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Broadway To The West End…and back?

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

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With the news that the highly acclaimed (and financially successful) Broadway production of Hair will transfer to the Gielgud Theatre with the full New York cast intact, the question arises…will this start a precedent among transferring shows?

Whilst it isn’t making history as the first musical to transfer its entire cast across the Atlantic, (despite many reports to the contrary, it was in fact Company that came to the West End with Broadway cast intact), we are left wondering what deal British producer Sir Cameron Mackintosh has done to achieve such a feat.

It’s generally accepted that short run plays featuring whole casts is now the norm, particularly from producing houses, such as the National’s The History Boys, and The Old Vic, who have seen not only the entire cast of the Norman Conquests head to the Great White Way, but also their Bridge project featuring American and British actors play at the BAM in New York and the Old Vic itself, and will continue to do so for the next two years.

Every now and then a Hannah Waddingham (Spamalot) will appear on Broadway, while we get a Sierra Boggess (Love Never Dies) here in the West End, but a whole musical cast is an interesting prospect. It strikes me as odd that we could not have had a UK cast for this revival, as I know there are enough performers out there desperate for work;  the Drama Schools and Musical Theatre courses are more popular than ever in this country.

But, Cameron Mackintosh, a man who was number two in the The Stage’s 2009 theatre industry power 100 and hasn’t been out of the top 10 since it started, has rarely put a foot wrong in recent years. After all, we are talking about the man who threatened to pull the entire Broadway production of Miss Saigon if original London star Jonathan Pryce was not allowed to repeat his performance as The Engineer. He knows what he wants and how to get it, so I can only assume the Hair cast was a means to an ends. So now I want to know what the end is.

Sir Cameron always has a little something up his sleeve, so I for one wait with baited breath to see what it is…


You Say Goodbye, I Say Hello

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

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So, as the champagne bubbles and fireworks fade into distant memory, we bid a farewell to the theatrical year of 2009, which saw such memorable performances as David Tennant’s Hamlet, which is perhaps more remembered for the star’s withdrawal due to back injury, Patrick Stewart and Sir Ian McKellen (now on level pegging thanks to Sir Patrick’s 2010 knighthood) starring together in the Haymarket’s revival of Waiting for Godot, and another Hamlet, thanks to Jude Law. We had the beautifully conceived Peter Pan returning to Kensington Gardens in a custom built venue, as well as the National giving us more Alan Bennett with his latest The Habit of Art. The West End saw an all black cast lead by James Earl Jones perform Cat On a Hot Tin Roof, while other revivals of The Rise and Fall of Little Voice and Inherit the Wind also proved popular.

The musical stage saw the debuts of Sister Act with the newly discovered powerhouse that is Patina Miller starring, and the Australian campfest that is Priscilla Queen of the Desert, as well as the Menier Chocolate Factory’s, Trevor Nunn directed revival of A Little Night Music (which scored the producing house yet another Broadway transfer – this one starring Catherine Zeta-Jones and Angela Lansbury) selling out thanks to high acclaim.

So, whilst 2009 gave us plenty to be excited about, 2010 is no slouch when it comes to anticipation. For starters, Legally Blonde the musical opens at the start of January, and while the show doesn’t exactly get me fired up, its leading lady, the supremely talented Sheridan Smith (Little Shop of Horrors) does! With musicals in mind, we can also look forward to the entire Broadway cast of Hair transferring, following greats reviews across the pond, as well as the promotional juggernaut that is Love Never Dies (otherwise known as Phantom of the Opera 2!) courtesy of Andrew Lloyd Webber. The Lord will also be returning to his Saturday primetime throne on the BBC as he promotes, sorry, hunts for a Dorothy (and a Toto!) for his long rumoured revival of The Wizard of Oz…so we can also expect to be gaily tripping up the Yellow Brick Road before the year is out!

And for every David Essex in The Fun of the Fair (really?!), there’s a Megan Mullally (Karen in Will & Grace) in her one woman show, which is enough to get me into a seat!

