By Lynn Venhaus

Virtuoso vocals and transfixing tangos propel the Muny’s grand-scale stylized and dramatic “Evita,” the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice classic.

Featuring three of the most expressive voices to grace the outdoor stage this or any season, Katerina McCrimmon is the titular character, Paulo Szot is Argentinian president Juan Peron and Omar Lopez-Cepero is narrator Che, the historic revolutionary born in Argentina. The musical goes through her meteoric rise to power and influence as Argentina’s First Lady.

Through their stunning renditions of the signature songs, the trio earns the audience’s awe and admiration. Notable for their commanding stage presence, technical skills and strong delivery, they flourish in the imposing setting.  

Also standing out were tenor Daniel Torres as the charming Magaldi in “On This Night of a Thousand Stars,” and mezzo-soprano Sabrina Santana poignant as Peron’s mistress, whose heart-tugging “Another Suitcase in Another Hall” is one of the evening’s highlights.

The glamourous and charismatic Evita, who died tragically of cervical cancer at age 33 in 1952, grew from humble beginnings to beloved icon. Marrying Peron in 1945, she became a populist leader after his election in 1946, later described as the “Spiritual Leader of the Nation.”

Paulo Szot and Katerina McCrimmon in the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by The Muny | Emily Santel

The story starts in 1934 when the poor Maria Eva Duarte was 15. As Evita, she championed the rights of the working class, women and the poor, establishing social programs and instrumental in women’s suffrage. But she also had her detractors, not accepted by the aristocracy.

McCrimmon, who is skilled at bringing the house down, for she toured as Fanny Brice in the most recent revival of “Funny Girl” and her rendition of “Don’t Rain on My Parade” was a highlight of the Fox 2024-2025 Broadway season.

With her tour-de-force delivery, she creates a magical Muny moment with the showstopper “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina.” Image-wise, she’s breathtaking in a shimmering flouncy white ballgown with silver sparkles, standing poised on a stately balcony/staircase representing Casa Rosada, the government seat.

With customary finesse, the Muny’s execution is nearly flawless. Innovative director Josh Rhodes, who also choreographed, had a specific vision and meticulously followed through, collaborating with the associate director and choreographer Lee Wilkins. Natalia Nieves-Melchor is the assistant choreographer and dance captain.

Omar Lopez-Cepero in the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by The Muny | Emily Santel

Rhodes’ flair for incorporating novel ideas was evident in “Chess” two years ago, and now, this time.

McCrimmon and Szot are a good match together, first paired in “I’d Be Surprisingly Good for You.” Tony winner as Emile de Becque in Bartlett Sher’s acclaimed 2008 revival of “South Pacific,” his rich, warm baritone is powerful in “The Art of the Possible,” “A New Argentina,” and shows range in the tender “She Is a Diamond.”

A bona fide star in three previous Muny shows, Omar Lopez-Cepero is an exceptional Che. As a cynical commentator, he snarls, he scowls, he expresses his disdain for Evita’s opportunistic and manipulative ways. And his songs are just as passionate.

He’s an observer, Greek chorus, challenger and critic on stage most of the time. Lopez-Cepero’s intensity comes through singing “Oh What a Circus,” “High Flying Adored,” “The Chorus Girl Hasn’t Learned,” “The Money Kept Rolling In” and “Dice Are Rolling,” among others.

Members of the company of the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

Lopez-Cepero was memorable in “On Your Feet!”, “The Unsinkable Molly Brown” and “Paint Your Wagon” in recent years, and he owns this role, making his performance unforgettable.

Best of all is music director Ben Whiteley’s brilliant orchestrations and conducting. He has brought out vivid colors in the musical imagery through captivating use of instrumentations.

He exuberantly captures Latin rhythms, jazz influences and pop melodies in the anthemic score.

Each orchestra piece stands out, thanks to the top-shelf skills of the 24-piece orchestra. Their work is exquisite from “A Town Square in Buenos Aires” through 26 more compositions to the finale “Lament.”

Sabrina Santana and Omar Lopez-Cepero in the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

Sound designers David Patridge and John Shivers also enhanced the aural experience.

Adam Koch’s majestic scenic design, accompanied by Paige Seber’s moody lighting design, and Steven Royal’s distinct black-and-white video design, all Muny debuts, create an immersive regal tableau. Fun fact: 20 years ago, Koch was a young assistant stage designer at the Muny. Welcome back!

