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March 22, 2012

Spoiler alert! Oh, just kidding. It will surely come as a surprise to no one that the title character in “Jesus Christ Superstar” does not come to a happy end, drifting blissfully into old age and obscurity on the sands of Judea. His gruesome death is depicted with unusually lavish flair in the director Des McAnuff’s flashy revival of the pop-rock musical by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber that opened Thursday night at the Neil Simon Theater.

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Usa Today
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Elysa
Gardner

March 22, 2012

At a preview of the new Broadway revival of Jesus Christ Superstar (* * ½ out of four), the pre-show announcement advised theatergoers not to worry about etiquette. Anyone who wished to open a noisy candy wrapper during the performance was welcome to do so: "The score will drown you out."

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Associated Press
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Mark
Kennedy

March 22, 2012

While walking out of the Neil Simon Theatre, one might be forgiven for wondering: Who knew the greatest story ever told needed this much help?

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March 22, 2012

Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s countercultural Christ musical shows its age but still earns its Hosannas in this amped-up staging, which comes to Broadway via Canada’s Stratford Shakespeare Festival and La Jolla Playhouse.

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Newsday
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Linda
Winer

March 22, 2012

Satire and the Crucifixion have always been the uneasy partners in "Jesus Christ Superstar." They are impossibly incompatible, of course. And yet their friction has powered the show’s audacity since 1970, when a couple of young British guys named Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice (or their record producer) invited the press to a church to sit and listen to their newfangled concept album — a pop opera. I was there.

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