Dramatically speaking, I think things are already a lot more exciting. With the Royal Court’s acclaimed productions Enron and Jerusalem transferring to the West End in January alone, the year is off to a great start! We can also expect the wonderfully talented Tamsin Greig in The Little Dog Laughed, which makes its UK debut. Knowing very little about the piece, except that it revolves around a young actor and his publicist, and that it closed very quickly in the US, despite great reviews, my only hope is that it doesn’t go down without a fight here.

There’s also a sense of de ja vu, as Sir Ian McKellen returns to his patient ways at the Haymarket, but this time Waiting For Godot sees the return to London of the revered Roger Rees. (Clearly Waiting For Stewart was impossible.)  It’s that fact alone that makes me think I should see it again, despite the play itself! 2010 is also not without its Hamlets too, with Rory Kinnear finally stepping into the great Dane’s shoes courtesy of Sir Nick Hytner’s National Theatre production, as well as John Simm trying his hand in Sheffield in a production that may well transfer. Do we really need that many Hamlets in 2 years? I’d rather see a good Richard III…Anyone? Anyone?

Kevin Spacey’s Old Vic will bring revivals of Six Degrees of Separation, and The Real Thing (sadly starring Toby Stephens, perhaps the smuggest looking man I can thing of) as well as their Stephen Dillane-led Bridge Project productions of The Tempest and As You Like It. The Chocolate Factory as ever remain tightlipped about what they have on their slate, but I am sure we can expect some interesting choices, as ever, under David Babani’s watchful eye.

And with that on our plate already, I feel overjoyed to be in London’s West End, but with the prospect of even more to come, the feeling is elysian.


Noises Off

Friday, December 4th, 2009

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As if stating that he abhors audiences (collectively, not individually!) wasn’t enough, Ian Hart is rumoured to have gone one better last week, at the curtain call of a performance of his new play, Speaking in Tongues. The actor is reported to be facing possible police investigation after allegedly attacking a theatregoer at the Duke of York’s theatre. Allegedly coming down from the stage via the pass door, he had to be  restrained by ushers, at which point he apparently hurled a torrent of abuse about how the audience member was disrespecting himself and the other actors.

Truly bizarre behaviour by anyone’s standards, particularly in light of the fact that numerous audience members have come forward to say that they have no clue what Hart was talking about. An extreme reaction like this – especially as the man was said only to have spoken briefly – does make me reflect on the various reports, particularly in recent years, where actors have not taken too kindly to something in the audience.

We all heard about the on-stage complaints of Richard Griffiths and Kevin Spacey when mobile phones went off during performances, but the most recent is the incredible response to the same during a recent performance of A Steady Rain on Broadway, where stars Hugh Jackman and Daniel Craig stayed in character, whilst Jackman encouraged the audience member in question to “grab the phone it doesn’t matter”! He went on to say “Come on, just turn it off unless you got a better story, you want to get up and tell your story?”, at which Craig chimed in with “Can you get that, whoever it is can you just get it? We can wait just get the phone”. I can only assume the audience member in question felt a little smaller than when they first arrived, as they should. There is nothing worse than hearing a phone going off, when you are absorbed in some incredible theatre, so that is multiplied for the actors giving their all to deliver it to you!

Of course, it’s not only mobile phones. Sometimes it’s sweet wrappers, loud whispers, or in the case of Alec Guinness, brusquely separating a lady on the front row from her pair of giant binoculars, which were obviously putting him off. Embarrassingly, he was then advised by an usher in the interval “The blind woman in the front row apologises if she upset you”. There remains a fine line between art being ruined by the inconsiderate few and equally rude prima donna behaviour, it seems.

It’s the people who have ‘generously’ put their phones to silent that get me. Most still consult their screens. I just cannot understand how anything that comes through on a mobile can be more interesting than what they have paid to see on stage – especially at current prices – but that’s another matter!


Back To ‘Reality’

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

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So, as Lord Lloyd Webber launches his latest hunt for a new West End leading lady (and her dog, if we are to believe the rumours) with Over the Rainbow (yes, The Wizard of Oz will be coming to the West End soon folks…sigh), I am sunk into a further state of depression for my poor professional performer friends, desperately struggling to get their ‘big break’.

