Mandy Patinkin September 20, 2013
Dressed for Success: Mandy Patinkin at Cerritos
By Glen Creason
For most people
in 2013 America, Mandy Patinkin is the character Saul Berenson on the hit
television show “Homeland.” Yet, on
Friday night at the Cerritos Center, the large and adoring audience on hand
could have cared less about his acting ability because they were there to hear
the man sing. Oh, how he did sing with all his heart and with every molecule of
energy in his very fit sixty-something frame. Still, his great acting gifts
combined with his magnificent and astoundingly elastic voice are what make him
a unique artist and one who has triumphed in so many shows before the
footlights, on the airwaves, on the big screen and also on the plasma TVs of
today. Accentuating his great talent is pianist Paul Ford who just could not
possibly be better accompanying in a dizzying variety of musical styles.
To make this
review simple: Mandy Patinkin at Cerritos gave one of the truly great
shows in the history of the hall. It was a concert that was full of surprises,
full of humanity and many musical moments that most of the crowd will never forget. Sure
he went delightfully over the top a few times and also forgot a lyric or two,
then admitted it, which only brought him closer to his fans. There are few
entertainers in the world that can connect a song to the listener as this man
does and does all night long. Maestro Patinkin can make you hear a song like
you have never heard it before. In making each composition something new it was
beautifully evident that he is a very special artist, a precious gem in the
world of American music. Steven Sondheim once said his voice is a gift from God
and on this night it felt downright spiritual many times.
There was an
amazing variety of materials from Tin-Pan Alley stuff like “Where Did Robinson
Crusoe Go with Friday on Saturday Night” to an Al Jolson send-up of “Rock a Bye
Your Baby” to a velvet-toned “September Song” to the fine “Tateh’s Picture
Book” from the movie Ragtime. There was not one but two tour de force: an
incredible Yiddish section from “Mamaloshen” involving an entire hall doing the
hokey pokey and the goose-bump eliciting Tom Waits song “the House Where Nobody
Lives.” In the best, maybe greatest is a better description of these moments
when Mandy Patinkin connected so deeply with the music and the audience the
hall was spellbound. One was an wildly expansive version of the “Queen” radio
warhorse “Bohemian Rhapsody” and a medley of American classic folk tunes like
“Tenting on the Old Camp Ground,” the Battle Hymn of the Republic” “Shenandoah”
and ending with a fiery “Ballad of Booth” from the under sung Sondheim show “
Assassins”...while reciting perfectly the Gettysburg Address! The encore appropriately was “Being Alive” from “Company” which
would aptly describe the happy Performing Arts crowd at the conclusion of
almost two hours of genius.
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