Reviewed by James Karas
Some Like It Hot is a rollicking musical and light entertainment show now playing at the CAA Ed Mirvish Theatre in Toronto. It is loosely based, of course, on the movie of the same name that featured Marylin Monroe, Tony Curtis and Jack Lemon and had some unforgettable scenes. Who can forget Marylin trying to arouse Curtis’s erotic interest!
The musical has the basic story of two friends, musicians Joe (Matt Loehr) and Jerry (Tavis Kordell). They work in a club owned by mobster Spats Colombo (Devon Goffman) and witness him killing several people. This is Chicago in 1933 and as witnesses to a major crime, they are in danger of being snuffed out by the people against whom they might give evidence. In desperation, they join an all-female band pretending to be women and head out for San Diego. Saxophone player Joe becomes Josephine and bass player Jerry becomes Daphne.
The band is run by tough-as-nails Sweet Sue (Dequina Moore) who barks
orders like a nasty sergeant in a boot camp but, she has a nice side too and a stentorian
singing voice. Josephine befriends the hot Sugar Kane (Leandra Ellis-Gaston) and
as Joe pretending to be someone else takes her to a yacht where she teaches him
dancing. (Forget the Monroe/Curtis scene). Millionaire Osgood (Eduard Juvier)
falls in love with Daphne and remains in love with her even when she tells him
that Daphne is really Jerry. It is a fascinating twist and a comment on sexual
identity. The musical also takes a stab at anti-black bigotry but the two
friends find a way around it very quickly. After all this is a fun musical and
we let it go even if we should not. The musical has a happy ending in case you
are concerned.
The musical is loud, boisterous and fast moving. There are quieter moments like Sugar’s “Ride out the storm” number and Osgood’s “Fly Mariposa, Fly” but the aim is to sing and dance up a storm at almost excessive volume and do not let the audience rest for long. The music is repetitive and the tap dancing unstoppably energetic but all have the aim of keeping the audience on their toes and entertaining them.
Dequina Moore has a big, throaty voice that she lets out like artillery shots and she uses her arms and body like weapons. Kordell is a superb dancer and the troops of ensemble dancers and singers in the form of Society Syncopators, Gangsters, Porters and Bellhops display unmitigated energy and tapdancing.
The humour varies from hackneyed to good and the music like everything in the musical emphasizes brisk tempo and volume. Music is by Marc Shaiman, the book by Matthew Lopez and Amber Ruffin and the lyrics by Scott Whitman and Marc Shaiman.
The show depends on Scenic Design (Scott Pask), Costume Design (Gregg Barnes), Lighting Design (Natasha Katz) and Sound Design (Brian Ronan). These are not passive participants but crucial parts of the colour, excitement, motion and creators of excitement and audience participation in the show.
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Some Like It Hot by Marc Shaiman (music), Matthew Lopez and Amber Ruffin (book) and Scott Whitman and Marc Shaiman (lyrics), continues until March 15, 2026, at the CAA Ed Mirvish Theatre, 244 Victoria St. Toronto, Ontario. www.mirvish.com






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