April 9, 2012
By Kris Vire
In 2009, Silk Road artistic director Jamil Khoury devised Silk Road Cabaret: Broadway Sings the Silk Road, in which performers of Asian, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean descent took on numbers from Broadway musicals like The King and I, South Pacific and Flower Drum Song, often giving them an ironic twist. These acts of reclamation were interspersed with personal stories about the intersections of the performers’ ethnic identities and their careers in the theater.
Khoury’s new cabaret broadens the scope. The basic setup remains that of Eastern-descent actors reappropriating Western material about the Orient and the Middle East. But Khoury extends his reach into pop, rock, hip-hop and Tin Pan Alley, while the prose passages here are taken from literary sources.
The blatant exoticism of South Pacific’s “Bali Hai” may seem obvious. But when it’s threaded together with musings on the region and its peoples by everyone from Edith Wharton to Weezer and William S. Burroughs to Ice Cube, Khoury, dramaturg Neal Ryan Shaw and director Steve Scott draw a compelling through line of the West’s long history of alternately fetishizing and fearing those “unimagined lands.” A winning cast of eight ably sells both that story and Ryan Brewster’s accomplished arrangements, which offer musical satisfaction as well as a lyrical clarity that allows us to ponder anew the amiable tone deafness of “Walk Like an Egyptian” and the xenophobic malevolence of Toby Keith’s “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue.”