The Capeman was not performed in its original form after its 68-show original Broadway run. Shortly after the show's closure there were discussions of a
Songs of The Capeman national concert tour, but these plans were abandoned. Just days after the show's Broadway premiere,
Variety journalist Greg Evans suggested that the doomed show would work well as a concert of songs. He wrote, "Years from now, when some savvy producer is scouting old theater material for a scaled-down concert staging,
The Capeman should be first on his list." In 2008, Joseph Melillo, director of the
Brooklyn Academy of Music, produced a stage show called
Songs from the Capeman using Paul Simon's
Capeman music without the narrative dramatic elements of the show. Melillo said, "I wanted to help Paul, to get this demon out of him and onto the stage, where we could say, 'Look everyone, this is great music.'" Melillo's production featured the
Spanish Harlem Orchestra led by
Oscar Hernández, original music director for the Broadway
Capeman. Paul Simon appeared, to sing "Trailways Bus," one of the songs from the show, and finished the evening with a performance of his 1980 Latin-themed single "
Late in the Evening." and a musical number by
Danny Rivera. This version was substantially stripped down, with a running time of only about 90 minutes (compared to the original production's three hours). The new version increased the focus on Agron's mother, used more choreography, and had no sets. The media was instructed not to write reviews of the show, which was officially described as a work in progress, with
Public Theater artistic director Oskar Eustis calling it "just a sketch" of full reconception of the show. Even so, Ben Brantley of the
New York Times, who said the original Broadway production was "like watching a mortally wounded animal", gave a positive review, focusing on the organic staging outdoors on a rainy night in Central Park. ==References==