Showing posts with label Musical Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Musical Theatre. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 September 2013

Life at the Fringe - Part 1

So I obviously planned to write up every show I saw at the fringe as I went along, but as is want to happen at the fringe life and theatre and more Theatre got in the way of these plans and now that the fringe is over there is not really a point to writing detailed posts about all of the shows I saw. While I feel bad for being lazy and not blogging on time or doing proper blogs for the things. I am a realist and with no stable internet connection at home things probably aren't going to get done on time anyway.

So as follows is a Fly-By Guide to my fringe experience (or at least the shows I saw whilst up there). I will also put down how much I payed for the tickets and do a total at the end, as a here is a rough guide of how much you will spend at the fringe/for my own curiosity. Enjoy!

Day 1
The Mechanisms - Already Blogged about here.
Free
Make sure you check it out as these guys are awesome and exist outside of the fringe bubble!

Showstoppers Mach #1 (Check out their website)
£12.50 Conc.
"In the Jungle the Flighty Jungle"
I did have a post written for this in *gasp* hardcopy but it is at home and I an not. Since I am being lazy you can read about it from my Girlfriends persepective here as I saw it with her.

Day 2
Ant Dewson: Now That's What I Call Musical Comedy
AKA The Dubious Cupboard Gig
Free
Another lazy Link to my Girlfriends Blog as I saw it with her and I don't think I could say it better.

Blind Mirth - Improvised Comedy
Comp Venue Ticket
Still being lazy... :P

Abominations
2-for-1 Tickets=£4.50 each
Same as above.

At this point my lazy blogging expires as my girlfriend went home and I can't just link to her blog anymore...
Ah well time for me to stop being lazy in Life at the Fringe - Part 2 (Coming Soon!)

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Live From London-One Off Show *Guest Blog*

This week we have our very first guest blog written by my wonderful girlfriend during my travels abroad to visit (meet) family. I hope you enjoy and if you want to hear more from Jenni check her out here.
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Sun 21st July - 7pm One Off Performance
Retford Majestic Theatre - £17.50 Ticket 

Hello! I’m Jenni, Glenn’s girlfriend and I am blogging for him today whilst he’s in Ireland visiting family. I’m almost as much of a theatre person as he is, and last week I was lucky enough to be treated to a night out at the theatre as part of my birthday present.

Live from London was a show put on by West End stars in a little, out-of-the-way theatre in a little, out-of-the-way town called Retford as a fund raiser for their local Operatics Society and to help repair and maintain the gorgeous Majestic Theatre that they regularly perform in. One of the organisers/performers had grown up performing in the Operatics Society so this was a fab way to give something back to the people that gave him his start.

There were 9 performers in total, all of them currently in West End shows and their voices were really fabulous. There was a mix of group songs, duets and solo pieces from a vast array of shows-some that I knew and some that I didn’t. Despite the fact that they had only rehearsed the full show for the first time that afternoon it was slick and professional and (apart from a few technical issues) you really couldn’t tell!

There were also some performances from the Retford Operatics Society and the Mini Operatics Bunch-which surprised me with how professional they were! I groaned inwardly when they announced that the kids were going to do a song (because I am very used to wildly out of tune, semi-shouting, ear splittingly bad children’s performances) but they actually sounded AMAZING. I was looking for adults secretly hidden in the wings when they all sang together because their harmonies were spot on and they were really really good!

There were songs from so many of my favourite shows that I can’t remember them all but there were definitely some from Rent, Wicked, Phantom of the Opera (that gave me goosebumps!), Oliver, Carousel, Hairspray (which was awesome as I went to see it on my birthday), Sister Act, Jekyll and Hyde, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Spamalot, as well as a lot that I had never heard before. They finished on a medley of songs from Les Mis, culminating in an amazing rendition of ‘One Day More’ which made the hairs stand up on the back on my neck. Me and my Dad left the theatre on a massive high with all of the songs in our head for the rest of the evening.

All in all it was a fabulous birthday treat, and although I can’t recommend it to anyone as it was a one off performance, I would if I could-it was a really great night out.

If you want to read more from me then I blog regularly over at My Every Day Adventure, where I write about my life and all that happens in it.


