Monday, April 11, 2011

'Catch Me' doesn't capture art of the con

By Elysa Gardner, USA TODAY

NEW YORK � Frank Abagnale Jr., the former con artist whose memoir inspired a Steven Spielberg movie, managed to pass himself off as an airline pilot, a pediatrician and an attorney before turning 21.

  •  Song-and-dance man Aaron Tveit stars as former con man Frank Abagnale Jr. Catch Me. Costumes are  by Tony-winning  designer William Ivey Long.

    By Joan Marcus via AP

    Song-and-dance man Aaron Tveit stars as former con man Frank Abagnale Jr. Catch Me. Costumes are by Tony-winning designer William Ivey Long.

By Joan Marcus via AP

Song-and-dance man Aaron Tveit stars as former con man Frank Abagnale Jr. Catch Me. Costumes are by Tony-winning designer William Ivey Long.

One feat that Abagnale did not attempt was writing and starring in a stage musical about his youthful adventures. And now we know why.

Not that Catch Me If You Can (* * � out of four), the new Broadway show based on the aforementioned film and autobiography of the same name, is a dud. Boasting a score by the famously witty team of Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman and a book by Terrence McNally, Catch Me is too ambitious and stylish in its efforts to entertain and move us to induce boredom.

The main problem with this production, which opened Sunday at the Neil Simon Theatre, is that only one of the two leading men is consistently compelling. And it's not the one playing Abagnale (Aaron Tveit).

Rather, it's the actor cast as his nemesis. Norbert Leo Butz is predictably marvelous as Carl Hanratty, the schlumpy federal agent who stalks and eventually nails the underage schemer ? though not as handily as Butz walks away with the show.

Don't blame Tveit, the square-jawed young actor who plays Frank Jr. ? at least not entirely. A robust singer and fluid dancer, Tveit exudes the kind of slick charm that surely helped Abagnale finagle his way into diverse fields, not to mention considerable fortune.

But that charm wears thin over 2� hours in which Frank Jr. and his exploits are so dominant. The musical is structured so that we see our mischievous finagler crafting his own story, introducing some numbers and then literally trying to sing and dance his way out of trouble. It's a canny conceit, but one that only emphasizes the character's disingenuousness.

Frank Jr.'s troubled family background also is documented, with a poignant Tom Wopat as Frank Sr., a less successful player who is nonetheless idolized by his son. But Tveit is most authentic when trying to seduce or impress us; he doesn't reveal the kind of vulnerability that would make us care about the younger Frank, as Leonardo DiCaprio did in the screen version.

In contrast, Butz imbues Carl (played by Tom Hanks in the film) with wry humor and bittersweet humanity. It's no accident that Tveit's Frank Jr. is more sympathetic in his scenes with Carl, who emerges both as a father figure and a fellow lonely soul.

Butz also handles the musical numbers with an ease that often trumps Tveit's more aggressive virtuosity. Certainly, Butz is more adept at milking Shaiman's jazzy nuances, which nod tothe more sophisticated side of '60s pop culture, from James Bond to Sinatra.

There are other elegant and frisky flourishes, from William Ivey Long's eye-candy costumes to Jerry Mitchell's vampish choreography ? both of which draw attention to the leggy, voluptuous figures in the female ensemble.

Still, in failing to deliver a youthful protagonist you can really cheer for, this Catch Me If You Can may leave you feeling a bit cheated.

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