Unfit to Print: CK Reviews Gutenberg! The Musical! With an Assist from DF (for Parterre Box)


In Gutenberg! The Musical!, two hapless aspirants from New Jersey scrape their cash together and rent a Broadway theater for a night, intent on impressing the Manhattan cognoscenti with their fanciful farce about the inventor of the printing press. Sitting in the audience of the James Earl Jones Theatre, you might wonder how this slimly plotted show, which had a brief Off-Broadway run in 2007 before fading into relative obscurity, ended up occupying a piece of prime Main Stem real estate nearly two decades later. To that end, I have four words: Josh Gad! Andrew Rannells!

Gad and Rannells, the agreeable original stars of The Book of Mormon, prove that their charisma and chemistry has not diminished an iota since they ended their mission. In the interim, Rannells has returned to Broadway numerous times (Falsettos, The Boys in the Band, and a stint as King George in Hamilton), while Gad has largely worked on the big screen, most notably in Frozen. Together, they offer a master class in holding an audience in the palm of their hands and using their natural talents to flesh out the thinnest material. We should all celebrate the return of this dynamic duo.

Producers and audiences should be thankful too, because Gutenberg! needs all the help it can get. Written by Scott Brown and Anthony King (who would later collaborate on Beetlejuice), the show stretches a single joke until it bleeds. Hungry to escape their picayune lives as nursing home karaoke performers, Bud (Gad) and Doug (Rannells) craft an extravagant—and largely fictional—tale about Johannes Gutenberg’s quest to bring literacy to the impoverished population of 15th-century Germany. The mission to mass-produce the Bible involves a satanic monk, a comely barmaid named Helvetica, and, for some unknown reason, an anti-Semitic street urchin. The results are as ludicrously overwrought as you might imagine.

Gutenberg! also attempts to celebrate the hungry desire for a life in the theater, but there is something tacitly unsatisfying about watching two bona fide stars enact the pathetic struggles of these untalented creators. Although Gad and Rannells sell the material for all it’s worth, the show might gain a greater poignancy with unknown actors in the roles, rather than a sense that the production is winking at the megawatt status of its leads. It also doesn’t help that director Alex Timbers has largely instructed the pair to play outsize versions of themselves, meaning we can never lose ourselves in the few revealing moments that attempt any genuine character development.

Timbers keeps the action hurtling at a relentless pace, but he cannot overcome the super-attenuated material either. (The show vastly overstays its welcome at two hours and 10 minutes, plus intermission.) Scott Pask’s set design similarly works too hard to look cute and cheap, and like the show itself, it gets swallowed up on a large Broadway stage. Bud and Doug don’t ultimately represent the future of Broadway, but Gad and Rannells surely do. Let’s bring them back in a vehicle deserving their talents. That’s news fit to print.

Photos: Matt Murphy

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