Sunday, 14 July 2013

Hairspray (Touring)

Mon 8th July - 7:30 Performance
Theatre Royal Nottingham - £21.50 Ticket, £2.50 Programme 

I wasn't going to see this show, however my girlfriend and some of her friends were seeing it for her birthday and I decided to hang around for an extra day to see it and I am very glad that I did! I had only seen the movie for the first time less than a month before seeing this show. I am glad that I had seen the movie as it meant I knew the music and was able to dance and sing-along a bit, although this is not essential for your enjoyment.

Hairspray is a very fun and energetic musical set in the 1960's with suitably 60's music. Written in 2002, Hairspray takes a look back at the 1960's issue of racial segregation. Through the life of Tracy Turnblat and her pursuit of a role on the 'Corny Colins' show and then its transition to an integrated show. Thankfully society has moved on at least a little bit since the 60's and the ridiculousness that was racial segregation, however I think we can learn a lesson from how ridiculous we find it now and think about some of the issues we face in modern society and how ridiculous they are. Anyway enough political stuff on with the fun bit.

The music and dancing in this show is quite stereotypical 60's and I absolutely love it! The show involved a massive 60 wigs to provide the cast with suitably ridiculously giant, hairspray ridden 60's hairstyles. The set and costumes are all brightly coloured and flashy as we expect from the 60's and had some really cool features strewn throughout. One of the features (Sorry if this is poorly explained) was a store front, which in the opening song Good Morning Baltimore was just a flat part of the set featuring an image of three women in red glittery dress, later in the show during (Hey Mama) Welcome to the 60s the image is now three women in red glittery dresses who step out of the 'store front' and dance. This cool transition of image to reality was fantastic and it was these sorts of cool things which made this show.

The drag role of Tracy's Mum, Edna (John Travolta in the Movie), was played by Mark Benton (Hustle). Mark did a superb job of balancing the reality of being a man and playing a woman, he used this as a superb tool for comedy. There was a hilarious and heart-warming moment during (You're) Timeless To Me where Edna and her Husband (Paul Rider) are dancing together where Mark and Paul corpsed (broke character and laughed). This was greatly enjoyed by the audience who joined in with a well time wolf whistle setting them off again. The band did extremely well (as did Mark and Paul) to pull it together and continue the song without any issues (like the singing and music getting out of sync). As an audience member I love it when I can tell just how much fun the actors are having and this always makes me wish I was back up on stage again (There was a moment when I saw singing in the rain where one of the dancers made eye contact with us, saw how much we were loving getting spashed, he grinned at us and proceeded to send an extra large splash our way).

Overall it was an extremely enjoyable production and if the touring show (or any production really) happens to be within relatively easy reach I recommend seeing it! Tour dates below.

Tour Dates:
Nottingham - Theatre Royal                       Closed
Dublin - Bord Gais Energy Theatre             6 Aug - 17 Aug
Leeds - Grand Theatre                               20 Aug - 31 Aug
Edinburgh - Playhouse                             3 Sep - 14 Sep
Aberdeen - His Majesty's Theatre              16 Sep - 21 Sep
Norwich - Royal Theatre                            24 Sep - 29 Sep

Sunday, 7 July 2013

Once

Fri 28th June - 7:30 Performance
Phoenix Theatre - £25 Ticket, £6 Programme

It is difficult to decide where to start with this show other than to say, I absolutely loved ALL of it! I very, very, very strongly recommend seeing it if you are able at any point. It is quite a unique feeling musical and the sub-line: A New Musical hints towards this. This show still feels fresh, young and vibrant, as if it was fresh from a fringe festival. It has a raw energy which runs rampant and toys with the audience's emotions.

The set for Once is a stationary Irish Bar, with an eclectic mix of differently shaped mirrors and bare light globes lining the walls. The actors mostly remained on stage at all times as they were also the band and provided support to those in the scene. This was done from seats down the sides of the stage behind which their instruments were stored. The scene changes were choreographed over music and stuck quite well with the overall feeling of the show.

The show begins 15 minutes before show time with the West End's only on-stage bar which the audience is encouraged to give their patronage. I of course took the opportunity to get up on stage but didn't buy anything as it was quite expensive and after a quick look around went and sat down. 
At show time, the Actor-Musicians come onto the stage with the audience and start playing, this creates an instant closeness between actor and audience not available to most shows. After several Irish Jig-like songs, the audience are asked to leave the stage and the story begins. I very much regret leaving the stage before the actors entered and we were asked to, as I feel that this experience is one I really shouldn't have missed. 

