Dancing the Memory, Missing the Map: “Gotta Dance!” Celebrates Broadway While Holding Us at a Distance

Libby Lloyd and the Company of Off-Broadway’s Gotta Dance! Photo by Christopher Duggan.

The Off-Broadway Theatre Review: Stage 42’s Gotta Dance!

By Ross

I walked into Gotta Dance! already holding onto a memory. Not of a specific show, but of a feeling. That moment when a line of dancers moves in perfect unison, and something clicks inside you before you can even name it.  It was not about plot or character. It was about bodies moving with purpose, creating something emotional that I could feel long before I could explain it. That ‘singular sensation’, that physical memory of movement, sits at the heart of Gotta Dance!, a high-energy revue that gathers together some of the most iconic choreography in Broadway and film history and places it squarely in front of us.

Conceived and co-directed by Nikki Feirt Atkins alongside co-director/choreographer Randy Skinner, the production arrives at Stage 42 following a sold-out run at the York Theatre Company. Built as a 90-minute dance-driven celebration, the show, as presented by Riki Kane Larimer, draws from the work of legendary choreographers such as Jerome Robbins, Michael Bennett, and Gene Kelly, reconstructing numbers from shows including West Side Story, Singin’ in the Rain, A Chorus Line, and Pippin. This is not a musical in the traditional sense, but a living archive, one that treats choreography as history worth preserving and performing.

The Company of Off-Broadway’s Gotta Dance! Photo by Christopher Duggan.

That intention is clear from the first notes, and it is carried with undeniable skill by a company of dancers who are, quite simply, exceptional. Jessica Lee Goldyn delivers work that is both technically precise and emotionally electric, particularly in “City Lights” from The Act, where Minnelli-control and Liza-vulnerability exist in equal measure. Sara Esty, stepping into “The Music and the Mirror,” brings a focused intensity that builds into something quietly mesmerizing, capturing the relentless drive and desperation at the center of that number. Brandon Burks and RJ Higton, a powerfully adept duo, bring sharp musicality and charisma to “Moses Supposes,” their precision matched by a sense of play that keeps the sequence buoyant and alive.

There are moments throughout the evening where the production feels exhilarating in exactly the way it needs to be. Kate Louissaint shines in Billy Wilson’s “Sweet Georgia Brown,” an iconic number drawn from a show that may not carry the same immediate recognition as others. But its delivery lands with clarity and style. Higton returns with a beautifully controlled “All I Need Is the Girl” from Gypsy, while “I Love a Piano” from White Christmas finds a balance between showmanship and character. Even in less-iconic selections like “The Contact Suite,” the choreography of Susan Stroman speaks clearly through the exacting moves of dancer Libby Lloyd, reminding us all of how much storytelling lives in the body.

Jessica Lee Goldyn and the Company of Off-Broadway’s Gotta Dance! Photo by Christopher Duggan.

And yet, for all its excellence in execution, Gotta Dance! struggles to fully connect its parts into a cohesive whole. The production moves from number to number with the help of projected titles and minimal framing, offering context but not quite providing a through-line. What emerges is a procession, a sequence of beautifully rendered moments that do not always speak to one another in a meaningful way. The result is a certain distance, as though we are observing the material rather than being invited inside its soul.

This absence becomes more noticeable as the evening progresses. The idea of choreography as living history is compelling, but without a clearer curatorial voice guiding us through the choices, the selection can feel random. The inclusion of the “Manson Trio” from Pippin feels less impactful than it might, particularly when one begins to think of other iconic numbers that might have deepened the evening’s exploration of that choreographic lineage. The list of what is not here inevitably grows in the mind, and it is likely different for each audience member.

RJ Higton and the Company of Off-Broadway’s Gotta Dance! Photo by Christopher Duggan.

The production elements support the dancers with consistency, if not always with the same level of distinction. The live seven-piece band, led by Eugene Gwozdz, provides a strong musical foundation, keeping the energy of the evening moving forward with clarity and drive. The lighting by Ken Billington and Anthony Pearson is dynamic and responsive, shaping each number with a sense of theatrical polish. The costumes by Marlene Olson Hamm, however, do not always rise to the same level. In a show that culminates in the one and only “One,” a number so closely associated with sparkling visual spectacle, the final look feels surprisingly bland, missing some of the glamour that might have elevated the moment.

Still, the dancers remain the undeniable center of the experience. Their commitment, precision, and sheer joy in movement carry the evening through its less defined stretches. They embody the very idea the show is built upon, that choreography is not simply decoration, but a language capable of holding memory, emotion, and history. That language lingers long after the final curtain, not as a fully formed narrative, but as a sensation, the recognition of how movement stays with us. The turns, the rhythms, the shapes carved into space. Gotta Dance! gathers those fragments and places them before us with skill, even if it does not always provide the cohesion one might hope for. What remains is the chance to feel those moments again, to watch them take shape with precision and purpose. Sitting there, it becomes hard not to return to that first moment when it all clicked, when the rhythm took hold and refused to let go.

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