THE BOSTON GLOBE November 15, 2000
LIVING/ARTS Names & Faces
By Michael Saunders and Jim Sullivan
Losing his religion
Chris Mascara has the title role in Boston Rock Opera's production of "Jesus Christ Superstar," running tonight through Saturday at the Mass. College of Art's Tower Auditorium. But it's not the first time Mascara, 32, has attempted the role. In 1989, when he was a comparative religion major at Tufts University, Mascara was tapped to play Jesus in a college production of the show and freaked, ending up in McLean Hospital for three weeks.
"I had my rock 'n' roll band at the time, the Void," Mascara says, "but had yet to make a foray onto stage in college. I was thrilled [to get the role] but at the same time, I had to make this some kind of spiritual quest, an opportunity to delve into the mystical side of the religious experience. I thought I had to purify, cleanse, and purge." He fasted and lost 20 pounds, meditated, did yoga, put himself through sleep deprivation, and finally was over taken by paranoia. "It was a psychotic breakdown," he says. He had become "not Christ-like, but weird. I wigged out." He withdrew from the play.
Approached by BRO to play Jesus this year, Mascara says, "I didn't know if I wanted to open that door. But once I did, I said I'm going to conquer this dragon once and for all. Now, I feel great on stage. When I'm home, I do have moments of fear, but not that I'm going to lose my mind. I'm an adult now."
>>>and REVIEW OF SUPERSTAR<<<
BOSTON GLOBE November 13, 2000
Boston Rock Opera's 'Superstar' is gripping - again
By Jim Sullivan, Globe Staff
How can a musical that is so unspeakably awful in the hands of a professional touring company become so gripping and gut-wrenching in the hands of a local group of musicians and actors? Maybe because it's not a job, but an adventure. Maybe, it's because the actor-musicians grew up with the work and find it a thrill to inhabit the roles. Maybe it's because of the rock 'n' roll backbone. At any rate, such is the case with ''Jesus Christ Superstar,'' the Tim Rice-Andrew Lloyd Webber rock opera, once again kicked up by Boston Rock Opera, the company formed on a shoestring budget seven years ago by producer Eleanor Ramsay and musical director Mick Maldonado. (They actually started doing ''Superstar'' in 1991 before the company took shape.)
''Jesus Christ Superstar,'' starring Chris Mascara in the title role and former Jesus -- Gary Cherone (ex-Extreme and Van Halen singer) as Judas Iscariot, is being staged at Massachusetts College of Art's Tower Auditorium under the direction of John Whiteside. It's the first time this production is being performed at a theater and not a rock club. Over time, this ''Superstar'' has grown from likably amateurish--the apostles drank real wine and got a bit tipsy during the first Last Supper--to something striking and professional.
The staging is simple and stark: a large metal grid at the rear of the stage, with a translucent scrim behind (shielding the band), and three platforms in front. Near the end, Cherone's Judas climbs the grid, anguished by his betrayal of Christ, and dramatically hangs himself. Then, of course, Christ's cross is put up against the grid, and Mascara's Jesus goes through his death throes.
The gender-and-race-blind cast--a mix of newcomers and old faves including Peter Moore (Pontius Pilate), Pat McGrath (King Herod), and Maldonado (Caiaphas)--dresses in a mix of period and modern costumes. A tag team of annoying reporters (Deborah Emmons, Lisa McColgan, and Mike Bidwell) stick microphones and cameras in the faces of the players. The big burly Gestapo-like cops (Stan LeRoy and George Bonin) whack Jesus with batons during ''The 39 Lashes.'' McGrath's boozy, smarmy, and highly debauched Herod is, as always, a hoot, and surrounded by scantily clad ensemble members of both genders. McGrath, in fabulous gold lame, goes off-script for a few comments about Christ's raising folks from the dead (''how Goth!''), cracks a sacrilegious double-entendre or two, and a few other goodies.
The crux of it all, of course, is the Jesus/Judas conflict, and in many, this is as much about Judas as Jesus. (Rice and Lloyd-Webber's original working title was ''The Last Five Days of Judas Iscariot.'') The limber, brooding, dyed-blond Cherone is superb--in Mascara's face about Jesus's supposed miscalcuations and singing the best songs of the show, ''Heaven on Their Minds,'' ''Damned for All Time/Blood Money,'' a posthumous, rousing ''Superstar,'' among them. Mascara plays Jesus as more human than Godlike, and experiences a full range of emotion from acceptance of his fate to rage against the merchants in the temple. Valerie Forgione, as Mary Magdalene, shines during her featured songs, ''Everything's Alright,'' ''Can We Start Again Please?'' and ''I Don't Know How to Love Him,'' belting out these cathartic songs in a manner far from her work with her ethereal rock band Mistle Thrush.
There were a few glitches at the show we caught, Wednesday's preview--some popping mikes, some dropped vocals (especially Karin Parker's Simon Zealotes), a slight stumble at the start of ''What's the Buzz?'' a lighting miscue that caused Rachel Morales, one of three dancers playing The Fates, to stumble and break her foot as she exited a scene.
But overall this a production of passion, pathos, and, yes, a little kitsch. It's respectful of the book, but has fun with it, too. The band, led by keyboardist/flutist Suzi Lee, shifts gears from hook-laden rockers to dissonant mood pieces expertly. It's an ambitious production of primo Lloyd Webber, before his descent into super-schmaltz.