Michael Riedel

Michael Riedel

Theater

The Manilow of the hour

Fanilows, rejoice!

Barry Manilow’s long-incubating musical “Harmony” is up and running in Atlanta and, judging from the reviews, it’s sure to hit Broadway next year.

Manilow and co-writer Bruce Sussman (who wrote the lyrics to the durable “Copacabana”) have been plugging away at “Harmony” for almost 20 years. The show is about the Comedian Harmonists, a hugely popular all-male singing group in Germany in the 1920s and ’30s. Their rise, though, coincided with that of the Nazis, and since their ensemble included several Jews, they were forced to disband when Hitler came to power. They were largely forgotten until a German filmmaker interviewed the last surviving members for a 1977 documentary. The movie led to a resurgence of interest in the group and, after Sussman saw it in 1992, inspired the musical.

A friend who saw the musical in previews last week e-mailed me afterward: “What can I say? I loved it! Totally ‘verklempt’ at the end . . . and the audience went bonkers — and it was a mostly WASPy, wealthy Atlanta audience!”

(For those who are like that audience, “verklempt” is a Yiddish word meaning “choked with emotion” — as in “After reading a very sad short story by John Cheever, and watching the late summer sun set from the porch of our home on the Cape, I was so verklempt, I had to pick myself up with a dry Beefeater martini.”)

The critics confirmed my friend’s verdict a few days later.

“Though a little fine-tuning here is inevitable, this show feels Broadway-bound,” wrote Atlanta INtown.

From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: “Manilow and Sussman have created a virtual ‘Jersey Boys’ for Jews. I mean that as a high compliment.”

The critic went on to praise the rousing opening and some “luminous” Manilow-style ballads.

Manilow and Sussman are “over the moon” about the reception for their show, a friend says.

The road to Atlanta was paved with hardship and tears.

When the show premiered at the La Jolla Playhouse in 1997, the reviews were mixed. Manilow and Sussman went back to the piano to rewrite. They announced a Broadway opening in 2003, with a Philadelphia tryout. But the day the cast was to board the train for Philly, Manilow’s producer, Mark Schwartz, tearfully admitted he’d raised only a fraction of the $7 million production cost.

The show was abruptly shut down.

Manilow called me that day from a plane and said: “Other than the death of my mother, this is probably the most devastating day of my life.”

He blamed “all this insanity” on Schwartz’s “incompetence and dishonesty.”

For years, Manilow and Sussman were tied up in arbitration against Schwartz to reclaim the rights to their show. At one point, a friend of Schwartz’s cornered Manilow in an elevator and screamed obscenities at him. Manilow was so unnerved, he started attending arbitration hearings with a bodyguard.

In the end, he and Sussman prevailed, and now “Harmony” is all theirs.