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September 12, 2011

Somewhere along the road from Washington to Broadway, the Kennedy Center production of “Follies” picked up a pulse. A vigorous heart now beats at the center of this revitalized revival of James Goldman and Stephen Sondheim’s 1971 musical, which opened on Monday night at the Marquis Theater. And though the subject is the ghosts of show business past, don’t expect gentle nostalgia. This “Follies” looks back as much in anger as in fondness. That’s what makes it so vibrant.

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Associated Press
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Mark
Kennedy

September 12, 2011

A revival of Stephen Sondheim’s "Follies" has arrived on Broadway just in time for Halloween. It’s perfect for the season — it’s got ghosts, skeletons bursting out of closets and a haunted house. It’s also a treat.

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September 12, 2011

Mention that the original 1971 production of Follies was passed over in the Tony Awards race for best musical and theater chat sites tend to explode into fresh howls of outrage, provoking the kind of breast-beating anguish rarely witnessed outside of Sicilian funerals. But 40 years after its Broadway premiere, Stephen Sondheim and James Goldman’s show still dazzles with its structural complexity and brilliant score, making it hard not to share that sense of injustice.

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Backstage
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Erik
Haagensen

September 12, 2011

Director Eric Schaeffer deserves credit for working hard to address the numerous shortcomings of his Kennedy Center production of Stephen Sondheim and James Goldman’s towering musical classic "Follies." Performances have been retooled, staging and pacing tightened, misconceived choreography redone, misguided casting changed, and a much-criticized red dress has vanished. As a result, the show’s potentially vast emotional power, smothered in its initial Washington, D.C. run, has begun to emerge. Unfortunately, problems remain. For those well-acquainted with the work, the result is a cruelly tantalizing miss. For audiences unfamiliar with "Follies," this production may prove more satisfying.

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Broadway Space
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Dan
Wolpow

September 12, 2011

“I’m so glad I came,” says Sally Durant Plummer, a former Ziegf—er…Weismann’s Follies girl as she arrives at a reunion party 30 years after the Follies ended for good in 1941. A throwaway line perhaps, but as uttered by Bernadette Peters, these are loaded words. It is with an equal mix of trepidation and utter longing that Sally arrives for the party, where she will not only be reunited with the man of her misbegotten dreams, but also be forced to confront the ghosts of her past.

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