Tuesday, May 16, 2023

‘Guys and Dolls’ by Frank Loesser, Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows

16 May 2023

When Nicholas Hytner and Nick Starr opened the Bridge Theatre, next to Tower Bridge in London, in 2017, they created a very flexible theatre space. This has provided the opportunity for Hytner and set designer Bunny Christie to develop some very innovative promenade productions. I really enjoyed watching live screenings of their promenade stagings of 'Julius Caesar' (reviewed here in April 2018) and 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' (reviewed here in October 2019). On Saturday we were at the Bridge Theatre to see Hytner’s new promenade production of ‘Guys and Dolls’ by Frank Loesser, Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows - though we opted to sit in the gallery, looking down at the performance rather than promenading. It was fascinating to watch the floor of the theatre, laid out as a New York street scene, gradually fill with hundreds of people as the audience wandered in. But the show becomes truly spectacular when the actors emerge from the crowd and large sections of the floor rise hydraulically to form small stages for each scene. An army of stewards constantly shuffle the crowd back, before the ground they have been standing on starts to move. And the lighting (by Paule Constable) shifts our attention to different parts of the arena as the story flows seamlessly across Bunny Christie’s constantly moving set. It’s a brilliantly slick theatrical experience. ‘Guys and Dolls’ is the Bridge Theatre’s first musical and it’s a triumph. As long-time readers may remember, ‘Guys and Dolls’ is one of my favourite musicals. I still treasure the memory of seeing the legendary National Theatre production in the early 1980s (with Lulu as Miss Adelaide). When we last saw a production of ‘Guys and Dolls’, at Milton Keynes Theatre (reviewed here in February 2007) I came to it with raised expectations and was a bit disappointed. But the Bridge Theatre performance has completely rekindled my enthusiasm for the show. ‘Guys and Dolls’ has some of the best songs of any musical and the script (in the style of Damon Runyon) is genuinely funny. There was some excellent singing - from Celinde Shoenmaker as Sara Brown, Andrew Sherwood as Sky Masterson and Cedric Neal as Nicely-Nicely Johnson - and Daniel Mays does a great comic turn as Nathan Detroit. Marisha Wallace, who has toured with Simply Red, Michael Ball & Alfie Boe, and Lisa Stansfield, brought a powerful soul voice to Miss Adelaide. And there was some great choreography by Arlene Phillips with James Cousins. It’s a wonderful musical party - with some brilliant additional interval performances. I came out beaming.

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Friday, May 12, 2023

'Wuthering Heights' by Emily Brontë, adapted by Lucinka Eisler and Ben Lewis

12 May 2023

Emily Brontë’s 'Wuthering Heights' is one of the many classic novels I have never got around to reading. More unusually, until last Saturday I had also somehow managed to avoid the many stage, film, TV and radio adaptations. So when we went to see the new version of 'Wuthering Heights' by the Inspector Sands theatre company at the Royal Theatre in Northampton, I genuinely did not know the story. This excellent production, conceived and developed by Lucinka Eisler and Ben Lewis and jointly produced by China Plate, Inspector Sands, Royal & Derngate, Northampton and Oxford Playhouse, presents the story as a tale recounted by six actors, each playing multiple roles, often questioning each other via a microphone to unpick the events at Wuthering Heights. It's a dark, brutal story of repeated abuse and violence but told, in this production, with much humour. Photos of the characters are helpfully stuck to a board at the back of the stage to provide a family tree - the actors removing their picture when a character dies. The grim tale of Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff is recounted in hindsight by the housekeeper Nelly Dean (Giulia Innocenti). It's a very inventive production, excellently acted. Condensing a complicated novel-length plot into a stage play, however, made it feel quite confusing at times - maybe assuming that most people would already be familiar with the story. So it has now prompted me to start reading the novel.

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Thursday, May 04, 2023

'Family Album' by Penelope Lively

4 May 2023

Penelope Lively’s 2009 novel ‘Family Album’ is a beautifully constructed series of snapshots of an eccentric English family. The opening chapter introduces us to the family as foreign affairs journalist Gina brings her new partner to meet her parents at the family home in which she grew up. But the following chapters start to flick backwards and forwards in time to show us the family’s history from the points of view of nine family members. It is impressive how Penelope Lively manages to make such a large cast of principal characters so distinct and well drawn: by the end of the novel you really feel you know them all. And her prose is gorgeous: a short passage describing walking down the staircase past photos of the children at various ages acts as a filmic montage of their childhoods. There are plenty of skeletons in the family’s cupboards (and their cellar) and much sadness in their stories. But this is a warm family portrait, drawn with love.

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