He is joking... but maybe the more the idea is in the air...
 
 Stupid NYT reviewer maybe doesn't know the Times initially gave Isthar
 a good review... as they should have.
 
 http://www.nytimes.
 
 Playgoers, Beware the 'Ishtar' Invasion
 
 By CHARLES ISHERWOOD
 Published: July 22, 2007
 
 BROADWAY has recently been diligent, even tireless, in the pursuit of
 refitting successful movie musicals from the 1980s (and the 1970s) for
 the stage. Almost without exception the results have been dire. The
 synthetic stage version of "Saturday Night Fever" took itself way too
 seriously; "Footloose" was bland and witless; "Urban Cowboy" had all
 the down-home grit of a barbecued marshmallow. The odious stage
 version of "Fame" never made it to Broadway — a small mercy — but it
 was an inexplicable hit in the West End of London. Next up: a stage
 "Flashdance,
 Earth, Wind and Fire jukebox musical "Hot Feet." Prognosis: scary.
 Skip to next paragraph
 Enlarge This Image
 Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection
 
 "Ishtar" starred Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty.
 Enlarge This Image
 Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection
 
 Jamie Lee Curtis in "Perfect."
 
 Now, with the improbably delightful "Xanadu" blazing a neon path
 forward, perhaps it is time for Broadway to forge ahead in adapting
 some of the truly awful movie offerings of the decade for the stage.
 Maybe only in acknowledged cinematic badness does the promise of stage
 greatness lie.
 
 Herewith my fantasy (and, I hope I need hardly add, facetious)
 suggestions for potential resurrection. You'll notice that my
 definition of the 1980s is a little bit loose here. The 1980s were the
 years in which the quality of American moviemaking truly began to
 decline precipitously, but a few '70s titles were so bad that I've
 decided to include them as honorary '80s movies. And, to narrow the
 competition, I concentrated on movies that are either musicals or were
 associated with hit songs or soundtracks. ("Mommie Dearest," a natural
 choice, is thus disqualified, although it could make a great opera.)
 
 'EYES OF LAURA MARS: THE MUSICAL'
 
 This 1978 thriller was not, strictly speaking, a musical, but it
 spawned a big hit for Barbra Streisand in "Prisoner (Love Theme From
 'Eyes of Laura Mars')," and its soundtrack also includes the familiar
 disco number "Let's All Chant," by the
 never-heard-
 
 Nor is it truly terrible, although its chichi fashion-world setting
 and the presence of Faye Dunaway in the title role firmly classify it
 as camp. Ms. Dunaway is fiercely entertaining as a demanding,
 perfectionist, Helmut Newton-style fashion photographer who is stalked
 both psychically and literally by a killer who plants ice picks in his
 victims' eyes.
 
 Who but the demanding, perfectionist Donna Murphy could fill Ms.
 Dunaway's leather boots onstage? Denis O'Hare would be brilliant as
 the snippy gay sidekick played by Rene Auberjonois. A dance medley on
 the soundtrack also includes "(Shake Shake Shake) Shake Your Booty"
 from KC and the Sunshine Band, which means the stage version could
 shoehorn in a few more of that group's undying dance hits with
 impunity, although it is hard to picture Ms. Murphy delivering any of
 them. Perhaps she could tone up the proceedings by singing "I'm Your
 Boogie Man" with a German accent?
 
 'A STAR IS BORN '76: THE MUSICAL'
 
 Andrew Lloyd Webber's production company was once rumored to be
 mounting a stage version of the beloved 1954 "Star Is Born," which
 starred Judy Garland and James Mason and featured songs by Harold
 Arlen and Ira Gershwin. Far more fruitful for pure kitsch purposes is
 the unbeloved, resplendently bad 1970s version that helped send Barbra
 Streisand's movie career into an aesthetic swoon from which it never
 truly recovered.
 
 I envision Idina Menzel in the lead role, center stage at the climax
 in a nimbus of light emphasizing the supersized faux-'fro that Ms.
 Streisand sported in the movie. (Remember, these were the Jon Peters
 years.) Ms. Menzel certainly has both the vocal chops and, as an
 alumna of "Rent," the rock (or rock-ish) background to play Esther
 Hoffman, the pop rocker on the rise whose marriage to that
 star-on-the-
 tragically.
 
 Harder to cast, perhaps, would be the Howard role, played by Kris
 Kristofferson in the movie, looking vaguely nauseated throughout.
 Perhaps Ms. Menzel's co-star in "Rent," Adam Pascal, could be talked
 into growing a scraggly beard and grumbling his way through Mr.
 Kristofferson'
 
 A metatheatrical twist could interpolate the backstage drama on the
 movie. Ms. Streisand's megalomania had begun to spiral out of control
 by this point. She and Mr. Kristofferson reportedly loathed each
 other; hence, perhaps, his terminally disgusted look. Incidentally,
 Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne shared screenplay credit. Would Ms.
 Didion be interested in another crack at Broadway, refashioning her
 work for a stage sendup? I rather doubt it.
 
