Friday, 30 March 2018

WEST END JOTTINGS 2018









 “How does a bastard. Orphan, son of a whore and a Scotsman, dropped in the middle of a forgotten spot in the Caribbean by providence, impoverished, in squalor, grow up to be a hero and a scholar?”


We spend the best part of three hours finding out in Hamilton. A bona fide phenomenon which has finally landed in London after several years being the toast of Broadway. It is epic in its storytelling and the use of musical landscape to convey that story. Essentially the tale of one of America’s founding fathers Alexander Hamilton and his climb to the top. It is principally known as a ‘hip-hop’ musical but this would perhaps be a little misleading. Whilst the score is framed with the hip-hop / rap style, it does encompass many different musical settings. The tunes and incredible lyrical dexterity of its composer, Lin-Manuel Miranda, are breath-taking in their ambition. To make a riveting piece about America’s battle for independence from the English and subsequent political machinations takes some doing, pulling it off to this level of artistic excellence is nigh on genius. The company now in residence at the beautifully refurbished Victoria Palace convey the story with relish. At the performance I caught the ‘alternate’ Alexander Hamilton was on show. Ash Hunter is perhaps a little laid back in some key scenes, but we get a sense of his intelligence as an orator and leader as the war with the English gains momentum. He carries the weight of the show on his shoulders and is a fine leading man with a good voice. He is matched by his contemporaries and fellow revolutionaries Aaron Burr (Giles Terera), John Laurens (Jack Butterworth), Marquis de Lafayette (a scene stealing Jason Pennycooke) and Hercules Mulligan (Aaron Lee Lambert). Together they bond in a vision of America free of the English colonial rule. So enter King George III. Michael Jibson is given a peach of a role, in a remarkably brief but dazzling turn stops the show as the King informs them “You’ll Be Back” as he is faced with revolt from the Yanks. This might sound as if it’s a very emasculated show, but the “laaadies” are a force to be reckoned with too. The wealthy Schuyler sisters set out to dazzle our combat ready heroes, and star turns are given by Rachel John as Angelica, Rachelle Ann Go as the future Mrs. Hamilton and Christine Allado proving seductive in the dual roles of Peggy Schuyler and Hamilton’s mistress Maria Reynolds. Director Thomas Kail takes a very simple wooden box set and in tandem with choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler, creates a series of tableaux’s which move the story forward at each turn. The sheer scope of the score from the battle of Yorktown to the utter despair at the death of Alexander Hamilton’s son in the achingly beautiful “It’s Quiet Uptown” are staged in  simple but visually striking set pieces. The rap showdowns that represent the cabinet battles perfectly encapsulate why this show is attracting so many new theatre goers and young people to the production. Every generation or so, a piece is presented that moves forward the barriers of musical theatre showing what is possible. Hamilton is one such show, a pivot in the history of mainstream theatre. Quite rightly, Lin-Manuel Miranda has been lauded around the world for his artistry in creating one of the truly epic evenings of music and drama. A quick word too for the sound design, it would have been so easy to blast out the orchestra and drown out the complex and intricate lyrics with the beats of the shows, but the fact I heard every word from beginning to end shows that Nevin Steinberg understands that that of all the elements that make up Hamilton, it is perhaps the lyrical content that defines it.










From an imported mega-show, to a production from home grown talent which is quickly establishing itself as a cult. Dan Gillespie Sells and Tom Macrae’s Everybody’s Talking About Jamie. Based on a BBC documentary Jamie – Drag Queen At 16, our colourful hero(ine) Jamie New is about to turn 16. He’s gay, but that’s an open secret, his real desire though is to be a Sheffield drag queen. Given that there are still countries where people are being killed for even being suspected of being gay, this on the surface would seem to be less a less than dramatic premise in such a liberal country which has a history of celebrating queer culture and eccentrics. However, the joy is in the telling of the story as Jamie reaches out to a hitherto unattainable world. He does so with the help of Hugo Battersby via his alter ego Loco Chanelle. Hugo owns a boutique for the bizarre, where drag queens can stock up on dresses, make up and all manner of fabulous props. He sets Jamie on the course of finding his inner drag queen. The score is littered with toe tapping pop, from the opening school room blitz “And You Don’t Even Know It” to the anthem for the different “Work Of Art”, Gillespie Sells dazzles with his ability to plant a killer melody in your head. Tom Macrae meanwhile makes sure that we know life isn’t all froth. Jamie’s Mum constantly invents supportive communications from his estranged Dad, but when Jamie does eventually confront his father, the harsh truth emerges. He belongs to the same school of intolerance as school bully Dean Paxton. Then there is Jamie’s best friend, Pritti Pasha, a hard studying Muslim who is herself the subject of racism and ridicule but pushes through in the self knowledge she is on a path to a better future than most of those who aims their vile barbs at her. At the epicentre of the production is John McCrea’s performance of Jamie New. He camps around, dances up a storm, delivers Queeny acidic put downs and struts like a peacock. McCrea is in every way a star turn, able to convey the insecurities and hurt as much as the high comedy of his camp nature when the script demands it. The huge ovation at the end of the show for McCrea says it all. However, the emotional heart of the show unquestionably belongs to Josie Walker in her portrayal of his Mum, Margaret New. She knows Jamie’s shortcomings, but provides unconditional love and support. Her ballads “If I Met Myself Again” detailing the advice she would give her younger self, and “He’s My Boy” are delivered with heart wrenching sincerity. Other notable performances include Phil Nichol as Hugo / Loco, Mina Anwar as Margaret’s mouthy best friend Ray – perhaps the Dad Jamie never had – and a lovely turn by Lucie Shorthouse as Pritti, displaying vulnerability with a quiet and admirable determination in the face of pressures from all sides. It’s fun, has lots to say about being different and will have you humming the songs all the way home. It has a long and bright future on stages around the world.







