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1. | Fancy Dress | | |
2. | Cold Feets | | |
3. | Best Man for the Job | | |
4. | Show Off | | |
5. | As We Stumble Along | | |
6. | Adolpho | | |
7. | Accident Waiting to Happen | | |
8. | Toledo Surprise | | |
9. | Message from a Nightingale | | |
10. | Bride’s Lament | | |
11. | I Remember Love | | |
12. | I Do, I Do in the Sky | | |
Under its enigmatic title lurks a remarkably entertaining little show. The Drowsy Chaperone is a droll Canadian import that's part homage to the musical theater, part spoof. Narrated by the unnamed Man in Chair (Bob Martin), the show basically reenacts a 1920s musical named 'The Drowsy Chaperone.' This allows the creative team to match an inspired collection of familiar 1920s types---the flapper (Sutton Foster), the cad (Troy Britton Johnson), the zinger-slinging diva (Beth Leavel), the Latin lothario (Danny Burstein), the zany character actors (Georgia Engel, Edward Hibbert)---with witty, well-crafted pastiches of songs of that era. Penned by Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison, the tunes are instantly hummable, while the ensemble cast is uniformly superb---you know the standard is high when the awesome Sutton Foster doesn't even stand out that much. Thankfully, the 'meta' concept doesn't lead to arch-irony and detachment. A genuine affection for what makes musicals so fun shines throughout, making this a real keeper of an album.