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Legally Blonde Play Analysis

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Legally Blonde Critique For many people music is way to express themselves or distance themselves from their problems. Overall music means different things to different people and this is how I see music. I recently saw Legally Blonde the Musical in the Mary Jane Teall Theatre at Century II on Sunday October 12th at 2:30 p.m. It was performed by the Music Theatre for Young People which are teenagers (13-18 years old). Even people from the Bishop Carroll Chorus were acting in the musical. Only the main characters of the play had personal microphones and they were hooked on their ear and extended close to the mouth. The play’s music and lyrics were by Laurence O’Keefe and Nell Benjamin. In addition to that the storyline is based on a Novel …show more content…

The music was also very rhythmic and repetitive. Also the music changed in between its artistic style of staccato and legato. While onstage they looked and sounded very enthousiastic and happy to be performing for us, which is a good quality to have in any performance. The group as a whole changed between the dynamics of forte and mezzo piano very well along with staying with the tempo presented with the song. Their particular intonation was well connected at times, but loosely connected at others (usually at times of a more conversational tone.) Being that there were younger kids with less mature voices greatly affected the group’s overall blend and with that the group could not sound as superb as it could have been. In the songs, there were no places where a majority of them breathed which showed that they executed staggered breathing flawlessly. There were also signs of a dominant female voice that affected the blend as well. But as a group, they sounded well practiced and well comfortable with their pitches. As far as articulation, some male voices were harder to hear which is due to inadequate vowel shape, not emphasizing the ending letter or sound of a word, and not rounding the mouth to get a mature sound. Still, considering this, the lead singers could, for the most part, project their voices indubitably well. They were also robust singers with good …show more content…

First things first, I came to the conclusion that she is an alto who, if needed, can also be a soprano II because she was able to sing with a fairly, adequate range. However, when she had to hold a note for an elongated period of time she tended to pull dreadfully flat. She also didn’t emphasize the ending letter or sound, thus making the phrase hard to comprehend. Besides that, her tone quality was fairly decent and her stage presence was stupendous. She also changed between dynamics advantageously. On the other hand, her stage presence was, somewhat, juvenile because she would try to fix her costume or things onstage, but this is fathomable. Most characters in the musical shared these characteristics at one point, some more than

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