Jets vs. Sharks rumble into the 21st century
Puerto Rican native Ernesto R. Acevedo-Muñoz has his eyes set on the next era of West Side Story
Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheimâs classic musicalÌęWest Side StoryÌęhas played a pivotal role in the life of Ernesto R. Acevedo-Muñoz, professor and chair of Cinema Studies and Moving Image ArtsÌęat the University of Colorado Boulder, ever since his father introduced it to his children.Ìę
âMy brother and I played (the album) over and over, and by the time we finally saw the movie on a pan-and-scan Betamax videotape sometime in the early 1980s, we were both sold on it,â Acevedo-Muñoz writes in his 2013 book,ÌęWest Side Story as Cinema: The Making and Impact of an American Masterpiece.Ìę
âFirst, I was intrigued by the words, âPuerto Rico ⊠my heartâs devotionâ on the album, for I had rarely heard the name of my homeland mentioned in any movie. Later, I was overwhelmed and giddily proud to see âPuerto Ricansâ represented onscreen, however inaccurate or stylized the portrayal.âÌę
Acevedo-Muñoz even says the Oscar-winning 1961 film version of âWest Side Storyââa retelling of Shakespeareâs tragedy,ÌęRomeo and Juliet, set in 1950s New York and replacing Capulets and Montagues with Jets and Sharksâis the reason he went into film study.
âYears ahead of its time, unlike any other musical film,ÌęWest Side StoryÌęcontinues to explore ethnic, sexual and social anxieties and to underscore dystopian polyrhythms within a fantastically utopian genre,â he writes.
These days, many of Acevedo-Muñozâ introductory students have never seen the film, though many know it through the television showÌęGlee, which featured the musical in 2011.Ìę
Which isnât to say thatÌęWest Side StoryÌęhas become a relic. The show has been revived on Broadway several times, most recently in 2009. Perhaps more significant, says Acevedo-Muñoz, âit has been produced thousands and thousands of times by regional, high-school and amateur companies.ÌęWest Side StoryÌęhas never disappeared.â
This year, the belovedâand to some, controversialâclassic is set for two major revivals, with a new and radically different stage version now in previews on Broadway and a Steven Spielberg-helmed remake of the film set for release in December.
âThis is not quite the same as the little summer-stock theater company doing it out in Horseballs, Nebraska,â says Acevedo-Muñoz, who is widely considered one of the nationâs experts on the film and has recently beenÌęÌęon public radio about the coming revival and remake.Ìę
That new versions arrive at this particular point in American history is no accident, he says.
âI think itâs a direct consequence of current political tensions having to do specifically with immigrants,â Acevedo-Muñoz says (though heâs quick to point out that technically, Puerto Ricans are not immigrants, since they had citizenshipâbut crucially, neither voting rights or representationâimposed upon them in 1917).
He also notes that just two years ago Hurricane Mariaâironically, the name of the female lead inÌęWest Side Storyâdevastated Puerto Rico, highlighting the second-class status of the islandâs residents. The federal government was slow to respond to the disasterâtwo weeks after the storm hit, 89 percent of the island still had no powerâand the Trump administration cut promised relief funds.
âOn top of all that was the public humiliation of Donald Trump throwing rolls of paper towelsâ in a photo-op, Acevedo-Muñoz says, âas if thatâs what was needed or useful.â
Though widely acknowledged as a Hollywood classic,ÌęWest Side StoryÌęhas long drawn fire from critics who say it presents negative stereotypes of Puerto Ricans, offers a retrograde view of relations between the sexes and committed âbrown-faceâ by using white actors to portray Puerto Ricans.Ìę
Dutch directorÌęIvo van HoveâsÌęBroadway revival reportedly seeks to redress some of those issues, jettisoning Mariaâs âI Feel Prettyâ and using Puerto Rican actors to play Sharks, among other changes.Ìę
Spielbergâs versionâset, like the original, in the 1950sâwill feature Rita Moreno, who won an Oscar for best supporting actress in the original, both as an executive producer and playing Doc, the wise counselor to the Anglo Jets gang who is based on Friar Laurence inÌęRomeo and Juliet.
âAnd they are making the effort to get the casting to be more accurate and reflective of reality, using real Latinx Puerto Rican actors to play the Sharks,â Acevedo-Muñoz notes.
He applauds efforts to find new ways to address troublesome aspects of the musical and film but notes that remakes and revivals often disappoint fans and critics alike.
âThe 2009 Broadway revival directed by Arthur Laurents included some lyrics adapted and translated to Spanish by Lin Manuel Miranda (Hamilton) in an effort to make the play more inclusive for contemporary audiences,â he says. âBut theatergoers responded negatively to this change, and eventually dialogue and lyrics were changed back to the original English.â
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Years ahead of its time, unlike any other musical film,ÌęWest Side StoryÌęcontinues to explore ethnic, sexual and social anxieties and to underscore dystopian polyrhythms within a fantastically utopian genre,â"
Regarding the Spielberg remake, Acevedo-Muñoz says he is âcautiously optimistic, given what we know about the casting and location work, but the recent track record of musical and other remakes suggests it could be a risky enterprise.â
Then again, he has little patience for remakes in general, and wonders why Hollywood continues to greenlight them when nearly all bomb at the box office and are savaged by critics and fans alike.
âWho asked to see a remake ofÌęDirty Dancing? Who asked to see a remake ofÌęFame? Who asked to see a remake ofÌęWest Side Story?â he asks. âNobody.â
Acevedo-Muñoz praisesÌęWest Side StoryÌęfor its ârevisionist approach, political commentary and social satireâ and âvisual and aural elements,â calling it âthe musical film equivalent of the great American novel.â But heâs not blind to its faults.Ìę
âThe plot is really silly. Tony and Maria know each other for all of 24 hours!â he says. He even likes to open lectures about the film with a classic joke by Robert Wuhl that puts the spotlight on just one of the storyâs implausibilities: âTony runs through the Puerto Rican neighborhood yelling âMaria!â and onlyÌęoneÌęgirl comes to the window.â Ba-dum-tsss.
Even so, Acevedo-Muñoz has little patience with the contemporary propensity to judge art out of context.Ìę
âIt appears that Maria doesnât start existing until Tony notices her,â he says about âI Feel Pretty.â âThatâs problematic. But itâs also perfectly in tune with the 1950s context of the play.â
In general, heâs no fan of hindsight sensitivity.
âLetâs not burnÌęWest Side StoryÌębecause it doesnât get a lot of things perfect; thereâs no such thing as perfect,â he says. âNo work of art deserving of attention isÌęnotÌęcontroversial. ⊠Itâs dangerous to pretend we can protect anyone from anything because ultimately, this is what helps us erase racial, social and class conflicts that have permeated this country since its founding.â