One of the most eye-catching elements is world-class tango dancers Junior Cervila and Noelia Guerrero – you can’t take your eyes off them. Cervila choreographed the tango-infused numbers.

They are mesmerizing in their first act introduction, then “Waltz for Eva and Che,” the finale, and most beautifully presented in the bittersweet ballad “You Must Love Me.”

From left: Katerina McCrimmon, Noelia Guerrero and Junior Cervila in the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

Written by Webber and Rice for the 1996 film adaptation, it not only became a stand-alone hit for Madonna, but also won Best Original Song at the 1997 Academy Awards. It has since been incorporated into the show.

 “Rainbow High,” where McCrimmon directs her transformation so that she can be adored and their ‘savior,’ ramping up the “star quality,” is also impressive, as is a feisty, playful “Buenos Aires.”

An articulate 20-person ensemble, representing different social classes, becomes a community, and their movements represent a changing cultural landscape – Rhodes’ vibrant choreography spotlights the country’s sociopolitical changes.

Andrés Acosta, Leyla Ali, Marissa Barragán, Leah Berry, Patrick Blindauer, Jordan Casanova, Marilyn Caserta, Junior Cervila, Devin Cortez, Nicholas Cunha, Kyle de la Cruz Laing, Daniel Alan DiPinto, Kylie Edwards, Noelia Guerrero, Natalia Nieves-Melchor, Zibby Nolting, Arnie Rodriguez, Leann Schuering, Trevor Michael Schmidt, Sharrod Williams and Noah Van Ess are featured – in celebration and in mourning. An ensemble of ten Muny Kids and eight Muny Teens are also incorporated. Shout-out to stage manager Kelsey Tippins.

Omar Lopez-Cepero and the company of the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

First-time costume designer Brian Hemesath brings considerable show business credentials with him – Three-time Emmy winner for “Sesame Street,” 100 digital shorts for The Lonely Island on SNL 2002-2015 and work on Spielberg’s “West Side Story” and John Wick films.

His timeline for Evita’s evolution from peasant to model, radio star, actress and First Lady is a mix of flashy and classy. Wig designer Kelley Jordan’s work is exemplary, complimenting his various looks.

The alluring presentation is not the issue. Webber and Rice’s storytelling is the show’s weakest aspect. Partly because throughout time, Eva has become a historical footnote, and many are not familiar with her controversial story.

Katerina McCrimmon and Omar Lopez-Cepero in the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

Is she a heroine or a villainess? It’s up to you to decide, but the musical’s format is hampered by unsympathetic viewpoints. You also may need a tutorial before you go, if you are unaware of the backstory.

This is not to say that the cast isn’t impassioned, because they are, and are fully committed to giving their all. They try very hard to make it an inspirational touchstone.

I’ve always found this musical cold – even though I invariably admire the performers. After seeing a national tour at the Fox Theatre in 2015 and an equal parts gritty and elegant presentation at the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis in 2018, I’m still waiting for the show to give me a reason to care.

Members of the company of the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

Nevertheless, the Muny’s creative teams’ craftsmen and artists have premiered one of the most dazzling productions with precision and clarity. Rhodes and company are authentic in historical context.

(Full disclosure, outside of “Jesus Christ Superstar,” not the biggest fan of Webber-Rice’s main claims to fame. I feel they are more about spectacle and bombast than an emotional investment. I hope for something to move the needle but so far not yet. So, there is that.)

Their ambitious and very theatrical sung-through musical “Evita” became a sensation first in London in 1978, starting with a rock opera concept, transferring to Broadway a year later and becoming the first British musical to win the Tony in 1979.

It made stars of its leads, Patti LuPone and Mandy Patinkin, who won Tony Awards (show nominated for 11, won 7).

From left: Katerina McCrimmon, Daniel Torres, Omar Lopez-Cepero and members of the company of the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

A 1996 movie starred Madonna and Antonio Banderas, and a 2012 Broadway revival starred Ricky Martin. London’s West End has revived the musical five times, including a current Jamie Lloyd interpretation starring Rachel Zegler.

The Muny debuted the show in 1985, and reprised it in 1989, 1996 and 2001. So, it’s been 24 years since a fresh take.

With its superlative all-around singers and their polished stage presence, “Evita” is a stylish whirl of dance and recognizable musical numbers.

