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Spring,
1999
New York Times Review
by Stephen Holden
"{Christine Andreas} has
a gorgeous theatrical soprano with a quicksilver vibrato that can make any
romantic ballad seem loftier than it deserves."
From the New York Post
by Liz Smith "Sexy
songbird Christine Andreas...is everything anyone who loves romantic
pop music could want -- simply sine qua non." From
Variety
by Robert Daniels While
it appears that every major cabaret entertainer in town is singing
"Storybook" these days, the soaring waltz is never quite
so thrilling as when performed by Christine Andreas...in her debut
performance at the historic Oak Room in the Algonquin Hotel, Andreas
spins beautiful dreams on her imaginary carousel...sung in perfect
French, the singer recalls an image of fervent Piaf, caressing words
of love and long with big, open-hearted allure.
New York Post Review
by Chip Deffaa
April 30, 1999 That
Broadway leading lady Christine Andreas, now making a long-overdue
Oak Room debut, has an exquisite voice is hardly news. This
twice Tony-nominated artist first impressed in the 1976 Broadway
revival of My Fair Lady, and has most recently graced The
Scarlet Pimpernel. In terms of vocal technique, she is a
finer singer than almost all on the cabaret scene. She applies
her pure tones to some wisely chosen numbers, including the rarely
revived Jimmy Dorsey ballad, "I'm Glad There Is You,"
Robert Merrill's "Mira" (from Carnival), and Billy
Joel's "And So It Goes." Time
Out New York
by H. Scott Jolley What
was Frank Wildhorn thinking? (No, I'm not talking about The Civil
War). How could he let Christine Andreas ever leave the
cast of The Scarlet Pimpernel? In the florid musical's
first version, her gorgeously sung performance was the best thing on
stage. While Pimpernel's revamped production has vastly
improved upon the original, Andreas's voluptuous voice has been
sorely missed. And now - joy! - she's back, not at the
Minskoff but just down the block, lighting up the intimate Oak
Room. It's an incredible instrument, that voice of hers, with
rich surges of power between soarding Streisandian
trills. For
her Algonquin set, Andreas sticks primarily to material from her
1997 CD, Love is Good. Her signature song from Pimpernel,
the waltzy "Storybook," gets an arrangement different from
the usual overblown orchestration heart onstage and on the
disc. Here, it's just Andreas and the piano (expertly played
by her significant other, Martin Silvestri). Andreas knows
this piece so well, delivering each not with a shining
clarity. And Piaf would envy the gusto with which she tears
into the little-sung French chorus. Andreas
can glide from big show tunes to adult-contempo pop without making
either sound false. She takes the schmaltziest of sentiments -
here a country love song from Clint Black - and limns it with
sparkling beauty. The words sound like a Hallmark card reject,
but when she sings, "Love isn't something we have, it's
something we do," the entire audience feels it, shivering in
delightful recognition. Although she gives other CD tracks
equal time - Bart Howard's swoony "Fly Me to the Moon" and
a spare, almost elegiac "Love is Good" (again, partially
performed in ravishing French) have a dazzling emotion - Andreas
doesn't merely revisit her studio session. The singer offers a
comically operatic number from Rodgers and Hart; her duet with her
partner, Lerner and Loewe's funny "I Remember it Well,"
features Silvestri's best Maurice Chevalier impression. Once
though - just once - Andreas’s perfect performance is a little too
perfect. While the peppy “On a Clear Day” is technically
proficient (she nails every note), it has a somewhat cold delivery.
You feel emotionally distant from her, even in the close
quarters of the Oak Room. But like the polished pro she is,
Andreas immediately warms up again with a tender, mikeless rendition
of Billy Joel’s “And So It Goes.” Restrained and
heartfelt, she truly connects with the lyrics’ emotions - and with
ours. By Gary
Stevens, Syndicated:
Christine Andreas, a honey of a singer, tags her act, "Love is
Good." When amour is bon, it is tres bon. All of
which leads to rating Ms. Andreas as a caring soprano who brings
clarity to song and intelligence to lyric interpretation...what was
proven at the Algonquin was Christine Andreas's tried and true
talent and that she and her accompanist-composer, Martin Silvestri,
are as close as pages in a book. Christine Andreas at the Oak Room
for Masquerade
by Catherine Tyrone
Did you ever wish your
favorite musical theatre star would sing just for you in a quiet cozy
comfy setting? The Oak Room at the Algonquin Hotel in New York City
made that wish come true recently for a very lucky group of people when
Broadway’s Christine Andreas made her debut there. Having
completed a year run with the seemingly indestructible Scarlet
Pimpernel last September, Miss Andreas’ choice of the intimate and
warm Oak Room to rejoin her fans allowed her the chance to be "just
Christine" or to momentarily take on a variety of characters as
she moved easily through a varied repertoire of well-known classics,
some nearly forgotten gems, and several compellingly beautiful
treasures written by Martin Silvestri, her partner.
