Scattered Brushstrokes Of Beauty
New York magazine|April 17–30, 2017

War Paint feels like two different shows.

Jesse Green
Scattered Brushstrokes Of Beauty

THE LAST HALF-HOUR or so of War Paint, the beguiling but frustrating new musical about beauty legends Helena Rubinstein and Elizabeth Arden, is just about everything you could want from a Broadway show. The two leads— Patti LuPone as Rubinstein and Christine Ebersole as Arden— each get a gorgeous, perfectly conceived solo: “Forever Beautiful” for LuPone and “Pink” for Ebersole. Then comes a rueful duet finale (“Beauty in the World”) to complete the arc of their double biography with some twin-engine vocalizing. This sequence is preceded by an equally fine one in which the empires we’ve seen them build over the decades start to crumble in the face of new trends in beauty and marketing: Arriviste Charles Revson introduces his blockbuster 1955 product line in a swell production number called “Fire and Ice.” (“You put the fire with the ice, what do you have?” scoffs LuPone in an outrageous Polish accent. “A puddle!”) In between, there’s a song for the men who symmetrically betrayed the two titans: Harry Fleming, Rubinstein’s business manager who defected to Arden, and Tommy Lewis, Arden’s wholesale manager—and husband—who defected to Rubinstein. Their swaggering duet, which Douglas Sills and John Dossett tear into like raptors, is an angry satire–cum–elegy for the kind of women they served and the kind of men who would serve them: It’s called “Dinosaurs.”

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