The Muny presents “Evita” July 18 -24 at 8:15 p.m. nightly at the outdoor stage in Forest Park, 1 Theatre Drive.The musical is 2 hours, 20 minutes with an intermission. For more information, visit www.muny.org

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Katerina McCrimmon in the 2025 Muny production of “Evita.” Photo by Phillip Hamer

By Lynn Venhaus
The sights and sounds of nights gone by are such a welcome sentimental journey on the exciting new online Muny Mondays.

But the variety show is not all a “Remember When” montage, and that is what sets it apart. With a fresh batch of pixie dust, the Muny’s second episode of its smash hit Summer Variety Hour Live more than met expectations after such a sensational series launch July 20.

Rob McClure and Maggie Lakis

If you were curious as to how they could top the inaugural show, now that we know the formula, one look at the lineup beforehand answered that quickly. Tony nominee Taylor Louderman singing live under the Culver Pavilion! Tony nominee and fan favorite Rob McClure, versatile veteran of six Muny shows, singing “Suddenly Seymour” with his wife Maggie Lakis, who has been in two Muny musicals, from their home in Philadelphia. McClure’s Muny debut was “Little Shop of Horrors” in 2011, so that was fitting. The cast of 2017’s spectacular “The Little Mermaid,” lead by Commodore Primous III as Sebastian, reuniting to sing a buoyant “Under the Sea.” I mean, the deck was stacked.

The best way to describe the ebb and flow of the carefully curated selection of acts is to compare it to a multi-course gourmet dinner especially crafted to include favorite dishes, comfort food, bold choices and unique taste treats, every bite bursting with flavor.

When the “Wow” factors were unveiled — those unforgettable Muny moments that you will always recall with awe, so grateful to have experienced it in person – they blew me away. It isn’t hard to pick five, ten or 20 out of your head if you are a regular. (We probably share some of the same ones – we’ll have to compare notes).

And this supersonic flash came from two performers I saw in ensembles but did not know their names: Nkeki Obi-Melekwe and Chloe O. Davis. I will never forget them now.

Nkeki Obi-Melekwe

Nkeki soared singing “If You Knew My Story” from “Bright Star” during her time, a selection to reinforce color-blind casting. Nkeki, a Michigan graduate, appeared in the Muny’s 2017 “All Shook Up” and went on to play Tina Turner in “Tina the Musical” in London’s West End in April 2019, then move to Broadway in October.

If you are unfamiliar with “Bright Star,” the musical by Steve Martin and Edie Brickell, it came out the same year “Hamilton” did and lost the Tony Award for Best Musical to the landmark show in 2016.

Chloe O. Davis, a dancer who grew up in St. Louis and was in “All Shook Up” and “The Wiz” in recent years, was featured in “My Tribute to Black Broadway and Black Choreography: I Thrive Now Because You Dared Then,” a dance she conceived and choreographed.

As she used Forest Park as her stage, she gave us a history lesson that stirred “all the feels.” She created the styles of famous black choreographers, using audio and visual clips in addition to her dance moves – East St. Louis’ international icon Katherine Dunham, George Faison, Debbie Allen, Hope Clarke, Gregory Hines, Donald Byrd, Bill T. Jones and Camille A. Brown among them.

Chloe O Davis

Moving. Powerful. Elegant. Truly a shining moment.

A delightful song-and-dance interlude was courtesy of three dynamos Maya Bowles, Trevor Michael Schmidt and Gabi Stapula, whose high-spirited “There’s Gotta Be Something Better Than This” from “Sweet Charity” captured our anxiety and their eagerness to get back to the business of entertaining. These chorus gypsies reminded us how ensemble cohesiveness is so important to any big splashy musical.

Gabi also works with the Muny Teens, and their fun-loving mashup of “Bring On the Monsters” from “The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical” and “Drive It Like You Stole It” from “Sing Street” again showcased how talented some local students are – and their sunny dispositions. I’m a big fan of the 2016 movie “Sing Street,” which is writer-director John Carney’s third film about the transforming power of music (“Once” and “Begin Again”), and its stage adaptation was set to open on Broadway in April after rave reviews off-Broadway.

The power ‘hour’ also featured behind-the-scenes stories about what’s happening at The Muny, including being able to pull off the stunning fireworks at the Centennial Gala, and the amusing game show throwback Munywood Squares. With interesting fun facts, hosted by Gordon Greenberg and featuring nine Muny performers in the Zoom grid,  including E. Faye Butler, J. Harrison Ghee, Ann Harada, Raymond J. Lee, Vicki Lewis, Steve Rosen, Jeffrey Schecter, John Scherer and Christopher Sieber. This week’s good sport contestants were photographer Phillip Hamer and Muny company manager Sue Greenberg. Fun remembering the raccoon who waddled on to the stage in “The Addams Family” in 2014!

