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    Theater Review

    A lot of Cox but not enough camp in The Bodyguard musical

    Lindsey Wilson
    Jul 26, 2017 | 4:55 pm

    Before reading this review, take a second to scan through the photos in the above carousel. Go on. I'll wait. Now you have a sense of what to expect with The Bodyguard musical — even if the show itself doesn't always deliver.

    When it's masquerading as a pop concert, the Deborah Cox-led show is — dare I say it — kind of fun. It's when the Whitney Houston hits stop, the muscled backup dancers retreat, and the disco lights dim that this empty-headed stage version of the 1992 film is revealed for what it is: a cheap money-grab that relies on nostalgia.

    This is not to say that the movie itself was high art, but plenty of stage adaptations have taken less-than-stellar source material and molded the muck into a fun night at the theater (Xanadu comes immediately to mind). The Bodyguard promises camp and covers, but it often falls short on the former while exhausting its star with the latter.

    As an example of the show's uneven structure, Deborah Cox sings approximately 80 percent of the score, which is made up of such Houston tunes as "I Wanna Dance With Somebody," "One Moment in Time," "So Emotional," and "How Will I Know." The show, it should be noted, is not authorized by the estate of Whitney Houston.

    But the Grammy-nominated Cox is oddly well suited for this role, which doesn't demand she do much as superstar singer Rachel Marron other than strut, belt, and occasionally get hefted around by those chiseled dancers. Jasmin Richardson, playing Rachel's second-fiddle sister Nicki, gets to do the emoting for both of them, and she does it with style. It would be interesting to see Richardson as Rachel (she's one of Cox's two understudies, and it's emphasized that Cox does not perform any matinees except Sundays, when she also doesn't go on for the evening show).

    The Bodyguard was first developed in London's West End, and it's since gone on to tour the world. Its book, written by Alexander Dinelaris and based on Lawrence Kasdan's screenplay, eschews characterization in favor of attitude, which is doled out in heaps by Cox, the mostly forgettable actors who comprise the singer's retinue, and the two young men (Douglas Baldeo and Kevelin B. Jones III) who alternate in the role of her pre-teen son.

    There apparently wasn't any sass left for Judson Mills, who is so stoic as the titular bodyguard Frank Farmer that he might as well be a set piece. Again, this is not to say that his film counterpart Kevin Costner was revered for his deep wells of emotion. It's just that there is a huge difference between movie close-ups and large-capacity theaters.

    Mills does, however, get to hint at his comic chops by talk-singing through the property's best-selling single, "I Will Always Love You." It occurs when Frank takes the icy Rachel out on a date to a karaoke bar, ill-advisedly mixing business with pleasure but ready to prove that protecting her life from a dangerous stalker needn't be completely serious.

    It's a cute way to work the property's most famous song — written by and initially made famous by Dolly Parton — into the show, but Mills is overshadowed by the ensemble members cutting it up in the background as the bar's patrons. The energetic chorus also pulls focus with their sharp execution of Karen Bruce's slinky choreography, looking more polished and alert than their star (The Bodyroll would have been an acceptable alternate title). Director Thea Sharrock has a solution though: whisk the interesting folks offstage so that Cox can once again move front and center to belt out a power ballad while the set melts away into a void of twinkling stars.

    Oh yes, about that stalker. The producers have sunk plenty of money into a host of special effects, most of them loud and designed to make the mysterious man with the six-pack abs (Jorge Paniagua) appear threatening. But despite gun shots and strobe lights and some very laughable projections, he, like the musical itself, just looks silly.

    ---

    The national tour of The Bodyguard runs through July 30 at the Music Hall at Fair Park, then August 1-6 at Bass Hall.

    Cox and dancers.

    The Bodyguard national tour
    Photo by Joan Marcus
    Cox and dancers.
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    Theater Critic Picks

    September theater in Dallas speaks Scottish, Spanish, and soul

    Lindsey Wilson
    Sep 2, 2025 | 10:13 am
    Shakespeare Dallas presents The Taming of the Shrew
    Photo by Jordan Fraker
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    This month's productions at theaters around Dallas offer lots of things you don't often see onstage: Puppets. A black-and-white movie brought to life. The singing voice of Jasmine and Mulan. Shakespeare in Spanish. More puppets. The lineup is anything but boring!