Amid all the musicals, we find some original drama. Writer Jez Butterworth and director Sam Mendes are reunited after their success with the latest James Bond outing SPECTRE, to deliver The Ferryman - a stunning piece set in the Northern Ireland troubles of 1981. We are taken to the Carney farmhouse in County Armagh where it is harvest time, cousins are on the way to join a large clan in residence to help bring in the bounty. It should be a a carefree time of camaraderie and jigging. But there are darker forces who want Ireland free of British rule. Quinn Carney’s brother has been missing for a decade, nobody quite sure what has happened. He keeps being spotted in Ireland or on the UK mainland by well-meaning onlookers. His fate is at the heart of the events of this 3 hour epic. A body has been found in bog land partially preserved in the peat. It is identified as the missing Carney brother. The reverberations of the find are to have a devastating effect on the Carney clan. Caitlin is staying with her in-laws with her son Oisin since the disappearance of her husband, and the strain has showed on their hosts Quinn and his wife Mary. A priest has been despatched by the loyalist forces of the IRA to issue a warning to Quinn over any comeback from the discovery of his brother’s body. The 22 strong cast which span all ages (including a babe in arms, one of the few occasions I have seen a baby on stage) and deliver the joy and the horror of the dialogue with killer precision. Each of the family have been touched by the troubles in their own way. When cousin Shane Corcoran dazzles the young Carney’s with late night stories about being a lookout for the feared Muldoon, you get sense that the terror is approaching and indeed a violent climax is inevitable. Owen McDonnell leads the second company at the Gielgud Theatre with a fiery performance as Quinn, the man who turned his back on the struggle of independence for family life. Catherine Macormack and Rosalie Craig as dutiful wife and longing sister-in-law both deliver quality portrayals which tear at the heart of Quinn’s daily life. Justin Edwards beautifully observed English farm hand Tom Kettle is a standout, playing a character with learning difficulties is no easy task and Edwards hits the tone perfectly. Sian Thomas' bitter Aunty Pat and Stella McCusker as Aunt Maggie Far Away both offer unique insights into the opposing forces which occupy the farmhouse. With a full compliment of younger actors, the play makes full use of a chance to see a viewpoint from another angle. Francis Meeza as Shane Corcoran is cocky and indiscreet as the oldest cousin, whilst Laurie Kynaston as Oisin offers us a troubled soul who finally has to accept the bombshell that his father is dead. I could go on picking out performances from this large cast, save to say every one of them succeeds in bringing to life brilliantly a member of the extended Carney family. Declan Conlon’s sinister Muldoon and Charles Dale’s tortured Father Horrigan complete an array of characters who are all given their own chance to shine by Jez Butterworth. The subject is deliberately provocative, divisive and ultimately tragic on all sides. It is a masterpiece of quality drama. 







Finally, from bright new shining stars on Shaftesbury Avenue, to a classic still holding court at Her Majesty’s Theatre in the Haymarket. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera is now reckoned to be the most successful single piece entertainment of all time. All continents have fallen to the power of The Phantom. With the original production now celebrating its 31st birthday in the West End, how is it holding up? The entire production is a triumph for the late Maria Bjornson’s designs in set and costume. I first saw the famous chandelier rise during the crashing organ sounds of Lloyd Webber’s overture back in 1986 when Michael Crawford and Sarah Brightman were the toast of London. The opening has lost none of it’s impact in the intervening years as we are transported back to the Paris Opera House of 1881. The show has passed into legend with its searing orchestral love songs, coupled with the discordant threats of the Phantom. As we descend to the Phantom’s hideout mist swirls the stage, candles rise up and his gothic lair is resplendent in its dark beauty. The current cast are thankfully telling the story with the same quality and intense sense of melodrama that the originals did. Ben Lewis comes to London fresh from a victory as the Phantom in the hit and miss sequel in Australia (his performance captured for DVD). Whilst The Phantom in Love Never Dies is in many ways a bitter and angry man, the version in Phantom is a ruthless obsessive denied love and affection through a hideous accident of birth. Whilst we learn to fear him, we also empathise with the Phantom’s pure love for Christine Daae. Lewis makes the most of the Phantom’s longing and desire, his “Music of the Night” finding the mesmeric beauty in the Phantom’s personality that so attracts Christine. Kelly Mathieson gives us a big range both vocally and in character as Christine who both loves and fears the Phantom equally. Her paramour Raoul offers perhaps less of a rounded character to play, but Jeremy Taylor invests him with all the gung-ho stoicism that the Vicomte demands. Jacinta Mulcahy’s Madame Giry hints at a darker personality which would be explored more in the later show, but here becomes the conduit between the Phantom and the hapless souls of the Opera House. Lara Martins and Paul Ettore Tabone as Carlotta and Piangi find the comic powerhouse to their roles, whilst also offering sterling vocal contributions. It is clear that Cameron Mackinstosh and Andrew Lloyd Webber have not let standards slide at Her Majesty’s over the years despite their massive worldwide success. The Phantom of the Opera can hold its head up high as pretenders to the throne vie for its crown, as still one of the genuinely thrilling nights of West End theatre.

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