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The show's massive sets and colorful costumes (both courtesy of Tim Hatley) are so visually eye-catching that they often distract from what's going with the story and score. Composer Jeanine Tesori has written attractive, eclectic, pop-flavored melodies that range from a jaunty "Travel Song" to a gutsy duet called "I Got You Beat" for Shrek and Fiona that revels in rude noises. We wonder what that song will sound like on the original cast recording. Lindsay-Abaire's lyrics are often fun and quite witty, which shouldn't be a surprise since he is the author of such zany, off-the-wall plays as "Fuddy Meers" and "Kimberly Akimbo." Yet despite its celebration of snark (the production slyly tweaks other Broadway musicals), "Shrek" wants to honor heart as well. The show's ultimate message
-- it's what's inside that counts, not the outer wrapper -- while not exactly new, is a fine one. And "Shrek" ends with a little sermonette of its own, sung by those outcast, eccentric fairy-tale creatures. "Let your freak flag fly" goes one of the musical's more persistent lyrics. Maybe "Bein' Green" isn't so bad after all.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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