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June 28, 2010

So buoyantly lightweight that it practically floats up, up and away, Dallas Theater Center’s extensively and inventively revamped "revisal" of "It’s a Bird … It’s a Plane … It’s Superman!" may be just what it takes to elevate the reputation of a semi-obscure Charles Strouse-Lee Adams musical heretofore best known as a cult-fave Broadway flop. A second-chance staging on the Great White Way may be problematical — DC Comics reportedly maintains a tight grip on its rights to the Superman mythos — but this new and improved iteration of the show conceivably could become a regional theater staple.

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July 23, 2010

While Bono, The Edge and Julie Tay mor have been twisting and turning in that web of a mess called "Spider-Man, Turn Off the Dark," the Dallas Theater Center is soaring with a long-forgotten show about the Man of Steel. "It’s a Bird . . . It’s a Plane . . . It’s Superman" flopped on Broadway in 1966, but down here in Big D, it’s a hit.

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July 23, 2010

SINCE Superman first arrived on Earth in Action Comics in 1938, superheroes have zigzagged from valiant to self-aware, campy to gritty, depending on the mood of the moment and how their stories are being told. Who the Man of Steel should be now is the decision that faced the Dallas Theater Center when it chose to revive the 1966 Broadway musical “It’s a Bird … It’s a Plane … It’s Superman.”

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