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Marriott Theatre's super 'Sweet Charity' has perfect rhythm

<p><strong>★ ★ ★ ½</strong></p>
<p>"The rhythm of life is a powerful beat, puts a tingle in your  fingers and a tingle in your feet."</p>
<p>Behold the words of Daddy Johann Sebastian Brubeck, jazz cat  turned street preacher in the musical "Sweet Charity." Daddy  Brubeck is the guru named for
       two rhythm masters -- Baroque  composer J.S. Bach and the Third Stream's Dave Brubeck -- and his gospel  enlivens the supercool musical about the misadventures
       of Manhattan dance-hall hostess  Charity Hope Valentine.&nbsp;</p>
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<div>That  "rhythm" animates Charity, the titular sweetheart of the 1966  tuner. And in Marriott Theatre's high-spirited revival, charmer and  Lincolnshire
           newcomer Anne Horak brings  the kindly optimist with bad taste in men to life in a performance that brims  with joy and endless good humor. </div>
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<div>Repeatedly  disappointed by love, Charity persists in its pursuit hoping a man will take  her away from the second-rate Fandango Ballroom. There, she
           and her friends don't so much  dance as defend themselves to music (a jazzy, urbane score by the great Cy  Coleman). Like best pals Nickie and Helene
           (played with sass and spunk  by Dani Spieler and NaTonia Monét), Charity aspires to middle-class  respectability: a life of "frozen peaches and cream."</div>
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<div>That wry observation  from lyricist Dorothy Fields suggests middle-class respectability isn't all  it's reported to be. The book, by the late Neil Simon,
           is equally  amusing.</div>
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<div><img  src="https://www.dailyherald.com/storyimage/da/20180914/entlife/180919326/EP/1/2/EP-180919326.jpg&amp;updated=201809141539&amp;MaxW=800&amp;maxH=800&amp;noborder"  data-src="/storyimage/da/20180914/entlife/180919326/EP/1/2/EP-180919326.jpg&amp;updated=201809141539&amp;MaxW=800&amp;maxH=800&amp;noborder"  alt="Dancers at the Fandango Ballroom try to entice a &quot;Big  Spender&quot; in Marriott Theatre's &quot;Sweet Charity,&quot;  directed and choreographed by Alex Sanchez." width="600"  data-gtm-vis-first-on-screen-2614454_63="63622"  data-gtm-vis-total-visible-time-2614454_63="100"  data-gtm-vis-has-fired-2614454_63="1" style="max-width: 100%;  width: 900px;">&nbsp;Dancers at the Fandango Ballroom try to  entice a "Big Spender" in Marriott Theatre's "Sweet  Charity,"
           directed and choreographed by  Alex Sanchez. - Courtesy of Justin Barbin</div>
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<div>Still, Charity dreams  and then meets a man who might just give her that peaches and cream life --  nervous accountant Oscar (the ever-endearing, always
           funny Alex Goodrich). They  meet on the way to a self-help seminar and bond while trapped in a stalled  elevator. Then, they find themselves at a
           revival presided over by  Daddy Brubeck, played by the charismatic Kenny Ingram, a Marriott favorite  son who delivers a praiseworthy performance
           of the irresistible "The  Rhythm of Life."</div>
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<div>It's one of several  showstoppers courtesy of an agile, exuberant cast under  director/choreographer Alex Sanchez. Sanchez works magic once again,  tipping
           his hat to original  director/choreographer Bob Fosse (note the dancers' classic Fosse-attitude:  knee bent, arm raised, fingers grasping the edge
           of a black bowler hat) while  putting his own sophisticated spin on the dance numbers.</div>
<p><img  src="https://www.dailyherald.com/storyimage/da/20180914/entlife/180919326/EP/1/3/EP-180919326.jpg&amp;updated=201809141539&amp;MaxW=800&amp;maxH=800&amp;noborder"  data-src="/storyimage/da/20180914/entlife/180919326/EP/1/3/EP-180919326.jpg&amp;updated=201809141539&amp;MaxW=800&amp;maxH=800&amp;noborder"  alt="Charity (Anne Horak), center, Helene (NaTonia Monét), left, and  Nickie (Dani Spieler) play taxi dancers eager to find another profession in  &quot;Sweet Charity,&quot; running through Oct. 28 at Marriott  Theatre in Lincolnshire." width="600"  data-gtm-vis-first-on-screen-2614454_63="64215" data-gtm-vis-total-visible-time-2614454_63="100"  data-gtm-vis-has-fired-2614454_63="1" style="max-width: 100%;  width: 900px;">Charity (Anne Horak), center, Helene (NaTonia Monét),  left, and Nickie (Dani Spieler) play taxi dancers
           eager to find another  profession in "Sweet Charity," running through Oct. 28 at Marriott  Theatre in Lincolnshire. - Courtesy of Justin Barbin</p>
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<div>But "Sweet  Charity" has more to it than showy production numbers. Sanchez  demonstrates flair for physical comedy (at which Horak and Goodrich  excel)
           and for drama. The  penultimate moments of this production are as honest as they are  wrenching.</div>
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<div>Of course, no review  of "Sweet Charity" would be complete without mentioning the  crowd-pleasing "Rich Man's Frug," a sly, insidiously clever  composition
           for dance in three movements  where disinterested elites strut their stuff. In that respect, it's not  unlike the decisively brassy "Big Spender,"
           where bored "social  consultants" entice Fandango patrons to the dance  floor.</div>
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<div><img  src="https://www.dailyherald.com/storyimage/da/20180914/entlife/180919326/EP/1/4/EP-180919326.jpg&amp;updated=201809141539&amp;MaxW=800&amp;maxH=800&amp;noborder"  data-src="/storyimage/da/20180914/entlife/180919326/EP/1/4/EP-180919326.jpg&amp;updated=201809141539&amp;MaxW=800&amp;maxH=800&amp;noborder"  alt="Director/choreographer Alex Sanchez's &quot;Rich Man's  Frug&quot; stopped the show on opening night of Marriott Theatre's  revival of &quot;Sweet Charity.&quot;" width="600"  data-gtm-vis-first-on-screen-2614454_63="64989"  data-gtm-vis-total-visible-time-2614454_63="100" data-gtm-vis-has-fired-2614454_63="1"  style="max-width: 100%; width:  900px;">&nbsp;</div>
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<div>Director/choreographer  Alex Sanchez's "Rich Man's Frug" stopped the show on opening night  of Marriott Theatre's revival of "Sweet Charity." - Courtesy
           of Michael  Brosilow</div>
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<div>Also deserving kudos  are music director Ryan T. Nelson and conductor Patti Garwood. She and her  dynamic octet do both Bach and Brubeck proud.</div>
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<div>As a character,  Charity Hope Valentine is hopelessly dated. She's passive, accepting whatever  the Fickle Finger of Fate bestows. She allows herself
           to be taken advantage of by  men, which makes for some cringeworthy moments. Yet her sexual confidence and  lack of guile are admirable. More importantly,
           she survives. Charity bounces  back. And when she does -- as Horak demonstrates in the explosive 11 o'clock  number "I'm a Brass Band" -- music pours
           out of her.</div>
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<div>Now that's a life  force. Charity's life isn't always happy, but it's hopeful. And it's got  rhythm.</div>
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<p>Amen.</p>