 'GREASE 2: THE MUSICAL'
 
 Sequelitis, the bane of Hollywood for at least a quarter-century, has
 somehow failed to infect Broadway. Maybe the doomed attempts to
 manufacture a hit follow-up to "Annie" had a vaccinationlike effect on
 even the more crass producers. But it's never too late to start.
 
 How many show queens recall that the super-flop sequel to one of the
 biggest movie musicals of all time was directed by Patricia Birch,
 better known as a Broadway choreographer and frequent collaborator of
 Harold Prince? Ms. Birch choreographed the smash-hit "Grease" for both
 stage and film and was rewarded with the director's chair on "Grease
 2."
 
 Sadly, her moviemaking debut didn't fare much better than Mr. Prince's
 moribund film version of the Stephen Sondheim musical "A Little Night
 Music." Perhaps a second crack at the material, with tongue in cheek,
 would be more fruitful. (More theater-related "Grease 2" trivia: Peter
 Frechette, a well-known New York actor, plays one of the not-so-tough
 toughs in the bland, sugary sequel to an already toxically innocuous
 movie.)
 
 I see Leslie Kritzer, now on Broadway as Elle's chief sidekick in
 "Legally Blonde," in the Lorna Luft role (and Ms. Luft in the Eve
 Arden role). Perhaps Kerry Butler could move smoothly from "Xanadu" to
 the lead, played by Michelle Pfeiffer, who was perhaps the only one
 involved in "Grease 2" to emerge unscathed.
 
 'ISHTAR: THE KARAOKE MUSICAL'
 
 Another popular trend Broadway has been slow to capitalize on is
 karaoke. Maybe the time has come to acknowledge that today, as amateur
 hours spread across the television spectrum like a variety-show virus,
 half the people in a Broadway audience secretly yearn for stardom, or
 at least a shining moment in the public spotlight. The rest have
 learned to be voyeurs and contest judges, happy to snicker as fellow
 audience members make utter fools of themselves.
 
 So the legendarily unamusing 1987 comedy starring Dustin Hoffman and
 Warren Beatty as talentless singer-songwriters could be adapted to
 give audience members a chance to play would-be pop idols themselves,
 sharing the stage with the stars of the Broadway sendup, Norbert Leo
 Butz and Brian d'Arcy James. Before taking your seat, you check off
 your repertory from a wide list of hits of the past few decades. Lucky
 winners get a chance to sing their favorite or share a duet with Mr.
 Butz or Mr. James.
 
 Thus laughs, so peculiarly absent in Elaine May's movie, can be
 effortlessly ushered into the stage adaptation. Also, Jackie Hoffman
 and Mary Testa repeat their scene-stealing chores from "Xanadu" here,
 playing both ends of a wisecracking camel.
 
 'PERFECT'
 
 This 1985 clunker was undoubtedly the worst movie ever made about the
 aerobics craze — also the only one I fondly hope — and possibly also
 the worst movie ever made about journalism. The chemistry between
 Jamie Lee Curtis, as a grumpy, manic, trampy workout instructor, and
 John Travolta, playing a reporter for Rolling Stone, was about as
 intoxicating as a gallon of Gatorade. Some egregiously bad dialogue
 didn't help. The immortally awful aperçu "You're a sphincter muscle!"
 is virtually a leitmotif, for example, spoken both in bitterness and
 in tendresse.
 
 To avoid having to use any of that un-lampoonably dreary dialogue,
 "Perfect" becomes Broadway's next all-dance musical, a zippy 90
 minutes choreographed by Twyla Tharp (she already did jogging in
 "Movin' Out") and reuniting two of the electrifying dancers from that
 show, Elizabeth Parkinson (in Ms. Curtis's asymmetrical shag) and John
 Selya.
 
 Their pelvic-thrusting pas de deux are performed to the music of the
 Pointer Sisters, whose single "All Systems Go" appears on the
 soundtrack, thus making it logical to include a bunch of their other
 infectious hits from the decade, like "Jump (for My Love)," "I'm So
 Excited" and "Automatic," all uncannily apropos for a show set in a
 stylized dream of a sports club. Other kitschy fun redolent of the
 '80s: a scene set in a Chippendales-
 bachelorettes, and a chorus line of Boy George impersonators
 serenading their trainer with "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?"
 (Weirdly, a bunch of Boy George look-alikes actually make cameo
 appearances in the movie.)
 
 'THE BRAT PACK LIVE! ON BROADWAY'
 
 This tribute to the sentimental filmic youthquake of the decade
 reunites all the stars of the John Hughes pictures (and tributary
 movies like "St. Elmo's Fire") who are not currently working in film.
 Which is to say, most of them.
 
 In a semi-satiric nostalgia fest the likes of Molly Ringwald, Ally
 Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Andrew McCarthy and Anthony Michael Hall recreate
 memorable scenes from the movies that made them, all too briefly and
 at a painfully tender age, famous. Altered hairlines and paunches add
 a postmodernist twist to scenes of teenagers battling and bonding. A
 poignant finale finds the cast leading a sing-along version of the big
 hit from "The Breakfast Club," Simple Minds' "Don't You (Forget About
 Me)."
 
 
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