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4/2/2009 - GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL To Have It's Off-Broadway Premiere At the Downstairs Cabaret Theatre News and Press Releases
Entertainment Events Productions will present the Off-Broadway Premiere of the smash UK hit, GIRLS NIGHT: THE MUSICAL, written by Louise Roche and directed by Jack Randle. Performances will begin June 2nd, for an Opening Night on June 4th at the Downstairs Cabaret Theatre at Sofia's (227 West 46th Street, next to the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre).
9/22/2008 - Get Ready for a Fun "Girls Night" Out Review
The opening night of "Girls Night: The Musical" at Shea's Smith Theatre was an estrogen extravaganza. Under a spinning disco ball, there was raucous laughter, singing and dancing - and that was just the audience.
8/8/2008 - Raucous "Girls Night" fun for all Review
The estrogen level of "Girls Night" did everything it could to blow the roof off of the palatial Hanover Theatre Wednesday night.
7/17/2008 - Girls Night: The Musical - Get Ready for Estrogen Overload Review
Imagine this if you can: "Sex in the City" meets "Desperate Housewives." Then, throw in "Grease" as the offbeat third ingredient and you've got "Girls Night: The Musical."
5/30/2008 - Girls Night: The Musical Review
I must say I was pleasantly surprised after dragging my baby-booming, starch-conservative mother out to "Girls Night: The Musical" last night. It even sent my Pentecostal mother on a laughing spree...
5/14/2008 - Leave The Man at Home For Fun Musical Review
Think just as funny and raunchy as "Sex in the City," although definitely not as sophisticated.
4/4/2008 - Broadway Series South: Girls Night: The Musical Review
Last night, this uproarious musical comedy, produced by Entertainment Events Inc. and Robert Dragotta of New York City and presented April 1 - 6 by Broadway Series South, had the mostly female audience in A.J. Fletcher Opera Theatre rocking, from its opening number - Diana Ross' "Remember Me" (1971) to its exuberant encore of Gloria Gaynor's 1978 chart-topper "I Will Survive."
12/4/2007 - Wimple while you work: Sister leads "Christmas Catechism" Review
So, a nun walks into a theater. No, really. It's not a joke. Not yet.
10/31/2007 - Paramount musical celebrates female friendships News and Press Releases
There's nothing quite so entertaining as watching girls who just want to have fun. They can be catty and cynical, silly or serious, weepy or wistful. And they've evene been known to get a bit raunchy every now and then - usually after midnight and only with the most innocent of intentions.
10/25/2007 - Sister rules, with sharp humor and nostalgia Review
"Late Nite Catechism" at the Olney Theatre Center for the Arts through Nov. 11, takes a hilarious and nostalgic look at parochial school education 40-some years ago, and incorporates many of the changes in the church since then, but it is never unkind or cynical about either the old or the new ways.
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Girls Night: The Musical

Friday, May 30, 2008


by Dwayne Steward
Newark Advocate

I must say I was pleasantly surprised after dragging my baby-booming, starch-conservative mother out to "Girls Night: The Musical" last night.

Though lacking slightly in artistic value, it was in this error that it showed strength, unapologetically plowing through any sort of "rightness" while capitalizing on the "myth" of girl-power beyond a certain age.  It even sent my Pentecostal mother on a laughing spree after introducing a well-endowed inflatable man into a dance number - a feat that definitely deserves some recognition.

Louise Roche's British phenomenon, still on its climb in the States, took the packed Southern Theatre audience by storm as it followed Liza (Sonya Carter), Anita (Justine Hall), Carol (Renee Colvert) and Kate (Whitney Kathleen Vigil) on a "typical" girls night out on the town.  The musical borrowed classic 80's hits (and dance moves) as the story navigated through the girls' storyline.

Sharon (Crystal Kellogg), a childhood friend killed in a motorcycle accident 20 years earlier, narrated the clique's sometimes jaded past, clad in an all-white Madonna / Michael influenced ensemble, complete with the rhinestoned mini jacket, pump tennis shoes and tight straight-legged pants.  A pair of glittered wings completed the outfit.

Though the draw for the packed house, the 80's aura wasn't what drove the play towards success, it was the overwhelming authenticity of the characters.

Most notable were Vigil and Colvert, whose chemistry - as the conflicting, yet loving, sisters Kate and Carol, respectively - stole the show.  The plot negotiated between the comedic and the dramatic, though jarring at times (transitioning from Carol's tear-jerking marital tragedy to the pop tune "I'm Every Woman"), keeping the plot on a steady incline.

Each woman had their time to shine, with Kellogg employing the perfect comedic shtick needed to pull off the sassy, mischevious and ultimately misguided Sharon.  Hall's portayal of the sometimes unstable Anita was a true embodiment of a woman on the brink.  She also took the award for best vocal of the night, her power ballads eliciting overwhelming reactions from the audience.  And Carter definitely looked comfortable in the skin of ever-pleasing Liza, proving why she was brought back for the show's second tour.

Complete with a decked out club scene, dripping in pink fur and a disco ball as its set, the cast broke that fourth wall at times to engage the crowd in the atmosphere.  A few scenes were accompanied by a large number of patrons standing, clapping and dancing in the aisles.

Taking its cue frm the comedic stylings of "Desperate Housewives" and "Sex in the City," "Girls Night: The Musical" simply offers good music and a good time, with a no-holds-barred look at women in their 40's.  And if it can get mom to laugh at a few raunchy jokes that would make even Will Ferrell squirm (lest we forget the blow up doll), then its got to be doing something right.

"Girls Night" continues through Sunday.  For tickets, hit up TicketMaster or visit www.capa.com/columbus.  Go ahead; take a few friends out to the Southern this weekend.  I promise there are Easton showings of "Sex in the City: The Movie" well past the show's 9:45 curtain call. 

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