“High School Musical”
The Bushnell
Through Oct. 14
By Bernadette Johnson
There was no mistaking fans of the 2006 Emmy Award-winning “High School Musical” who turned out en masse for the stage version. They tended to be well under five feet tall, wide-eyed and expectant, parents in tow.
In this smash Disney Channel hit, popular basketball jock Troy (John Jeffrey Martin) and class brainiac Gabriella (Arielle Jacobs) defy their friends’ expectations by auditioning for the school musical, much to the dismay of to-date undisputed star Sharpay (Chandra Lee Schwartz) and twin brother Ryan (Bobby List). Landing a callback, the budding thespians are thwarted by Sharpay and by well-meaning classmates and teammates, who are intent on upholding the “status quo.”
The touring company wowed with their unflagging high energy, crisp precision and timing of intricately choreographed numbers. The fact that the band often overpowered the cast (and the cast our eardrums) didn’t seem to matter to the denizens of Disney Channel, who knew all the lyrics and sang along and clapped spontaneously.
While Martin and Jacobs quickly won hearts with their youthful innocence and tender duets, Ellen Harvey as Ms. Darbus, the school’s drama coach, upped the ante with a quirky no-holds-barred delivery, while Schwartz and List dazzled and delighted as the scheming arch rivals, particularly with their rendition of “Bop to the Top.”
Script writers have met challenges head-on as have set designers. The film’s laid-back detention scene evolves into farcical improvised drama onstage, and scenic designer Kenneth Foy arranges for too-numerous-to-count scene changes (hallway to gym to chem lab to theater to cafeteria etc. and back again) to flow seamlessly.
If there was any doubt about the popularity of this production, it was obliterated by screaming tweens, who took to their feet with Troy and Gabriella’s first kiss and whose deafening cheers rocked the house through the very last bow and final curtain.
Through Oct. 14
By Bernadette Johnson
There was no mistaking fans of the 2006 Emmy Award-winning “High School Musical” who turned out en masse for the stage version. They tended to be well under five feet tall, wide-eyed and expectant, parents in tow.
In this smash Disney Channel hit, popular basketball jock Troy (John Jeffrey Martin) and class brainiac Gabriella (Arielle Jacobs) defy their friends’ expectations by auditioning for the school musical, much to the dismay of to-date undisputed star Sharpay (Chandra Lee Schwartz) and twin brother Ryan (Bobby List). Landing a callback, the budding thespians are thwarted by Sharpay and by well-meaning classmates and teammates, who are intent on upholding the “status quo.”
The touring company wowed with their unflagging high energy, crisp precision and timing of intricately choreographed numbers. The fact that the band often overpowered the cast (and the cast our eardrums) didn’t seem to matter to the denizens of Disney Channel, who knew all the lyrics and sang along and clapped spontaneously.
While Martin and Jacobs quickly won hearts with their youthful innocence and tender duets, Ellen Harvey as Ms. Darbus, the school’s drama coach, upped the ante with a quirky no-holds-barred delivery, while Schwartz and List dazzled and delighted as the scheming arch rivals, particularly with their rendition of “Bop to the Top.”
Script writers have met challenges head-on as have set designers. The film’s laid-back detention scene evolves into farcical improvised drama onstage, and scenic designer Kenneth Foy arranges for too-numerous-to-count scene changes (hallway to gym to chem lab to theater to cafeteria etc. and back again) to flow seamlessly.
If there was any doubt about the popularity of this production, it was obliterated by screaming tweens, who took to their feet with Troy and Gabriella’s first kiss and whose deafening cheers rocked the house through the very last bow and final curtain.
Labels: bushnell, greater hartford, high school musical, musicals, theatre

