I despise musicals! I love Carrie Underwood. I sat all the way through this and shocked my wife. Carrie was good from beginning to end.
I’m sure the LATimes critic just hated it because none of the children were openly gay.
I’m surprised this has become so controversial. Just you basic family values, God loving and flag waving everyman. Nothing special. Yet, I’m almost expecting people to hold picket lines at wherever this was filmed. Picketers with big signs showing the New Maria’s face x’ed out or wearing devil horns. There is nothing they can Boycott.
Ha.. that's a keeper.
It must be very difficult to do a live TV production-at least give her some credit for trying. And it was nice of NBC to put on something wholesome, for families to watch this time of year.
Carrie Underwood is a Wonderful comedian!
Her spoof on Miley Cirus is a Winner!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0H9ofSB5DBw
everyone has different tastes and I have seen people say Carrie cannot act
There is not a nastier more vindictive group of people in the world than Broadway theater queens. These people were horrified that a country artist would be hired to play Maria. They also deeply resent Underwood’s poking fun at Obamacare during the recent CMAs, as they still think the Dear Leader walks on water.
The Sound of Music Broadcast gave NBC some of its highest ratings in years, Underwood should be proud of her part in it.
What is this ‘sound of music’ and who is this Carrie Underwood person (if that is its real name)? I mean, I know that music “sounds”, doesn’t everyone?
Within the group of trained actors, I think Carrie held her own pretty well. Especially the scene where the mother superior sings, “Climb Every Mountain.” Carrie touchingly played Maria, with tears and everything.
We watched it...she did a fine job. No, acting isn’t her strong suit...big deal. She’ll get better...her ambition and talent more than made up for what was a bit of a stretch in the character development.
Damn, folks, she was doing something new for an entire generation of television viewing. The entertainment was decent family fare, her voice was beautiful.
For the first live full blown musical in 50 years on television, I give it an A. B+ at worst.
What was everyone expecting? Julie Andrews II?
God bless you, Carrie.
It's silly for the Von Trapp family to weigh in on this, as the story only vaguely resembles history. From what I've read, the real Maria was even more of a martinet than the captain. I really admired the entire production for pulling off all the singing and choreography live the way they did.
The biggest of which is that NBC drew its largest Thursday night audience in five years by showing wholesome family entertainment.
...Karath tweeted during the show.
What's this?
Is this going to be the new expectation of "professional" on the Broadway stage? Tweeting by the performers to the audience DURING the performance?
What happened to staying focused on your part/job/role/assignment until it was done, and then go out to play with others?
-PJ
It’s silly to mess with perfection.
The original “Sound of Music” is perfect.
For those who want to see Carrie Underwood sing with the children, “Do-Re-Me” (She is wonderful!):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=31v13ukJknE
Let me weigh in in all sincerity.
Carrie Underwood was OK as Maria. She gives no indication that she can act her way out of a paper bag, but her singing was excellent.
I thought everybody else was pretty good to excellent and I was very glad they played it straight with the religious scenes.
There were some technical problems with the show, at many points the singers seemed drowned out by the music and it seemed to really suffer from not having an actual live audience for the performers to play to. I’ve seen complaints about the lighting, etc. which are beyond my ken, but I give them credence.
There was really a lot to complain about with this production, but I enjoyed it and I’m glad they did it. I hope they do more things like this.
I think they just hate wholesome family entertainment - it’s a damn sight harder to make work than sleaze.
We had some similar live family entertainment on Australian TV the other night - I said to my wife that I had not seen something like that since the eighties. It was terrific.
Does your heart good to see young people singing great tunes and with dancing and acting talent to boot!
Mel
I stumbled on the movie while channel surfing. It was so amateurishly bad that at first I thought it was a comedy.
That doesn’t make me think more or less of the actors. Everyone gets bad scripts and bad production from time to time.
This was like a high school production and the mezzo broke the last phrase of “Climb Every Mountain” when she ran short of breath.
I watched most but not all of The Sound of Music Thursday night; a long day a work and having to get up early for an early AM conference call at work the following morning, I turned in for bed a little after 9:30. I would like to watch the whole thing.
