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March 1, 2026 9:30 pm

Bigfoot!: Fuzzy and Facetious

By Michael Sommers

★★☆☆☆ A new musical satirizes the gullibility of flyover America

Grey Henson in Bigfoot! Photo: Marc J. Franklin

Opening on Sunday at City Center Stage 1, Bigfoot! wants to provide satirical musical commentary touching upon America’s weird folklore, venal elected officials, voracious developers, ecological disaster and the swayable nature of the ignorant masses. An assemblage of silly comedy scenes and a dozen songs strung along a thin plotline, Bigfoot! registers as an amiable 90-minute cartoon performed by a gung-ho six-member company.

Set in the dismal industrial burg of Muddirt in some unidentified flyover state of misery, the story transpires during the 1980s Reagan era, so the satire is general rather than specific. Unseen yet feared by the townsfolk, Bigfoot (Grey Henson) is immediately revealed to be a nice, do-gooder teddy bear devoted to his community activist mom, Francine (Crystal Lucas-Perry), a human who explains to the audience, “You have sex with a carnie next to a nuclear power plant, you end up with a giant son.” Health undermined by toxic surroundings, the ever coughing and fainting Francine is aided by her devoted Doctor (Jason Tam) in keeping Bigfoot stashed away in the woods.

However, the town’s corrupt Mayor (Alex Moffat), wanting to divert public awareness away from his pocket-lining backroom schemes with a real estate CEO (Jade Jones), frightens the ignorant locals into organizing a search for Bigfoot. Soon arrives Joanne (Katerina McCrimmon) a bloodthirsty bounty hunter who proclaims, “I’ve killed more animals than a lipstick company.” Yet after their initial tussle, Joanne and Bigfoot unexpectedly become chums and join Francine and the Doctor in thwarting the Mayor’s nefarious plans.

The satirical humor of the sketchy, often obvious script by Amber Ruffin and Kevin Sciretta scarcely arises above the collegiate level: “Our water system has more illegal substances in it than a bathroom at Studio 54.” Several running gags involve face-slapping, the portentous shrieking of a raptor and awkward medical terms. The message regarding the American public’s susceptibility to despicable leaders and crazy notions was sent long ago.

Played by a four-musician ensemble, the songs composed by David Schmoll (who wrote the arrangements) and Ruffin (who wrote the lyrics), sound mostly like an easygoing mixture of old-school pop rock and contemporary jingles; they are usually energetic, upbeat, repetitive. A ballad expressing Francine’s wishful hopes for her big boy’s future, “Maybe” is a sincere exception to the generally facetious nature of the modest song stack. Crystal Lucas-Perry’s soulful interpretation of the number lends it greater emotional clout.

Funnily looking like a hirsute Brigham Young, the baby-faced Grey Henson depicts Bigfoot with a perfectly innocent quality. Alex Moffat sweats mightily to mine some laughs from his coarsely written character of the crass Mayor. Jade Jones gives the swaggering CEO a sleazy authority. Everyone but the fur-suited Henson capably assumes several minor roles. Director-choreographer Danny Mefford fields a respectable production with serviceable scenery by Tim Mackabee shaded at times by lighting designer Mextly Couzin in a green glow. Although the show unfortunately tends to be performed with a slyly aren’t-we-being-funny attitude that can be annoying, especially when the material proves to be not always so brilliant, Bigfoot! offers at least a pleasant waste of time.

Bigfoot! opened March 1, 2026, at City Center Stage 1 and runs through April 26. Tickets and information: bigfootthemusical.com

About Michael Sommers

Michael Sommers has written about the New York and regional theater scenes since 1981. He served two terms as president of the New York Drama Critics Circle and was the longtime chief reviewer for The Star-Ledger and the Newhouse News Service. For an archive of Village Voice reviews, go here. Email: michael@nystagereview.com.

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