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The new musical comedy “Boop,” which opens this weekend on Broadway, is one of the year’s few family-friendly shows. There’s ...
It's "boop-oop-a-doop" for a musical that needs a good spritz of Pooph from David Foster, making his Broadway debut.
“Boop”’s plot, like its title, is monosyllabic. A to Boop. The basic and predictable book from writer Bob Martin is surely a ...
Boop!” makes a fresh star of the classic cartoon, while “Smash” banks on the rhythms of background television.
Boop! The Musical” borrows from “Barbie” and “The Wizard of Oz,” takes on #MeToo Baddies and Eric Adams, and brings a ...
Who’s Betty Boop? Beyond the iconography you might have seen on a lunchbox ... Betty’s introduced within her cartoon reality as a movie star who takes on any role her bosses at the studio ask her to, ...
Betty Boop was a dog. Pardon the expression. It's just a fact. Betty was a French poodle when she made her first movie appearance in "Dizzy Dishes," a short cartoon released Aug. 9, 1930.
Supported by By Michael Paulson Betty Boop has arrived on Broadway ... The arrival of the Hays Code — content guidelines for movies that started in the mid-1930s — had a big influence on ...
The Betty we meet in “BOOP!” skews more closely to her original incarnation ... And yes, she falls in love — with a guy who admits he hasn’t seen any of her movies. (“They’re called shorts,” she notes ...
Following on the high heels of the 2023 hit film “Barbie,” “Boop! The Musical” likewise aims to remake and rebrand another ...
The It girl with the spit curl looks great for 100, but her Broadway musical, which feels like one big merch grab, is ...