Pages

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Theatre 2025: Beetlejuice Musical @ Ed Mirvish

Recently it seems like more and more musicals are based on other sources such as movies, TV shows, and books, or use the music of famous musicians as the songs, either paired with an original story or using the life stories of those musicians as the plot.  This is not surprising given what a risky business it is mount a new musical with original songs and book.  Basing a show on an adaptation of well-known and well-loved material brings a built-in audience which gives the musical a better chance of being a success.  While totally understandable, it is also too bad since this trend stifles the creativity and originality that comes with new works.

Beetlejuice is the most recent musical arriving in Toronto that is based on another source.  It is adapted from the 1988 gothic-horror/comedy movie starring Michael Keaton as the eponymous ghoul Beetlejuice, who is summoned when his name is chanted three times in succession.  Dorky couple Adam and Barbara Maitland (played by Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis) are in midst of renovating their cherished, quaintly designed home when they perish in a car accident and find themselves roaming their house as ghosts.

Real Estate developer Charles Deetz and his second wife Delia (Jeffery Jones and Catherine O’Hara) purchase the house and move in with Charles’ morbid, moody daughter Lydia (Wynonna Ryder), who is dressed in black.  When Delia starts to redesign the house in a “new-wave, post-modern aesthetic”, the Maitlands try to haunt and scare off the family but are too mild-mannered to make any impact.  It does not help that only Lydia can see them so their feeble attempts to frighten the oblivious Charles and Delia come off as humorous instead of horrific.

After discovering the “Handbook for the Recently Deceased”, the ghosts travel to the Netherworld (waiting room for spirits) for advice on how to expel the Deetz family.  Out of desperation, they summon the mischievous and malevolent spirit Beetlejuice to help them.  This leads to the iconic scene where the Deetz family and their dinner guests become possessed and start singing Harry Belafonte’s “Day-O (the Banana Boat song)”.   A botched exorcism threatens to permanently destroy the Maitlands who Lydia has bonded with.  Beetlejuice agrees to save them if Lydia will marry him, which would allow him to stay in the world of the living.  Once freed from the exorcism, the Maitlands rescue Lydia and invoke a giant sandworm to devour Beetlejuice, sending him back to the Netherworld.  The Maitlands and Deetz agree to harmoniously live in the house together.

Beetlejuice the Musical maintains the high-level plot of the movie but totally reframes the story, shifting the main focus and driver of the storyline to Lydia as opposed to the Maitlands.  Depictions of other roles are also tweaked for comedic effect and plot-points changed make it easier to portray on stage.  The result of these changes is a more heart-felt storyline, deeper, more nuanced characters and a more humorous show with broader jokes.

Rather than just being a weird, sulky goth girl as portrayed in the movie, Lydia is a lonely daughter missing and grieving the recent death of her mother, while frustrated with her father Charles, who is not able to share his own pain with her.  The show opens with the funeral of Lydia’s mother Emily.  Lydia voices her grief by singing “You’re invisible when you’re sad…nobody sees a thing”. The song ends with Beetlejuice breaking the fourth wall to proclaim, “A ballad already! What a bold departure from the original source material” before declaring in the next song that this is “A show about death!”. 

Beetlejuice continues as a narrator who often addresses the audience and injects pop-cultural and musical references into his rants and songs.  His character is given more depth as a lonely soul, craving for attention and love and putting up with an abusive mother Juno, who is an authoritative figure in the Netherworld.  In the finale, Beetlejuice is even given a bit of a redemptive arc.

The Maitlands are now secondary figures who are strait-laced and even more incompetent in their attempts at haunting.  Their method of death is changed from a car crashing into a lake to something easier to stage.   In an Australian production, the couple crashed through the floorboards falling into the basement.  In the Toronto touring production, they die by accidental electrocution.  Once again, only Lydia is able to see the Maitlands and Beetlejuice because of her gloomy nature. In this adaptation, a living human is required to invoke Beetlejuice to bring him into the living world but Lydia initially refuses since she finds him creepy (“Say My Name”).

While Delia was Lydia’s stepmother in the movie, the musical hypes up the comedy by making Delia a ditzy “life coach” who preaches happiness and positive thinking.  As well as being Charles’ paid employee, she is also his secret lover (does that make her a prostitute, she ponders?).  When the couple become engaged, Lydia feels powerless and isolated, thinking that her mother is being replaced.  Lydia enlists the Maitlands to use their power of “possession” to disrupt her father’s important business dinner, leading to the iconic “Day-O” number.  When that fails, out of desperation, she finally summons Beetlejuice who quickly ousts all the other humans from the house.  This leaves him and Lydia alone to rule the roost and frighten off all screaming visitors including a Girl Guide, Census taker, Pizza delivery man and a well-meaning neighbour (“That Beautiful Sound”).

After Charles and Delia return to the house to try to save their daughter, Beetlejuice tricks Lydia into thinking she can resurrect her mother, but instead she starts an exorcism on a screaming Barbara Maitland.  To save her, Lydia seemingly agrees to marry Beetlejuice, but tricks him by jumping into the passageway to the Netherworld in search of her mother with Charles jumping in after her.  There they meet many residents, including “Miss Argentina” and a shrunken head, who perform a big song and dance number (“What I Know Now”) to encourage the living humans to go back to the living world, lamenting on their regrets of not appreciating life when they could.  Charles and Lydia finally talk about her mother and reconcile but are chased by Beetlejuice’s mother Juno who wants to keep them in the Netherworld.

Returning to the house, Lydia and Charles find Beetlejuice in a rage, prepared to kill everyone.  Once again, Lydia agrees to marry Beetlejuice to appease him.  This time, the marriage takes place, which brings him to life, allowing Lydia to promptly kill him again, using a big ugly sculpture that was initially shown in the neo-modern redecoration of the house, making it the ultimate “Chekov’s gun”.  Now newly deceased, Beetlejuice can be sent to the Netherworld.  But when Juno arrives to reclaim Lydia, Beetlejuice stands up to her and conjures up a sandworm to devour her (thus the redemptive arc).   Beetlejuice leaves peacefully and the Deetz and Maitlands agree to coexist in the house, just like in the movie.  So, while most of the salient points of the movie are represented, the musical is definitely an entity unto itself.

Some of the current references made by Beetlejuice include “If I hear your cell phone ringing, I’ll kill you myself!”, “I’m invisible, powerless ... like a gay Republican” and “It’s a Green Card thing” when explaining his desire to marry a human.  When Adam and Barbara first encounter Beetlejuice and ask who he is, the demon jokes to Adam “I am your father” in a Darth Vader reference. There are several musical references as well. When describing how boring Adam and Barbara are, Beetlejuice claims they are more boring than the musical Brigadoon and during the song “Good Old-Fashioned Wedding”, Beetlejuice references Fiddler on the Roof with the lyrics “OMG”, L’Chaim, To Life”.

Extremely bright, flashing and strobing lights were used in the staging of this show including a green light that repeatedly shone right at our eyes from our seats at the front of the Mezzanine of the Ed Mirvish Theatre. It was surprising that there were no trigger warnings about this since there had been warnings at other shows for much less intense effects.  We also found the sound quality in Ed Mirvish Theatre to be lacking as it was difficult to hear the lyrics of many songs, particularly when Lydia was singing since she sang at a higher octave range than the other actors.  This is not the first time that we had trouble hearing at this theatre.  It might be just poor acoustics since in this case we did not feel like the background music drowned out the singing as we have felt at other shows.

Despite these staging issues, Beetlejuice the Musical was a fun night out with some of the audience really getting into the spirit of things by dressing up like Beetlejuice or Lydia.

No comments: