ctor/director John Freedson has loved Broadway musicals since he was a child. But as an adult, he's having more fun ripping the genre to shreds. Mr. Freedson directs and performs in Forbidden Broadway, a musical-comedy revue that lampoons many of Broadway's most beloved stars and musicals. Showing at Detroit's Gem Theatre, the production puts such favorites as Cats, Evita, Les Miserables and Phantom of the Opera square in the cross hairs of insightful parody. The Forbidden Broadway ensem- ble, which includes Mr. Freed- son, Dorothy Kiara, Christine Pedi and William Selby, also targets individuals. The troupe performs hilarious and dead-on impersonations of Carol Channing, Yul Brynner, Barbra Streisand, Richard Harris and a side-splitting pairing of Mary Martin and Ethel Merman. "It's more fun than any show I've ever done," Mr. Freedson says. "Everybody gets to do the entire range of what they can do — from sing- ing at their very best to very broad comedy." The Detroit production is the first stop in Forbidden Broadway's 10-year anniver- sary tour. Mr. Freedson, 35, has been involved with the show on and off for seven years. He directed perfor- mances in Sydney, Australia; Boston, Minneapolis, Phila- delphia and Chicago — where it won the Jefferson Award for best musical review in 1990. He assembled what he calls an "all-star cast" of the show's New York veterans for Forbid- den Broadway's first visit to Detroit. When casting a show, Mr. AARON HALABE Special to The Jewish News John Freedson, right, and the Detroit cast of Forbidden Broadway. When he saw it, John Freedson begged an audition for Forbidden Broadway. Freedson looks for a "stellar" voice before comedic or imper- sonation abilities. "I look for first-rate singers who sing as well as the stars they're paro- dying;' he says. "Because if you don't, then the show starts to look like sour grapes. It starts to look like we're mak- ing fun of these people because we're not as good as they are. And I've made that mistake a couple of times." There's no mistaking this cast as anything but first-rate. The ensemble is put through their paces, performing 25 musical numbers that range from a rugged Yul Brynner impersonation to coloratura singing. The performance includes "Phantom of the Musical" (a parody of "Phantom of the Opera"), "Ambition" (from "Tradition" from Fiddler) and "I Strain In Vain To Train Madonna's Brain" (originally "The Rain in Spain" from My Fair Lady). Mr. Freedson per- forms as Yul Brynner, Dustin Hoffman and M. Butterfly. Forbidden Broadway creator Gerard Alessandrini believes that Broadway musicals are prime satirical targets because many people think of them as "the ultimate in the art form. I think the best thing to parody is anything that is considered stuffy, or held up as a sacred cow," Mr. Alessandrini says, "or some- thing that is considered im- portant, maybe more impor- tant than it should be." Evidently, many celebrities who are spoofed in the show don't take Forbidden Broad- way too seriously. Mr. Freed- son says some stars consider it a badge of honor to be includ- ed. "You knew you had made it if you were spoofed in For- bidden Broadway. It has become a form of flattery in a way," he says. When Forbidden Broadway opened in 1982 at Paulson's supper club on New York's up- per west side, the show didn't include a Carol Channing number. In the early days, Mr. Freedson jokes, it was thought that "a parody of Carol Chan- ning would be redundant." Since then (after a request from her husband), a Carol Channing number was added to the show. Mr. Freedson says Ms. Chan- ning, Ann Miller, Anthony Quinn and other celebrities regularly attend Forbidden Broadway performances. "After it had been running in New York for a while, it was like the in-thing for Broadway stars to do," he says. "We wouldn't want Lauren Bacall to come because we sort of im- ply that she's a man. Or Liza Minelli, because we're still harping on her drug days:' The majority of the show's material is well-intentioned lampoonery that honors the grand traditions of the Broad- way musical. One glaring ex- ception is the ensemble's treatment of Les Miserables, and British musicals in general. Mr. Freedson calls the Les Miz parody "an indict- ment" of Andrew Lloyd Web- ber's convoluted story, and strained musical lines that force singers "way out of their range." (One Forbidden Broad- way number is called "It's lb° High.") "We feel that the British have come and ruined the musical for all times," says Mr. Freedson. "They've made these sort of overblown operas that take themselves so seriously and have no heart to them. They're just these big, dark, clunking spectacles. So our Les Miz parody is not an affectionate tribute . . ." Mr. Freedson was inspired to pursue a theater career when, as a high school student, he THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 65