Here is my take from what I saw and from the YouTube videos:
I was pleasantly surprised and with emphasis on surprised, on how well Carrie Underwood handled the singing. There were a few moments when I detected an ever so slight twang slip through, but overall, as far as the singing, I think she did well. Her acting however, the speaking parts, was rather painful to watch. As one reviewer commented, She delivered her spoken lines with all the inflection and spontaneity of an in-flight safety video. As some have mentioned however, she did seem to improve as the production went on. I will however say that for someone who has no Broadway stage experience, it must have been daunting to perform a complete musical live. It is a lot different from just singing on stage or doing music videos. I wonder if having a live audience would have helped or hurt her.
Stephen Moyer also disappointed as Georg Von Trapp. I think hes incredibly handsome and sexy and hes a good actor and can sing as well, but his acting Thursday night I also found stiff and labored. I found it odd how he constantly had his hand over his stomach as if he was having a gall bladder attack.
The woman who played Elsa, Laura Benanti was excellent. Then again she is an experienced stage actor and FWIW, she played Maria in a Broadway revival of TSOM in 1999. The children were also very good, especially the young woman who played Liesl. Then of course there was Audra McDonald as the Mother Abbess. She was simply outstanding and out shined the rest of the cast IMO.
I understand that many people love the 1965 movie. So do I. My big brother took me to see it at the movie theater when I was 5 years old and he had bought the soundtrack LP too and I wore it out, know every song by heart along with the soundtrack to Mary Poppins. But people need to understand that this was not an attempt to re-make the 1965 movie or Underwood attempting to recreate Julie Andrews (or Mary Martins who originated the role on stage) performance. This was a live performance of the original stage musical and I hope that with the ratings success, that we will see more such similar programs in the future. And FWIW, the 1965 movie made some changes in song order and staging of some of the songs and dropped a couple of songs that had been in the original stage musical and it was nice to see them included in this production.
Next as far as the casting Audra McDonald who is black, while some seem to, I had no problem with it. I would have felt much differently if she had played the part as black, blacked it up; in other words acted more like Whoopi Goldberg in Sister Act or as if she was in some Tyler Perry movie, sung Climb Every Mountain like a negro spiritual but she didnt, she played the role perfectly. While in the first minute of the production, I couldnt help notice her skin color, it was soon forgotten as it should.
It should be noted that McDonald is a Juliard trained five-time Tony Award winning actor in addition to being an accomplished TV and movie actor and Grammy wining recording artist. She won a Tony for her performance as Carrie Pipperidge in a revival of Carousel and played Lady Percy in Shakespeares Henry IV.
Casting for stage productions, especially musicals typically do not follow the same sort of rules or concerns as for TV or movies casting in far as race or age. For instance, Mary Martin who originated the role of Maria in The Sound of Music in 1959 (for which she won a Tony that year) was at the time 46 years old a wee bit too old to play the young novice Maria doncha think? And she reprised her role as Peter Pan in 1960 for a live TV performance at the age of 47, as a boy no less.
Opera also casts singers in roles based solely on their singing and acting ability alone and never for their physical appearance. Luciano Pavarotti played many romantic leads in operas but no one ever swooned over his good looks; his singing and stage presence, yes. The same can be said for many female opera singers while not all female opera singers are rotund, there are more than a few that wouldnt be cast in a movie because of their weight or lack of attractiveness or age on the operatic stage, these things do not matter. And FWIW, my mother had many years of classical voice training, sang opera locally here in PA and was invited to audition for the Met, and her favorite opera singer was Leontyne Price, my mother thought her voice was near perfection. And Leontyne Price along with many other black opera singers have played roles that are not black roles, some even being cast in Wagner operas.
But for those of you who still that think that historical accuracy is important in a stage musical and concerned about a black woman cast as a nun in Austria prior to WWII, then you should skip The Sound of Music all together because the musical, both the stage musical and the movie is only bares a passing resemblance, is only rather loosely based on the real Von Trapp family. I would also ask why McDonalds casting is an issue when American southerner Underwoods is not. Underwood is from Oklahoma so perhaps one day she will take a stab at that musical in the role of Laurie, I think that would be a good role for her, hopefully after polishing her acting skills.