War Paint review
Two of the most persuasive saleswomen New York has ever seen are peddling their wares with high style and equal determination at the Nederlander Theater, where âWar Paintâ opened on Thursday night. And no, I donât mean the subjects of this data-heavy musical, the beauty-industry magnates Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein, though they were certainly no slouches in the art of the deal.
Iâm talking about the resourceful and resolute women portraying those resourceful and resolute women, Christine Ebersole and Patti LuPone. These are actresses whose performing signatures are as well known to Broadway audiences as the stylized brand names of Arden and Rubinstein were to buyers of cosmetics.
Ms. LuPone and Ms. Ebersole (notice how tactfully Iâm shifting the order in which theyâre mentioned) are not coasting on the market value of their star appeal. Theyâre strategically deploying the knowledge and craft of a combined eight decades in musicals to make us believe that the show in which they appear is moving forward, instead of running in place in high heels.
If that sounds like heavy lifting, Ms. Ebersole and Ms. LuPone seldom betray the strain. Even more than when I saw them in an earlier version of âWar Paintâ in Chicago last summer, they look as if they were having a marvelous time, singing solo after solo about the specifics of the beauty business and the penalties of being a successful woman.
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After all, the creators of âWar Paintâ â Doug Wright (book), Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) â have lovingly custom-tailored roles for Ms. LuPone and Ms. Ebersole in a show that assures them separate ovation-garnering entrances, down a staircase (for Ms. Ebersole) and a gangplank (for Ms. LuPone). Both in their 60s, these enduringly vital actresses have reached an age where the field of juicy starring parts in musicals often feels limited to those of Momma Rose in âGypsyâ (Ms. LuPone has already won a Tony for that) and the title character of âHello, Dolly!â (co-opted this season by Bette Midler).
In this sense, âWar Paint,â directed by Michael Greif, might be seen as the musical equivalent of âFeud,â the mini-series in which Jessica Lange and Susan Sarandon play the aging Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, when they made the shocker âWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane?â together. (Ms. Ebersoleâs Arden describes her and Rubinstein as âdueling actresses in our umpteenth sequel.â)
Like âFeud,â âWar Paintâ depicts a bitter rivalry between glamorous women struggling to stay in control in a field that is notorious for seeing women as perishable commodities. And neither show shies entirely from the camp factor that is catnip to gay men and their female soul mates.
But in telling its story, âFeudâ has one whopping advantage, in that Davis and Crawford actually worked together, side by thorny side. There is no record of Rubinstein and Ardenâs having met, though they ruled their fast-expanding beauty empires from the same Manhattan neighborhood in the same era. (The show is set between 1935 and 1964.)
This lack of face-to-face time has forced the authors of âWar Paintâ to depict the womenâs twinned biographies as a series of parallel lives, acted out in counterpoint on separate sides of the stage. Thus we learn that for all their differences, Rubinstein, a Polish Jew, and Arden, a Canadian Episcopalian, were ultimately twin sisters under their pancake-covered skin.
The shows count the ways that this is true: Theyâre both self-inventions; theyâre both excluded from snooty New York society; they both realize that they wouldnât have half the problems they have if they had been men; and they know â oh boy, do they know â that itâs lonely at the top.
Itâs the loneliness part that creates the most conventionally dynamic scenes. Both Arden and Rubinstein quarrel with, and are betrayed by, men they love, who feel emasculated by their dominating women and wind up changing alliances even before the first-act curtain falls. For Arden, thatâs her husband, Tommy Lewis (John Dossett); for Rubinstein, her gay right-hand man, Harry Fleming (Douglas Sills).
Lewis and Fleming are thankless parts, which may be appropriate to a show about women who rule, but it doesnât make their whiny company less tedious, despite the talented actors playing them. Their existence does lead to a rather amusing sequence in which, their traitorous men having spilled the beans on their beauty formulas, Rubinstein and Arden are forced to appear before a Senate investigation committee.
Otherwise, âWar Paintâ is a double portrait of unchanging women during changing times. The passage of years is signaled by the deluxe period costumes, designed by Catherine Zuber, and by the foxtrot-to-frug dance steps of Christopher Gattelliâs choreography; the leading ladiesâ eternal solitude is expressed by David Korinsâs coffinlike walls-of-products set.
The show has slightly shifted its focus since its Chicago incarnation. It now begins not with its stars at separate vanity tables, contemplating their visages, but with a chorus of smartly dressed women heeding the call of a bodiless voice to beautify themselves.
That is of a piece with a work in which the dubious ethics of an industry that preys on female insecurity are considered at length, as are the minutiae of packaging and marketing. (What other musical features songs listing ingredients in face creams?) But the compression of extensive research can make âWar Paintâ sound like a singing Wikipedia entry.
Ms. Ebersole and Ms. LuPone go a great distance in disguising the showâs essential sameness. Ms. LuPone, wearing heavy jewels and a Polish accent to match, is as imposing as Rubinstein must have been, and presumably a whole lot funnier.
Ms. Ebersole, blithe and brittle, is equally formidable in a lighter vein. And Mr. Frankel and Mr. Korie, who gave Ms. Ebersole the part of a lifetime with their best-known collaboration (with Mr. Wright), âGrey Gardens,â have written numbers for their stars that cannily play to their separate but equal strengths â think trumpet (Ms. LuPone) and flute (Ms. Ebersole) â and even make an asset of Ms. LuPoneâs notoriously garbled diction in song.
So, though my eyes occasionally glazed seeing âWar Paintâ for the second time, I wouldnât have missed it, if only to hear its leading ladiesâ climactic ballads. Ms. LuPone has an ardently sung tribute to the preservative powers of narcissism, during which a gallery of Rubinsteinâs portraits by famous artists materializes behind her.
And in the showâs most exquisite number, Arden takes inventory of an existence lived in a pale shade of rose. The song is called âPink,â and as Ms. Ebersole delivers that seemingly cheery word, it is weighted with triumph, regret, defiance and anger, all struggling for ascendancy. Itâs a reminder of how a single ballad, and a lone interpreter, can capture the full, ambivalent spectrum of a lifetime.
Last Update:June, 24th 2017
War Paint Lyrics
- Act 1
- Best Face Forward Lyrics
- Behind the Red Door Lyrics
- Back on Top Lyrics
- My Secret Weapon Lyrics
- My American Moment Lyrics
- Step on Out Lyrics
- If I'd Been a Man Lyrics
- Better Yourself
- Oh, That's Rich Lyrics
- Face to Face
- Act 2
- Inside of the Jar Lyrics
- Necessity is the Mother of Invention Lyrics
- Best Face Forward (Reprise) Lyrics
- Now You Know
- No Thank You Lyrics
- Fire and Ice Lyrics
- Dinosaurs Lyrics
- Pink
- Forever Beautiful
- Beauty in the World Lyrics
- Finale Lyrics