Taylor Louderman

On an intermittent rainy night, star Taylor Louderman was accompanied by four socially distanced musicians, to sing live the power ballad “Astonishing” from “Little Women.” Always nice to include a female empowerment song, this one from Louisa May Alcott’s timeless and timely heroine, Jo March. From Bourbon, Mo., 60 miles southwest of St. Louis, Taylor went from Muny Teen to Tony nominee as Regina George in “Mean Girls.” She made her Broadway debut in 2012’s “Bring It On!,” has been in seven Muny shows and won the St. Louis Theater Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Musical for last summer’s “Kinky Boots.” (And this year, finished her bachelor’s degree that she had started at Michigan in 2009 and was married five weeks ago to Brooks Toth).

The archival footage of past summer shows is a fond trip down memory lane, starting with Muny titans Beth Leavel and Ben Davis in 2015’s “Oklahoma!” Leavel, Tony winner for “The Drowsy Chaperone” and nominee for ‘The Prom,” is a frequent St. Louis Theater Circle Award nominee, winning for her Mamma Rose in 2018 “Gypsy.” Davis, seen last year as Sky Masterson in “Guys and Dolls,” has been nominated multiple times, and once joked during an interview that he is the ‘Susan Lucci’ of the Circle Awards.

Davis was in the now legendary production of “Spamalot” in 2013 as Sir Galahad. Host Mike Isaacson introduced “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life,” which holds the distinction of being the most popular song at funerals, pointing out how weather affected the show. I remember that on opening night June 17, a steady rain was falling after torrential downpours for days preceding it. So, there was little opportunity to rehearse outdoors. The audience for the show opener of the 95th season was so eager to see this Muny premiere that we came in droves with our umbrellas — and were mightily rewarded.

It’s a night I’ll never forget. During the curtain call, actor John O’Hurley, playing King Arthur, stopped the show to introduce Monty Python founder and show creator Eric Idle! Whoops, cheers and thunderous applause! Everyone on their feet. I turned to my companion and said: “We are in the presence of a Python!” Oh, be still my heart. It was pure bliss – he led us in “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” after mentioning this was the largest audience to ever see the musical and he wanted to see if we could get in the Guinness Book of World Records for our sing-a-long.

Oh, what a night! I had the good fortune to interview John O’Hurley later that fall when he was touring as Billy Flynn in “Chicago,” and we had a pleasant conversation about that enchanted evening.

Another splendid memory was shared with the incredible “We’re in the Money” from the extraordinary 2016 production of “42nd Street,” choreographed by Denis Jones, St. Louis Theater Circle Award winner. That curtain call – go see it on YouTube – as the cast cascaded down a staircase will go down as my favorite (next to “A Chorus Line”) in Muny history.

All these elements are what make summer nights special at the Muny, and spotlighting the world-class talent – from the musical theater majors from the best schools in the country to the stars with Broadway credentials — who come together in Forest Park – is one I like to emphasize. Years ago, seasons were headlined by ‘names’ – mostly from TV – and while recognizable, I much prefer having the best talent possible give us their all on that stage. Drama geek that I am, I read all the bios and notice who returns to the Muny, who creates magic on the stage, or is given the part of a lifetime.

And in that spirit, the Summer Variety Hour Live emphasizes how many parts make each show happen.

And it is a warm, familiar embrace at a time we all need a hug.

On July 20, The Muny 2020 Summer Variety Hour Live! drew more than 30,000 viewers from across the U.S. and around the world. This total sets a new, record-breaking first in The Muny’s live-streaming history.

On July 27, we were connected by the calypso beat of newly crowned EGOT winner Alan Menken, the banjo picking of brilliant Steve Martin, the Britpop synthesizer of ‘80s New Wave, the zaniness of silly comic geniuses, homages to Busby Berkeley and Broadway chestnuts, the triumph of a ‘local’ small-town girl with a dream, sweetness, sincerity, showmances and people who think sitting under those stars in St. Louis is like coming home.

These shows (5 total, 3 left) are exclusive, one-time-only streams and will not be available after the Thursday night airing. The July 30 re-airing will include audio description and captions. The link is: youtube.com/themunytv

The Muny’s online 2020 season is sponsored by World Wide Technology. Episode 1 was made possible by US Bank and Episode 2 by Edward Jones. They announce the next lineup every Wednesday.