I recall the weeks I spent listening to my friend ‘Laura’, and her tales of woe over the fact she got so close during the preliminary stages in the Lord’s last search for a star, I’d Do Anything. Having only bothered with one episode apiece during the Sound of Music and Joseph searches, I decided that maybe I should pay closer attention to this one, as Laura had taken quite a knock over her dismissal, and bias aside, she is an excellent performer.

So, there I was settling down in front of the TV, braced for what was to come…and thank goodness I was braced! I don’t recall ever having seen a more trivial waste of time. It looked interesting enough to start with but it quickly disintegrated into the same tired format that you see with The X Factor, American Idol, etc, etc. It’s sadly the same old story. I end up wondering how one of these girls singing ‘I Need a Hero’ with more vocal gymnastics than the next girl, singing ‘Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend’, can show who would be most suitable in the role of Nancy in Oliver!. Needless to say I turned off shortly after…but I do still believe the best remaining girl won.

And now, despite being vocal in his dismissal of such programmes as merely a way of gaining free advertising for the show in question, Kevin Spacey has let it be known that he is in various negotiations with TV producers regarding a similar style show. His aim would be to cast a role in one of the Old Vic’s upcoming slate. Interesting from a man who said the following to the BBC of the search for a Joseph: “(They) are not a commercial operation, and I felt it was crossing the line unfairly.” and when asked if impacted negatively on theatre; “They made £22 million at the box office so I don’t think they’d say it’s impacted (badly) on them, but I do think it’s imbalanced.”

So, it seems that Spacey perhaps was less concerned with the fact that the musicals had been promoted, than he hadn’t got there first. The word is that the negotiations may take some time, as Spacey has already said that cameras cannot enter the rehearsals, so we wait with baited breath.

The good news is, that following on from the acclaimed revival of Inherit the Wind starring Spacey himself, the Old Vic will be bringing us well-cast revivals of Six Degrees of Separation starring Anthony Head and Lesley Manville, as well as 2010’s Bridge Project: The Tempest and As You Like It starring Stephen Dillane, Juliet Rylance and Thomas Sadoski, so there’s plenty to breathe a sigh of relief over.

I am left with the question, what could he call a reality show casting one of these?…the mind boggles!


‘Darling, I was marvellous’ – the theatre awards begin

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

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With the Evening Standard publishing the shortlist for their annual theatre awards, tongues have started wagging among the theatrical community. Of course, those in the know are all too aware that the winners have already been decided, and the powers that be are already trying to ensure that the right bums are on the right seats come the 23rd November.

Anyone who has paid any attention to these events in the past will immediately know that the awards will be distributed on a highly political level. I would be very surprised if we didn’t see a wave of support for the highly acclaimed Jerusalem and Enron. Strategic awarding will probably mean we see the Best Play award go to Jez Butterworth, and Best Actor to Mark Rylance for Jerusalem, leaving Best Director to go to Rupert Goold for Enron. This may seem incredibly cynical, but having spent many years in and around the theatre industry, I don’t expect to be wrong, particularly in light of the fact that both transfer to the West End imminently, and let’s face it, sales are never guaranteed, so any help is always welcomed.

The good news is that this does leave the other categories open, allowing them to award some much more interesting choices, such as Best Actress to Deanna Dunagan, repeating her Tony Award win, for August: Osage County and Best Musical to Spring Awakening. Having seen this show at both the Lyric, Hammersmith and the Novello, upon its West End transfer, it was perhaps once of the most vibrant, exciting and wonderfully conceived musicals I have seen in the last five years. It was further enhanced perhaps, by the fact that I expected not to like it at all!

Sadly, the cynic in me does say “Ah, but wouldn’t that award be a huge help to getting the Open Air Theatre’s production of Hello Dolly into town?”, and yes, he is probably right. Good job I like Samantha Spiro, a superb actress and deserving of a West End musical run, following her acclaimed turns in Merrily We Roll Along and Funny Girl. So we wait for the 23rd with baited breath.

One thing is always for certain; it’s all good for the London theatre industry, and therefore the theatregoing public.