![]() Each of them also gets to sing his own solo. Each Plaid shares a few anecdotes about his time on Earth and how he became a Plaid. While the musical concerns the Plaids as a group, Flaa allows each vocalist to let his personality shine through. At the end of “Shangri-La,” bubbles fall from the ceiling and onto the audience. During “Heart and Soul,” an audience member is escorted onstage to play the top part of the piano for the Plaids. During “Caribbean Plaid,” Sparky and Jinx give a pole decorated with bananas, peppers and colorful lights to audience members to hold. ![]() The Plaids bring out props to accompany certain songs, and the audience gets to watch and even hold some of them. ![]() While many times they mess up (deliberately), you can tell the Plaids are clumsy because they care very much about their first big performance, making the musical all the more delightful. The synchronicity could have felt robotic and harsh, but under Flaa’s direction it’s charming. Starting with their opening number, “Three Coins in the Fountain,” the Plaids’ dancing is synchronized and deliberate. The Plaids sing 18 songs over the course of the musical, and they all make you feel like you are at a 1950s prom-in a good way, of course. It’s as if you’re watching them from your living room rather than an impersonal concert hall. Flaa’s perfectly imperfect choreography and witty jokes make the actors feel like your friends. While the stage is minimal, with only a band featuring a pianist, cellist and drummer situated in the back and four microphones and two stools downstage, the flamboyant cast and beautiful harmony steals the show. This is director-choreographer Steven Flaa’s 15th production of “Forever Plaid,” and it shows in the quality of the performances. Their clumsiness creates a loveable quality to the group and will make you laugh throughout the musical. However, throughout the musical the four men do not just sing and dance they crack jokes, address the audience and embarrassingly mess up the choreography. The quartet comes back to Earth 52 years later (upon arriving to the stage, Sparky asks an audience member what year it is) in order to carry out its dream of performing onstage. While this sounds morbid, the show is far from it. These 1950s crooners-Sparky (Adolpho Blaire), Smudge (Charles Logan), Jinx (Nick Endsley) and Frankie (Alex Jorth)-meet their deaths in the car crash just before they are about to carry out their dream of singing in concert. The four men, or the “Plaids,” walk onstage from the aisles carrying candles and looking like picture-perfect barbershop quartet angels: white jackets, patent leather dress shoes and plaid bowties. This is accompanied by a piercing sound effect and a flash of lightning. “Forever Plaid” begins with an ominous narrator, who recounts the story of four singers suffering a deadly car crash before a concert.
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