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It’s All in the Wrist And the Voice And the Moves

It’s a revue, “The World Goes ’Round,” and the Half Moon Theatre Company is performing this homage to Kander and Ebb’s songs, (some familiar, some less so -— with some-of-the-less-so even more affecting than the biggies) at the CIA, the college in Hyde Park for training restaurant chefs.

It works. Food is theater, too, you know.

Ask anyone who ever worked in a restaurant.

Also, the Culinary Institute’s 900-seat auditorium with its undulating surfaces and lush coloring and spectacular lights is more showplace than lecture hall. And the five singers/dancers/actors from Half Moon made the most of every moment on that stage.

Mellissa Marye Lehman — dressed in red, straight and lean with big, shining eyes — opened alone, except for the four-piece band in silhouette behind her. She sang “The World Goes ’Round” — softly, at first, until the big finish — rooted to her spot, addressing serious matters like surviving broken dreams--.

Then she was joined by four more adorable theater people — Christopher deProphetis, Kenneth Kyle Martinez, Lisa Sabin and Denise Summerford, who is also co-director of Half Moon Theatre’s School of the Arts. 

And we were off with lyrics running from “Don’t say why, say why not,” to the wry and troubled “I don’t remember you, I can’t, I won’t.”

Some of the numbers were witty. Martinez sang of “the one I love, the beautiful Sara Lee.” Some were bawdy, like Sabin’s number with deProphetis about “coffee in the morning, brandy at night and Arthur in the afternoon,” and some bitter, with Lehman and Summerford declaring, “Every SOB is a snake in the grass, whatever happened to class?” 

What these talented people on stage did, with some very swift directing by Michael Schiralli, was give voice to the joys and sorrows of being human. Some people are ignored, as in Kander and Ebb’s famed “Mr. Cellophane,” some triumph, “How Lucky Can You Get?” and some skate hilariously in circles to “The Rink.”

“The World Goes ’Round,” with music by John Kander and lyrics by Fred Ebb, and conceived by Susan Stroman, David Thompson and Scott Ellis, runs at the Culinary Institute of America’s Marriott Pavilion, off Route 9 in Hyde Park, NY, through Nov. 16. For tickets, call 800-838-3006; for information, 845-235-9885.

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