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Swing
January 16- 21 at Paramount Theater
Like Dancin' and Smokey Joe's Cafe, Swing is more a collection of song-and-dance numbers than a book musical. Some of the sections are staged almost as they might have been originally, with smooth vintage choreography for the vocalists matching the liquid quality of their harmonizing. But historical accuracy is not the major goal of the production—a few of the numbers use as many contemporary tricks as they can manage, including something suspiciously similar to bungee jumping. In this context, swing dancing seems like a precursor to the "high-risk" choreography of Eduoard Locke or the uncompromising gymnastic challenges demonstrated by Elizabeth Streb.
Scholarly types have several explanations for the current interest in swing. There's our nostalgia for the World War II generation and its culture, enthusiasm for athleticism and virtuosic movement, or just the infectious quality of the rhythmic patterns themselves. Whatever the actual reasons, with a playlist that reaches from Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman to Hoagy Carmichael and Count Basie (with stops for Harold Arlen, Louis Prima, and Johnny Mercer) and choreography to match, Swing looks to be a riotous survey of a fabulous era in song and dance.