Katie Brayben, Christian Borle (Photo: Matthew Murphy)
Tammy Faye
By Fern
Siegel
For
anyone familiar with the evangelical scandals of the 1980s, Tammy and Jim
Bakker, Jerry Falwell and Jimmy Swaggart are familiar names.
The
latter two preached fire and brimstone - and their demonizing of liberals and
feminists was their calling card. Hell hath no fury like a preacher scorned. Into
this world of sin and condemnation came the Bakkers. And to many evangelicals,
they were a revelation, promising heavenly rewards and earthly riches.
Unlike
other electric church pastors, they preached a prosperity gospel, an upbeat belief
that, thanks to satellite TV, fueled millions into their PTL (Praise the Lord)
ministry, Christian-themed Heritage Park and personal bank accounts. The
Bakkers lived lavishly. (A lifestyle shared by Falwell [Michael Cerveris], who
had Liberty University underwrite his excesses and a political alliance with
Ronald Reagan to help protect him from later investigations.)
The
centerpiece of their televangelism was Tammy Faye (Katie Brayben) - whose life
in the public eye is now a Broadway musical.
Direct
from its Olivier-winning run in London, Tammy Faye, with music by Elton
John and lyrics by Jake Shears, presents a sympathetic portrait of a woman whose
life is the stuff of melodrama. She experienced rejection from a harsh,
judgmental church. Her father left her mother with seven children. And rather
than embrace the family, their hometown church kicked the divorced woman out.
Tammy Faye
takes on a big subject, but fails to dig deeply. John's music, which all sounds
alike, is belted out at ear-shattering levels. Too often Broadway musicals play
over the singer, which is the case here. And Brayben is worth hearing - her
performance is intense, heartfelt and sincere.
The
show chronicles their rise in the 1970s from itinerant preachers to TV
superstars, and the scandals that destroyed them. Hypocrisy, greed and corruption
are prominent. Sadly, Tammy Faye devotes far too many numbers to faith
and neglects the dark underbelly of these religious rock 'n' rollers. The show
is both too long and too little.
Michael Cerveris, Christian Borle, Katie Brayben (Photo:
Matthew Murphy)
At
PTL, whose empire aroused the jealousy of their rivals, Jim (Christian Borle) ran
the administration - and they appeared as a united couple. But it was Tammy's
open-heartedness, warmth and refusal to turn political that endeared her to followers.
She had a PTL cooking show, talk show and a message of love and forgiveness
that clicked. More comfortable in front of the camera than Jim, she even welcomed
a gay paster with AIDS in the 1980s with compassion.
But
from great heights come great falls. Jim is accused of rape by church secretary
Jessica Hahn, the government investigates the misuse of ministry funds, and
Falwell swoops in to eliminate a rival.
Tammy Faye
skims the surface of the Bakkers' story, though as 2021 movie The Eyes of
Tammy Faye made clear, there is a compelling tale to tell. Director Rupert
Goold keeps the action moving and Bunny Christie's sets and Katrina Lindsay's
costumes reflect the era well.
Despite
convincing performances by Brayben, Borle and Cerveris, who captures Falwell's
oily persona, the musical never finds its footing. It's like watching an
over-the-top episode of PTL, rather than revealing the uniquely American
rags-to-riches tale that uses religion to power personal ambition.
Tammy Faye
Palace
Theater, 160 W. 47 St.
Running time:
2 hours and 35 minutes
Tickets: tammyfayebway.com/tickets/
Through
December 8