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NBC’s ‘Smash’ is ready for the spotlight

By Chuck Barney, Contra Costa Times –

WALNUT CREEK, Calif. — All the world may be a stage, but Megan Hilty, one of the stars of NBC’s “Smash,” has been around long enough to know that the most compelling action doesn’t happen under the spotlights.

“I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been backstage, looking around, going, ‘Where’s the camera? There needs to be a camera here,’” says the actress, who appeared for several years in “Wicked.” “The drama that happens behind the curtain is way more interesting than what’s happening on the stage.”

NBC desperately hopes viewers agree. The beleaguered network is betting big on “Smash,” a dazzling, boldly ambitious fictional saga about the making of a Broadway musical — or, as Hilty calls it, “a gorgeous, elaborate soap with some fantastic, splashy song-and-dance numbers.”

The show is packed with creative firepower, including film and theater producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron and movie kingpin Steven Spielberg. And its sprawling cast features Anjelica Huston, Debra Messing and “American Idol” Season 5 runner-up Katharine McPhee, who plays a Broadway newbie battling Hilty’s character for the lead role in a production about Marilyn Monroe.

“Smash” is the kind of quality fare that NBC entertainment chief Robert Greenblatt hopes will pump some life back into a once-proud network that is now sputtering in fourth place. “We think it’s special — that it can break through the clutter,” he says.

On the other hand, skeptics wonder if a mass audience will, indeed, be seduced by the lullaby of Broadway — or if the musical setting will appeal only to those few who regularly read “Playbill.”

Spielberg is convinced the idea has legs. An executive producer on “Smash,” he had long envisioned a TV series about the Broadway creative process, complete with “the fights, the arguments, the dreams, the egos, the disappointments and the energy” that go into it.

“I thought audiences would be able to relate to (it) whether or not they ever had seen a Broadway show,” he told journalists last month during television’s winter press tour. “This is about the drama of the characters.”

Several years ago, Spielberg recruited Zadan and Meron, who brought “Chicago” to the big screen. They enlisted playwright Theresa Rebeck to pen the script, as well as the composer-lyricist team of Mark Shaiman and Scott Wittman (“Hairspray”).

The series was initially pitched to Greenblatt during his stint as president at Showtime. When Greenblatt left the cable network, he brought the series with him to NBC. Still, “Smash,” being the offbeat risk that it is, may have never made it to prime time had it not been for the success of a certain little musical comedy about high school songbirds.

“When (producer) Ryan Murphy did ‘Glee,’ he broke a great barrier,” Zadan says. “He allowed the networks to really believe that there was room for drama, comedy and music in one show week after week. I don’t think (our) show is like ‘Glee,’ but we feel grateful to ‘Glee’ for opening that door.”

Monday’s instantly captivating pilot episode of “Smash” introduces viewers to the writing team of Julia (Messing) and Tom (Christian Borle), who are eager to craft a musical about America’s iconic blonde bombshell, even though a previous production about Monroe flopped. The project draws interest from a producer going through a messy divorce (Huston) and a self-absorbed director (Jack Davenport).

As the casting process unfolds, two ingenues — the naive novice, Karen (McPhee), and a veteran chorus girl, Ivy (Hilty) — engage in a spirited showdown to play Marilyn.

The performances are solid all around, with McPhee and Hilty making strong impressions — and not just for their vocal power. Also thoroughly convincing is Messing, who dials things down from her “Will & Grace” days to play a woman torn between professional passion and family life.

And true to Spielberg’s word, there is plenty of dramatic juice that will have universal resonance, including workplace rivalries, marital strife, sinister scheming and sexual tension.

Should “Smash” become a smash, producers have discussed turning the fictional Marilyn musical into an actual Broadway show. But Rebeck insists they don’t want to get ahead of themselves.

“What we’re aiming to do right now is write a great television show,” she says. “ … What happens in the future, who knows?”

———

SMASH

10 p.m. EST Monday

NBC

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