The bar was re-opened at interval and I decided to buy a drink purely for the souvenir cup as I was loving the show that much! The feeling which came over me standing up on that stage in front of an audience (not that they were paying any attention) is extremely difficult to describe. It was an extreme feeling of RIGHT, it made me hot and cold at the same time and I guess kinda like this. It is a feeling which I think only other theatre people (and I suppose other performance people) could comprehend and the only thing further I will say is get me the hell back up on-stage already!!!

I went into the theatre fully expecting Once to be nothing but a cheesy love story because of the tag line "The only thing his music was missing was...her" however it turned out to be anything but. Once is the tale of a heartbroken Irish man who is about to give up on music when he meets an equally heartbroken though more resilient Czech woman. She, after hearing him play and recognising the soul and talent behind the music encourages him to keep playing music, some other stuff happens and I will say no more because *Spoilers*. Needless to say the story is quite unique and it doesn't end as expected.


The music is amazing if you love a little bit of Irish Jig/flair, which I do :) There are also some lovely slower and ballad-y ones thrown in and is all around an awesome score.

Overall an extremely lovely and powerful show which I very strongly recommend seeing if you want something a little bit different to your more standard West End Musical fare. Tickets are currently booking until 31st May 2014 though if you walk in on the day like we did you can pick up some pretty awesome half price day seats. And as cheesy as it sounds it will not be a show I will only see Once.

Saturday, 29 June 2013

Merrily We Roll Along

 Thurs 27th June – 7:45 Performance
 Harold Pinter Theatre   £20 Ticket, £4 Programme

Merrily We Roll Along wasn’t my first choice for shows this evening, unfortunately my first choice (A Doll’s House) hasn’t opened yet… Oops a little too keen perhaps :P

Merrily We Roll Along was indirectly recommended to me by a friend’s facebook status; "If you're in London and you've got the moola, go and see Merrily We Roll Along at the Pinter Theatre. Can't recommend enough." which was enough to put the idea in my head when I strolled past the posters in the underground as an option for the evening’s entertainment.

This show is about the hopes and aspirations of three young friends and the gradual destruction of their friendship by a; shall we say Yoko Ono type character and the hunt for fame. Now this all seems very depressing and set to end as a rather depressing show. Well you would be right in thinking this IF the show wasn’t a reverse chronology of the tale. The show opens to a “lively” Hollywood party where we soon discover that everyone is really depressed and wondering where their lives went wrong. Time is wound back through the clever use of the title song and we slowly watch the story (and friendship) unravel, or I should say ravel :-P

The set for the show was mostly a stationary Hollywood Villa-esque house which through the clever use of slide-into-wall-able features and brought-on by the ensemble during song props undergoes a smooth transition through the years and through several different location (house, freshly moved into house, courthouse, office, TV studio etc.). The lighting was mostly naturalistic with the focus sometimes shifting the focus to who is talking as the others continue “talking” etc. and it was also used in one scene to add “wallpaper” to the set.

The songs in the show were quite catchy and I was humming the melody to the title song as I walked to the underground (That means it is good, because there is a Melody you can hum :P – Haha show reference! ).

Despite the unhappy ending *cough* I mean start, the play closes on a very optimistic note and there is a lot of comedy throughout. The character of Mary is quite witty and provides the audience with a lot of laughs and the meta-musical was hilariously cheesy and awful.

You could tell that this is from a slightly older generation of musicals, though it is extremely well done and still very enjoyable for the modern audience. I would recommend it, if you get a chance before it closes on 
28th July but if you are not in London for long/can only see a few shows there are quite a few “Must See” shows (Matilda and Once to name two) before this one. 

Tuesday, 25 June 2013

A Chorus Line

Mon 17th June - 7:45 Performance
London Palladium - £20 Ticket£3.50 Programme

I was fortunate enough to get my ticket discounted down from £65 (Thank you Idea Tap!) so my seat was pretty amazing (4 rows back almost dead centre). I was surprised how much of the music I already knew from this show and I have no idea where I know it from.