Did you ever hear a song and wish it could go on forever, letting
you hold, out of time, that exquisite moment created by the voice and the
heart of the singer? Broadway is frankly up to its ears in talented
people who sing well; and Christine Andreas easily has one of the
most beautiful voices around. She could certainly be successful
offering nothing more that that. Yet, whether by choice or
unconsciously through her own innately giving nature, she shares within a
song, not only the sound of that rich warm voice, but the heart of the
singer--a heart that knows love and joy, deep pain and sorrow, victory and
defeat, inner strength and the sweetness of surrender. She can carry
the listener on wings soaring free and laughing joyously in the summer
sun, or bring you to tears with overwhelming emotion and empathy. She is
one moment a sexy, sultry chanteuse only to transform instantly into an
impish, teasing pixie full of fun and devilish merriment.
Laced among her songs, Miss Andreas proved she can be a charming
entertainer as well, whether poking fun at The Scarlet Pimpernel
("They cut it here, they slashed it there, and still we get another
year"), sharing "mommy" wisdom ("That wasn’t what he
was really asking--I’m a Mother and I know these things") or
playing straight-man to Mr. Silvestri:
Christine: This was the only song written just for me.
Martin: 20 years before I met you!
Christine: (pained, shocked expression) Let me introduce you to the
composer of that song, the man who has just stepped on my favorite
fantasy!
Martin: Truth be known, I DID write that song for Christine. I
just didn’t know it at the time. When she sang it for me the very
first time I presented it to her, I knew I had written it for her.
Christine: (angelic, triumphant smile)
Audience (among themselves): Nice save, Marty!
In keeping with the theme of her debut solo album Love Is Good released
late in 1997, the evening was a veritable love fest from many
delightful perspectives. Though Fields of Ambrosia was not a
critical success in London’s West End, it is clear that this show
is near and dear to the hearts of its composer and star. The
hauntingly lovely "Too Bad", dueted with Mr. Silvestri,
instantly recaptured the compelling power of this unique musical drama. As
easily as she adopted Gretchen’s Viennese accent, Miss Andreas switched
to the song she has made her own from The Scarlet Pimpernel,
"Storybook" and Martin Silvestri’s "Love is
Good" with French so clear and perfect it is easy to assume she
learned it as a child (she insists she doesn’t even speak the language).
Hearing her rendition of "On a Clear Day", one can’t help but
wish production of that show had been delayed until Christine Andreas was
old enough to leave school, so real is the other-worldly quality she lends
to Daisy/Melinda. Rodgers and Hart’s murderously delightful
"To Keep My Love Alive" brought a (hopefully!) unique viewpoint
on fidelity in love and a wickedly merry twinkle to the singer’s eyes.
"I Remember It Well" allowed the two performers to share
the spotlight in a duet at once touching and tender, teasing and
delightfully funny. But, perhaps the highlight of the evening came with
her second encore, the stunningly beautiful "Is This The Way It
Feels", written by Martin Silvestri and Joel Higgins.
No helpless damsel in distress, Christine Andreas’ choice of songs
provides a signature for someone who is strong and clear on who she is,
where she is going, and what she believes. Listening to the passion
in her voice as she speaks of one or another of her songs and even
more so when she sings them, one is aware of being in the presence of a
very ancient and highly-evolved soul who wishes more than anything to
share through her eloquent and supple voice her understanding and
deep sense of peace with whoever can hear it.
With all the magic of the musical theatre, did you ever dream of something
even better than seeing a show with your favorite performer playing the
lead role? For the audience at the Algonquin Oak Room, Christine
Andreas made that dream come true.
Spring,
2000
From:
Budging Before Spring Creeps Over the Windowsill
Christine Andreas
Oak Room at the Algonquin
New York Times Review
by Stephen Holden
March 14, 2000
When Christine Andreas sings a word like
"thrill," the rapid pulse of her rich, rounded soprano races,
and she finds a blend of lyricism and sweet sensuality that only the
finest Broadway voices can conjure. Ms. Andreas became a star
playing Eliza Doolittle in the 20th-anniversary Broadway production of My
Fair Lady. A high point of her newest cabaret act, which plays
through April 1, is a medley that includes two songs from that show,
"I Could Have Danced All Night" and "Wouldn't It Be Loverly?",
both executed with a supremely graceful finesse. Ms. Andreas is so
richly endowed with vocal gifts that the beauty of her singing alone can
carry a show...
New York Post Review
by Chip Deffaa
March, 2000 Twenty-four
years ago, as I waited in the St. James Theater for the revival of My
Fair Lady to begin, I wondered if the "un-known" who'd
been cast in the Eliza Doolittle role - Christine Andreas - could
measure up to cherished memories I had. For my love affair
with the Theater had begun 15 years earlier, catching My Fair
Lady at the Mark Hellinger in its original Broadway run.
But Andreas, so appealingly human and endearing, won me over.
The other night at the Oak Room, as Andreas eased brightly into a
song from My Fair Lady - every word clear, crisp, warm and
dancing with life - I jotted in my notebook with amazement: "24
years later she could still play the same role, the voice, the good
looks, the spunk are all there!" She also sat on the
piano, Helen Morgan style, and carried off with aplomb a Morgan
torch song. And she gave "Is This the Way it Feels?"
from a Broadway-bound musical, Storyville, a sterling
debut. I hope there may be a good role for her in that show -
if not, she could always revive My Fair Lady!
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