READ THE REVIEWS:

July 29, 2012

How would Don Quixote behave if he were a cat? Would he hiss at windmills? “Skippyjon Jones,” the latest family musical in Theatreworks USA’s Free Summer Theater Program, suggests an answer. The title character, a Siamese cat, may not share all Quixote’s qualities, but he does have an impossible dream: to be a Chihuahua. Not just any Chihuahua, but a swashbuckling, sword-fighting, romantically noble one.

READ THE REVIEW
New York Daily News
BigThumbs_MEH

Joe
Dziemianowicz

July 26, 2012

On the surface this one-hour show for kids 4 and up is simply a kicky tale of a big-eared Siamese cat who’d rather be a Chihuahua. But look closer and themes resonate about acceptance and being comfy in your own skin, er, fur. Either way, it’s light and bright and scampers along thanks to five game actors and a litter of lively songs by composer Eli Bolin (“Sesame Street”) and lyricist Kevin Del Aguila (“Altar Boyz”), whose story is based on Judy Schachner’s picture books.

READ THE REVIEW

July 26, 2012

Little ones learn some important lessons about the power of the imagination and accepting others for who they are in Skippyjon Jones, the new musical that TheatreworksUSA is offering free-of-charge this summer at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. With a breezy book and gag-filled lyrics by Kevin Del Aguila and a deliciously giddy Latin-infused score by Eli Bolin, the show also proves to be a great deal of fun…for theatergoers of all ages.

READ THE REVIEW
Backstage
BigThumbs_MEH

Sam
Thielman

July 25, 2012

Once upon a time there was a beautiful Kevin Del Aguila–Eli Bolin score that lived with some embarrassing direction and a horde of delighted under-10s in a Theatreworks USA production called "Skippyjon Jones." There are kids’ musicals and there are kids’ musicals, and "Skippyjon Jones" is one of the latter. It’s not as much fun for parents as, say, "Click, Clack, Moo," which set a high watermark for tuners about socialist farm animals, but it’s everything a discerning 5-year-old is looking for in the theater.

READ THE REVIEW