Liz Callaway: Between Flights
This extremely entertaining cabaret act showcases the Broadway star's winning personality and pure singing.
(© Joseph Marzullo/Retna)
What Callaway brings to the stage is a winning, often upbeat personality combined with a pure, seemingly effortless quality to her singing that makes her a true pleasure to listen to. Her sure vocal control allows her to focus on the lyrics and get to the heart of the song, without having to sacrifice musicality for interpretative acumen. At rare times, one wishes Callaway would dig deeper for intensity -- as in Stephen Sondheim's wrenching "Not a Day Goes By" -- but for the most part, her lack of ultratheatricality is refreshing. (Her backing trio, led by pianist/arranger Alex Rybeck, also shares the credit for keeping things in check.)
For many in the audience -- especially her longtime fans -- the show's highlights are three theater pieces that Callaway has practically made signature numbers over the years: Stephen Schwartz's soaring "Meadowlark" -- which she first learned as a singing waitress back in 1980; Sondheim's blaring "There Won't Be Trumpets"; and most especially, "The Story Goes On," the brilliantly anthemic ode to motherhood she introduced in the Broadway show Baby in 1983 and which she still sings better than anyone I've ever heard.
As Callaway proved on her wonderful CD, The Beat Goes On, she has a special flair for the songs of the 1960s, as evidenced by the quartet of selections she performed here with consummate skill: "You Don't Own Me," "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," "Leaving on a Jet Plane," and especially a poignant medley of Jimmy Webb's "Didn't We" paired with a lesser-known section of "MacArthur Park."