The Pepsi Center was the right place for this spectacle -- a gargantuan complex (it's the DIA of arenas) highlighted by several mini-mountain ranges lining the main parking lot, a bizarre sculpture of, among other things, an upside-down basketball player who looks as if he's trying to commit suicide by diving into the sprawling lobby's tiled floor, and concession-area walls lined with one immense advertisement after another. The selling continues in the performance zone with plenty of "branding" by sponsors such as the Denver Post, and Martin's handlers quickly got into the spirit, projecting commercials for (natch) Pepsi, Ford, and Ricky's favorite cologne on the white curtain stretched around the curved-stage setup as soon as the lights were lowered. Also being pimped was Jessica Simpson, the latest signee of Columbia Records, Martin's label, who opened the show with about twenty minutes of karaoke renditions from her newly issued disc, with backing provided by the usual well-muscled dancers. A Barbie blonde whose endowments were almost contained by a negligee-esque top, Simpson seemed like a cross between the first woman to die in a slasher flick and a third-rate Mariah Carey: Mariah Scary, if you will. But though her music would have to improve radically to achieve mediocrity, she was smart enough to mention Martin's impending arrival every chance she got -- and the largely female throng responded to his name as promptly as Pavlov's dog. Woof, woof.
Shortly thereafter, a burlap bag in the rafters caught fire, sending a small shower of embers flickering down on the folks in the $98 seats; the first ten rows were briefly evacuated, and the beginning of the concert was delayed for over half an hour. But that's where the spontaneity ended and the surreality began. Even many of those who'd seen Martin's network TV special two days before soon found themselves slack-jawed.
First up was a film in which Ricky rose from bed, put on his sexiest duds and emerged onto the street, where he was immediately swarmed by (you guessed it) paparazzi. Before you could say "Don't go into that tunnel, Princess Di," Martin was racing across the city in a vintage Mustang convertible with the media leeches hot on his shapely tail -- a pursuit that ended when he crashed into a fire hydrant. Then, as water from the hydrant ejaculated suggestively onto the camera lens, the curtains parted and a replica of the Mustang rose through the floor of the stage with Ricky standing on its hood shaking his black-leather-swaddled moneymaker to the blaring strains of "Livin' la Vida Loca." At around the same time, a woman wearing a white-fringed bikini popped into view (had she been in the trunk?) and jiggled every bit of flesh she owned within mere feet of our favorite Martin. But Ricky didn't even seem to notice. He was very much in his own world, unself-consciously doing the exact same hand gestures and dance moves that he used in the "La Vida Loca" video even as he offered up alternately coy and joyous looks that told his fans he was just as turned on by his boyish desirability as they were. This was hardly the only bit of evidence his turn provided to those whispering about his sexual preferences; throughout the evening, Martin remained at arm's length from any and all of the voluptuous women who contributed to his act, getting personal only with the poles that peppered the multilevel set. (Watch Ricky slide up and down, up and down.) But in the end, ambiguity ruled: The only person Martin seemed eager to have sex with was himself.
If he was attracted to himself for his mind, his love must have been blind; every time he spoke between songs, the audience's collective IQ dropped a couple of notches. At one point, he said that the concert was a step toward achieving the cultural union of the Americas. Such polite but endearing dopiness, not his gyrating pelvis, is the real legacy he shares with Elvis Presley; the innocence and naivete he projects take the edge off his egomania, as does his pathological eagerness to please. Starting off with his signature song -- the one comedian Chris Rock, in his HBO special Bigger and Blacker, said was in danger of becoming "the Puerto Rican 'Whoomp! (There It Is)'" -- was a risk, especially considering the comparable strengths (or lack thereof) demonstrated by "Spanish Eyes," "Shake Your Bon-Bon" and the rest of the material on this year's Ricky Martin, his English-language debut. But Martin's tireless exhibitionism kept the show from flagging even when he performed "Mara" and other Spanish-language songs that perhaps two-thirds of the attendees had never heard. No stage move was too corny or melodramatic for him, nor was any theatrical cliche too hackneyed to grasp to his bosom -- and by refusing to censor himself, he wound up wowing those for whom the old standbys still work and cracking up anyone accustomed to performers less willing to go several steps over the line.