That's what happens when you put an indisputably authentic star like Mr. Jackman at the center of an indisputably bogus show like "The Boy From Oz," the bathetic musical biography of the Australian entertainer and songwriter Peter Allen, directed by Philip Wm. McKinley.
Not, Mr. Echols admitted, that an indisputably authentic performance will be accomplished, or is even possible.
To make it indisputably authentic, what better companion need you ask but a Hamishwoman?
Although he called the show "indisputably bogus," Ben Brantley in The New York Times also called Mr. Jackman "an indisputably authentic star."
J. H. Vince asserts that the speech is indisputably authentic, but it seems improbable that it was published by Demosthenes himself.
George Bataille claims that Huysman's description of the Black Mass is "indisputably authentic".
But that's what happens when you put an indisputably authentic star, like Mr. Jackman, at the center of an indisputably bogus show like "The Boy From Oz," the bathetic musical biography of the Australian entertainer and songwriter Peter Allen, which opened last night at the Imperial Theater.
It is a powerful and original work all its own that moves along in short, staccato chapters with indisputably authentic language.