    Here are 11 top shows appearing in Dallas theaters in September, listed in order of start date:

    Opera Box
    Ochre House Theater, September 3-20
    A poor Southern family, caught up in the addiction of the opioid crisis and the collapse of their American Dream, journeys through a Tibetan bardo seeking clues to understand their lives. The production, written in verse, will employ live music, shadow play techniques, projections, puppetry, and a wickedly hilarious cast.

    Fort Worth Fringe Festival
    Theatre Network of Texas, Inc., September 5-7
    Thirteen acts span theater, poetry, and dance at the ninth annual festival, held this year at Stolen Shakespeare Guild.

    Heartbreak House
    Hip Pocket Theatre, September 5-28
    First mounted 105 years ago, George Bernard Shaw's funny, sexy, prescient, timely Heartbreak House - A Fantasia In the Russian Manner on English Themes skewers a society that's deeply distracted by a range of self-interests. Societal beauties are focused on being beautiful, oligarchs are in government as unelected leaders, old men are with too-young women, and bombs are falling with no one paying attention.

    The Wiz
    Broadway Dallas, September 9-21
    This all-new production of the groundbreaking, Tony Award-winning musical returns “home” to stages in an all-new pre-Broadway tour, the first one in 40 years. The groundbreaking twist on The Wizard of Oz changed the face of Broadway, from its iconic score packed with soul, gospel, rock, and finger-snapping '70s funk to its stirring tale of Dorothy’s journey to find her place in a contemporary world.

    MacMurder!
    Pegasus Theatre, September 12-21
    This is the world premiere production of an original comedy-murder mystery that captures the look and feel of an old Hollywood movie from the 1930s and '40s. It stars Harry Hunsacker (an inept but endearing private detective), Nigel Grouse (Harry’s paid-by-the-hour assistant), and Lt. Foster of the real police (a regular guy who is constantly driven crazy by Harry’s hare-brained ideas). The production is part of AT&T Performing Arts Center's Elevator Project

    El Rey del Pollo
    Echo Theatre, September 12-27
    The Esteemed Reymundo Lear is retiring from running his fried chicken empire and plans to pass on his three restaurants to daughters, Gisela, Raquel, and Cordelia ... until Cordelia falls out of favor. You'll have to wait for the rest of the delicious story to be told by the foolish narrator, Jeff. El Rey del Pollo puts a family-friendly spin on King Lear, using Elizabethan verse, Spanglish, and today’s vernacular to make an hour-long Shakespearean telenovela for the stage.

    Lea Salonga: Stage, Screen & Everything In Between
    AT&T Performing Arts Center, September 14
    Musical theater royalty and official Disney legend Lea Salonga will sing stage and screen classics from her best-known roles in Miss Saigon, Les Misérables, Aladdin, and Mulan; new-found favorites from the critically acclaimed West End hit Old Friends; and more from her celebrated career and beyond.

    The Taming of the Shrew
    Shakespeare Dallas, September 17-October 19
    In the beloved romantic comedy that has inspired so many other works, Lucentio loves Bianca but is unable to court her until her older sister, Katherina, marries. Hilarity ensues as the eccentric Petruccio marries the reluctant Katherina and uses a number of tactics to charm her. This production of the Shakespearian classic is set in the Wild West.

    The Niceties
    Theatre Three, September 18-October 12
    A young Black student of history. A middle-aged white professor of history. What begins as a polite clash in perspective explodes into an urgent debate about race and power. This production is performed in the basement Theatre Too space.

    Life of Pi
    Broadway at the Bass, September 23-28
    After a shipwreck in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, a 16-year-old boy named Pi survives on a lifeboat with four companions: a hyena, a zebra, an orangutan, and a Royal Bengal tiger. Told with jaw-dropping visuals, world-class puppetry, and exquisite stagecraft, Life of Pi is a breathtaking journey.

    I Got the Last Laugh!
    Jubilee Theatre, September 26-October 19
    Step into the world of Jackie “Moms” Mabley, a trailblazing comedian, fearless truth-teller, and one of the most influential voices in American entertainment. Through humor, heart, and unapologetic wit, the production celebrates her groundbreaking career, her resilience in the face of adversity, and the laughter that made her a legend.

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