s West End and toured North America simultaneously for a staggering four years from 2006 to 2009, and second and third national tours took to the road from 2010 to 2012—and then another from 2012 to 2014.
It has been mounted worldwide in Sydney, Barcelona, Cologne, Budapest, Stockholm, Mexico City, Tokyo, Oslo, as well as its two year run at the Wynn and also appeared at Canada’s Stratford Festival. Images of the show even became a series of postage stamps for Britain’s Royal Mail Service.
Idle’s hugely popular slapstick cashcow has proven to be a stroke of marketing genius, generating well over $300 million in ticket sales since its inception. Talk about always looking on the bright side of life, eh?
This new and even more broadly irreverent retelling of the legend of Arthur and his illustrious Knights of the Round Table, chronicling the outrageously armored and wigged boys’ Keystone Cop-esque search for you-know-what, once again pays quintessential homage to the movie, but here’s where one of two major differences from the original is evident.
First of all, Nichols’ inaugural production whimsically featured intentionally cardboard-y sets and homemade looking props made to seem as though they were lifted directly from decorations created for a high school homecoming dance in Podunk, Iowa, while the new version takes advantage of one of the American theatre’s most popularized assets: grandly animated and blazingly colorful video projections.
As with many other contemporary musical presentations both in New York and on tour, the visual designs here by Paul Tate dePoo III (honest) are incredibly imaginative, adding immensely to the cartoon-like nature of Idle’s fantasy tale.
I almost chose not to attend the Pantages opening of the current national tour directed by and featuring inventively hairbrained choreography by Josh Rhodes, which again took the Big Apple by the killer bunnies in 2023-2024. My partner Hugh, however, is a diehard Pythonian and, being a few centuries younger than I am, had never seen the musical. And let me tell you, I loved the production as much as he did.
There are once again plenty of gorgeous leggy showgirls to ogle, this time out costumed with true razzle-dazzle by Sesame Street’s Jen Caprio, all of whom flash their feathers and hang on the arm of the newest King Arthur (Major Attaway) and his noble court of worldclass comedic buffoons.
There are also enough familiar Monty Python references thrown in whenever possible for the multitudes of rabid Flying Circus fans to make this goofy musical more watchable than ever. If anything can wipe away the stress of dealing with what’s happening to our country at the hands of a far more dangerous real-life clown, this is the one.
The few uninitiated folks under 35 or so who never watch cable or didn’t grow up with parents intent on performing old Python routines in their living rooms might be a tad bewildered when the giggles from the audience come before the gag ends. The mere appearance of a guy on stilts sporting ram’s horns (played with perfect seriousness by Chris Collins Pisano) provokes instant hilarity and the first declaration of the word “Ni” is enough to send many in attendance into wild peels of laughter. Punchlines in Spamalot are almost unnecessary.
All the requisite paraphernalia is here, from that lovably terrorizing fluffy red-eyed Jekyll and Hyde-bred bunny to those familiar flatulent taunting Frenchmen to characters calling for the locals to bring out their dead. One guy even gets to carry a rubber joke store chicken. How cool is that?
Attaway, so memorable as the Genie in Broadway’s Aladdin, is exceptional as Arthur, filling the cavernous Pantages with both his booming voice and infectious personality. Amanda Robles as the Lady of the Lake also has quite astounding lung power, especially in the knockout “Diva’s Lament.”
Blake Segal is a charmer as Arthur’s poor overloaded loyal servant Patsy, Leo Roberts is a standout as Sir Galahad and the father of the super-gay Prince Herbert—a role that brings another uproariously funny turn by Steven Telsey, who impressively doubles as many other characters, including the Historian (Narrator), Not Dead Fred, and various babies, nuns, and mimes.
As Sir Robin (a role originated by David Hyde Pierce and more recently Michael Urie in this revival on Broadway), Sean Bell is hilarious, particularly in the Al Jolson-inspired “You Won’t Succeed on Broadway [If You Don’t Have a Jew],” which concludes with a dead-on line of willing Knights doing the bottle dance from Fiddler on the Roof.
The entire company could not be more willing to pull out the stops, creating one of the tightest and most watchable ensemble casts I’ve enjoyed in a long time, and musical director Jonathan W. Gorst also deserves praise for leading the production’s spirited full orchestra who keep the performers quite literally on their toes. If anyone thinks, as I almost did, they’ve seen Spamalot so many times that this remounting could not offer anything new, think again. It is as delightful as ever, if not more so.
I mentioned there were two things I remembered fondly about the original production of Spamalot and the second, if you’ll allow the indulgence, is a personal memory. When I last saw the musical in 2007, I was still traveling to Vegas every three weeks or so writing a monthly entertainment-oriented column in the long-gone Salon City Magazine that I called “Vegas Daze.”