Sara Bareillis wrote the music for a 2015 stage adaptation of the 2007 movie Waitress. In Waitress: The Musical, in movie theaters Thursday, she plays the lead role.
At the same time, Jenna also gets a new doctor, Jim Pomatter (Drew Gehling), with whom she falls in love. Jenna's co-workers Dawn (Caitlin Houlahan) and Becky (Charity Dawson) also get romantic subplots.
Most of the songs Bareillis wrote are upbeat, which matches the tone of the original Adrienne Shelly movie starring Keri Russell. When the music slows down for ballads, they are emotional and powerful.
The filmed version of Waitress: The Musical can offer closeups far more intimate than even a front row seat. Overhead shots highlight how the chorus and stagehands gracefully move props around the set and bring Jenna ingredients for baking scenes.
The stage lights go blue when Jenna imagines scenes. And if those pies are just fake props, they still look appetizing.Like the films, the stage show doesn't make excuses for the adultery. Yet, it has empathy for people finding supportive companions, even if the circumstances are not ideal.
Jenna and Dr. Pomatter share charming banter and food-based sexual innuendo. Gehling does some impeccable physical comedy, too.
Background dancers fill the stage with activity, if not choreography as acrobatic as a show like Newsies. But Waitress is a mellow show; it's not about aggressive dancing.
In the popular phenomenon of Broadway adapting films as musicals, Waitress is faithful yet finds a musical voice that suits the material. Like other filmed stage performances, Waitress: The Musical captures the energy previously only experienced by theatergoers in person.
Fred Topel, who attended film school at Ithaca College, is a UPI entertainment writer based in Los Angeles. He has been a professional film critic since 1999, a Rotten Tomatoes critic since 2001, and a member of the Television Critics Association since 2012 and the Critics Choice Association since 2023. Read more of his work in Entertainment.