When Nathan Lane 
                  came to town a ticket for The Producers was the hottest 
                  in the West End. And when he left it wasn’t. Lane is a Great 
                  White Way deity of course but it takes two to tango and a great 
                  theatre star belting it out in a turkey is still belting out 
                  a turkey. Naturally The Producers is cut from an altogether 
                  different beast and we’ve all known it from Mel Brooks’s 1968 
                  film. The Broadway cast now brings it to your compact disc player, 
                  relishing an hour or so’s worth of fizz and farce, and announcing 
                  the arrival of the production on the silver screen.
                That cast is headed 
                  by Lane, a man of Wagnerian stamina, the Lauritz Melchior of 
                  Broadway, and a worthy inheritor of Zero Mostel’s capacious 
                  crown. As Leo Bloom we have the superficially unlikely Matthew 
                  Broderick – but Broderick is a versatile character actor and 
                  a board-treader of some standing, albeit one can never quite 
                  efface Gene Wilder in the role. He is small though – and that 
                  helps things theatrically.  Franz Liebkind is hot-to-trot Will 
                  Ferrell, though oldsters will cleave to Kenneth Mars. Statuesque 
                  Juno Uma Thurman, lately seen on screen slicin’ an’ dicin’ in 
                  Tarantino martial art capers, appears as Ulla, a role taken 
                  in the film by Lee Meredith. This Valkyrie is one we can all 
                  admire. 
                From the big butch 
                  intro through the stompy Yiddish inflected numbers the score 
                  is a salami of chutzpah. Samba rhythms are infiltrated into 
                  I wanna be a Producer, and a tango coils through Along 
                  came Bialy, some G&S patter seeps into That Face, 
                  and John Barrowman, the Anglo-American preppy star, takes 
                  a fine Lead Tenor in Springtime for Hitler. Never was 
                  goose-stepping more enjoyable. A sly Bolero shuffles into Springtime 
                  for Hitler – Part II and some salsa into You’ll find 
                  your Happiness in Rio. There’s even a bonus 
                  track of The King of Broadway. 
                Above all though 
                  it’s Brooks, words and music. And what words, ones that 
                  tend to overshadow the music, if we’re being judgemental, which 
                  tends to make up in gusto what it lacks in real memorability. 
                  Still, the trick is to amuse, excite and titillate the audience 
                  and in those spheres Brooks has few peers. 
                Jonathan Woolf