The set for this show was very very simple but it really didn't need anything more than it had. It was a black box stage with the back wall able to be rotated to introduce mirrors (and something else at the end *spoilers*). And some mirrors which dropped in at one point of the show and that is it. The majority of lighting was a basic wash, with superb use of stationary spots and the occasional bit of colour. It is a very no frills show but it really doesn't need them, it stands on its own.


Also with the setting and context of the show, flash and glamour wouldn't make sense. The setting is a dance studio, the context; auditions to get into a chorus line for an unnamed show. From the start of the show I found myself choosing favourites, the ones who i wanted to survive and get the job. I'm not usually one for shows like American Idol or the Voice and yet I couldn't help choosing favourites. I thankfully still liked the ones I had chosen at the start (even the ones that I didn't think would get through).


I ended up feeling for most of the characters as they lay their lives, secrets, hopes and aspirations on the line. Except one, for want of better phrasing, the ass and tits character; Val. Now I understand that this character exists for a reason as her story is a real one, people do get given roles based on their looks and miss out if they are not quite the traditional image of beauty/they are flat chested etc. However, despite this understanding and the obvious body issues that she was covering up with the work she had done, I couldn't quite support her as a character. It saddens me that such a character needs to exist, what saddens me more is that I couldn't fully support her. I am not sure whether this was me, how the character is written or the portrayal of the character.

The character who came the furthest in my regards is Cassie. At the start she was just a face in the line (was not one of my initial favourites, in fact I barely noticed her) however as the show unfolded and I heard about Cassie's past I couldn't help but feel sorry for her and in the end celebrate with her. I think this show, is one that speaks to people who are involved in theatre on a deeper level than those who are not. Most of us have been through the audition process at one time or another and know how nerve-wracking it can all be and of course how devastating not getting the part can be.

Overall, a very enjoyable show which has a character or two which everyone in the audience can empathise with. I would recommend this show to all theatre practitioners and to the wider public as a whole.

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Matilda

Sat 15th June - 7pm Performance
Cambridge Theatre - £5 16-25yo Day Ticket, £5 Programme

The first thing I must say is SEE IT! NO REALLY DO IT!

*Ahem*
It really isn't a wonder that this show is consistently sold out days and even weeks in advance unless you are willing to pay more than 
£65 a seat (even then you will be lucky to get one), though in this case I think it actually would be worth it. I was fortunate enough to score myself one of the 16 £5 16-25yo Day tickets which involved queuing outside the theatre from 8:50 (I was still 17th in line, people had been there since 7ish) and being grateful there are two shows on a Saturday.

Now this show is based off Roald Dahl's novel Matilda and has been preceded by an amazing Movie adaptation which was one of my favourite movies as a child. Needless to say this show had a reputation to live up to. Dennis Kelly did a fantastic job adapting the book for stage and the ever amazing Tim Minchin did a superb job complimenting the script and enhancing the characterisation with his music and Lyrics which are extremely catchy (Naughty) and poignant especially When I Grow Up.

The set is wonderful, the way in which the classroom rises from the floor, the bathrooms slips effortlessly back into the stage and its outline is lost is amazingly done. There is one point where Matilda is singing and she rises above the stage on a stack of books, she was about a foot off the ground before I even realised she was moving, it was that seamlessly and smoothly carried out. The integration of the older performers into the younger cast members and the way in which the children (and bigger children) moved the set was well done.  The lighting was beautifully done, it was used to wonderful effect to create spaces and paths for the characters to move through, heightened the mood considerably and was in general, fantastic. The team pulled off some amazing stunts throughout the show such as the disappearing chocolate cake, the ponytailed girl hammerthrow and the self writing blackboard and I would love to know how they were done/be sitting closer to the action to try and work it out.

As with many shows with children in the cast, there are several children cast in each of the roles and they alternate between shows. This adds extra incentive to see the show again as although the show will still be similar each of the children will be unique and as such there performances will be individual. Something which has intrigued me about this alternating cast is how they decide who does which shows? In all of the roles except Matilda (4) herself there are three children sharing the role, you would think that on a set night the same children would perform together but is this the case? I don't know and would be interested to find out. I would also like to know how the children are educated, does the company provide tutors and run classes? Do they attend school like normal children but skip out on Thursday afternoons for the matinee performances?

Anyway you should definitely get yourself along to see this show! Though thankfully it is currently set to run until May 2014 and I could see it extending further.