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Camelot (Broadway Version) by Marty Callner
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DVD detailsActor: Barrie Ingham, James Valentine (II), Meg Bussert, Richard Harris, Richard Muenz Director: Marty Callner DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 147 minutes DVD Release Date: 2007-05-01 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Acorn Media
DVD Reviews of Camelot (Broadway Version)DVD Review: A Not So Brief and Shining Moment Summary: 1 StarsRun away Guinevere, run away! While there may "not be a more congenial spot than Camelot," this Camelot is ruled by a king who is more leche that liege.
As a former Broadway director/choreographer and actor, and one who has directed Camelot as well as seen many productions of it including the original, you can not begin to imagine my utter dismay with this production. From the moment the aging and foppish Richard Harris began prancing about the stage without motivation or apparent direction while mugging to the audience and incessantly twirling his stadium scarf like some amateur stripper twirling a boa, I was appaled. I was not expecting Burton; was only hoping that I might find the King Arthur of the film; but certainly did not expect to find a Richard Harris festooned in undecipherable garb and topped with a blond page boy hair style makimg him appear (and act) more Duke (Patty) than King (Arthur). What Harris lost in appearance and demeanor he totally forfeited in acting and singing. While never all that gifted an actor or singer, what little gift he had has since been given away. . . far, far away.
Meg Bussert's singing was adequate but she seemed unsure of who her character was exactly. Was she the young frightened innocent finding herself in a strange land to marry a man she had never met, or a modern day twenty-something looking for someone, anyone, with whom to "hook-up." We are never quite sure, but this audience member could smell the wood burning beneath the stake during the opening number in which she seemed part Guinevere and part Ado Annie ready to break any moment into a quick rendition of "I'm Just A Girl Who Can't Say No."
There is simply nothing to like about this production of Camelot. The sets are symbolic of nothing; the properties are anachronistic such as the yard lanterns carried in the medieval wedding ceremony; the staging is something you might expect from a director of MTV videos (Oh, that's right, it was directed by an MTV video director!); the choreography is Martha Graham meets Monty Python; the sound is as if it were recorded in a box car; and the film itself is grainey and poorly focused.
Now the performace is not without merit. I am currently using it in both my directing and acting classes at the university where I teach as examples of bad directing and bad acting. It is perfect for that purpose.
Camelot is an under-appreciated Lerner and Loewe show and this production will do nothing to change that. Instead, and while I am loath to recommend film versions of Broadway musicals, buy the film version. It is not totally true to the original and while Richard Harris still stars as Arthur, his boyish good looks come across more as impish rather than lascivious (as should be), and the production is breathtakingly beautiful.
DVD Review: Camelot Summary: 5 StarsI have been looking for this Video for almost 20 years. I first saw it on HBO and loved it. I have since bought other versions of Camelot starring Richard Harris, but this was my favorite. I loved Richard Meutz as Lancelot. My daughter also has been looking for this version and I let her know where to find it. I am thrilled with it.
DVD Review: Camelot (broadway version) Summary: 5 StarsThe stage show of Camelot with Richard Harris at his best, filmed in front of a live audience in the theatre in 1982 and with the camers capturing the intimacy of the performers. A great cast bring this moving story to life with the wonderful score of Lerner and Lowe, a gem to own for every theatre lover.
Movie versions can't give the spontaneity and atmosphere of a performance before a live audience and it is to be hoped we see more filmed stage shows especially as technology is so much better in capturing the event
DVD Review: Great Item Summary: 5 StarsI was so happy when I finally found this DVD. I saw the original that aired on HBO is the early 80's. For so long I searched for a way to see this again as it was a fond memory of my younger days. Thanks to Amazon I found it.
I watched it within minutes of receiving it in the mail and it brought back so many memories for me. I was thrilled to share this with my own daughters.
DVD Review: Arthur strives to fulfill his ideals for a just and peaceful kingdom Summary: 5 StarsCamelot is a DVD rendition of Lerner and Loewe's Tony-nominated play of King Arthur's court, performed live on a Broadway stage and featuring legendary actor Richard Harris as King Arthur himself. In Camelot, King Arthur strives to fulfill his ideals for a just and peaceful kingdom, yet his dreams are betrayed when a doomed love arises between Queen Guenevere (Meg Bussert) and Arthur's closest friend, Lancelot (Richard Muenz). Close-up shots are judiciously applied to capture the distinctive moments of the stage performance; extras include production notes, the original Broadway playbill on DVD-ROM, and biographies of Lerner & Loewe as well as Richard Harris. A "must-have" especially for live theater fans. 147 min., closed captioned.
Description of Camelot (Broadway Version)Experience Camelot's "one brief, shining moment" as Lerner and Loewe envisioned it-live on a Broadway stage. Working at the top of his talent, Richard Harris heads an all-star cast in one of Broadway's wittiest, most literate musicals, filled with memorable tunes. Recorded at New York's historic Winter Garden Theatre in 1982, this production captures all the immediacy and intimacy of a live performance viewed from the best seat in the house. Idealistic King Arthur longs to create a perfectly principled kingdom, but sees his dream undone by a tragic love triangle involving Queen Guenevere (Meg Bussert) and his best friend Lancelot (Richard Muenz). In this thoroughly engaging Tony®-nominated production, the medieval monarch's vision-a place where "violence is not strength, and compassion is not weakness"-speaks to our time and for all time. Recommended for family viewing by the National Education Association DVD SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE original Broadway PLAYBILL? (DVD-ROM) and bios of Lerner & Loewe and Richard Harris. A live-on-stage performance filmed for HBO in 1982, Camelot returns Richard Harris to the role he immortalized on film in 1967. Harris replaced the original King Arthur, Richard Burton, in this revival production as it was on its way to New York's Winter Garden Theatre, which turned out to be Harris' only role on the Broadway stage. Fifteen years later, he's an older and wiser Arthur, a little more world-weary but still with a twinkle in his eye. He's paired with Meg Bussert, whose Guinevere is not as beautiful as Vanessa Redgrave in the film, but a better singer and appropriately younger. Bussert, who was Tony-nominated for her role in Brigadoon the year before, sounds eerily like original Broadway star Julie Andrews at times. Richard Muenz (The Most Happy Fella revival) plays Lancelot, Barrie Ingham plays Pellinore, and Richard Backus is Mordred. Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's score is still a great classic, and here two songs cut from the movie are restored, "Before I Gaze at You Again" and "The Seven Deadly Virtues," but inexplicably cut is "Then You May Take Me to the Fair." Not surprisingly the production has a more stagebound feel compared to the sumptuous feature film, but it's good to have a more faithful version of the show available on DVD. --David Horiuchi
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