Tag Archives: Alan Cumming

SUGAR DADDY

★★★

Underbelly Boulevard

SUGAR DADDY

Underbelly Boulevard

★★★

“blends stand up and storytelling into a hilarious, cohesive whole”

How do you survive losing the love of your life? Comedian Sam Morrison’s answer is laughter. His one-person show, ‘Sugar Daddy’, turns grief into big-hearted, belly-laughing comedy, even if it never gets past the denial phase.

Sam Morrison’s had a hellish few years. The love of his life tragically dies in the pandemic, he’s diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, and to top it off, he’s attacked by seagulls. His coping strategy? Turn it into cathartic theatre! Though try as they may, his grief counsellor can’t get him to sit in his feelings for long.

Morrison’s set blends stand up and storytelling into a hilarious, cohesive whole. His whimsical yet biting style skewers everything from death to diabetes to being grateful your plus sized partner has ashes to spare. The laughs are big, interleaving with cycles of reflection which cleverly mirror the ebb and flow of grief. It’s great strength is the balance of humour and emotion, really connecting with the audience in deeper moments. But there’s a real snag: every time things get vulnerable, Morrison pulls back. This happens repeatedly and the show ends without clear progression or payoff. Perhaps it’s an honest glimpse into grief’s open endedness? But as a show it never quite opens up, leaving it feeling a little stuck. Plus, the number of cycles makes time harder to track, and the grief counsellor feels underdeveloped.

That said, Morrison is undeniably funny, owning the room with sharp timing and fearless crowd work. He connects effortlessly with the audience, ad-libbing with impressive ease – at one point he warmly welcomes a late arriving silver fox while blanking their younger companion, bringing the house down. In full flow, he’s a breathless delight, before easing into more emotional beats. Though the transitions could be slicker in places, Morrison clearly knows how to command a stage.

Amrou Al Kadhi’s assured direction steers the show with aplomb, weaving in theatrical flourishes that lift the stand up and drive the narrative. The energy rises and falls naturally, and the pacing matches the emotional tone. Though the cycles could use further shaping to clarify the narrative and build emotional momentum, overall the staging lands with flair.

Hugo Dodsworth’s set summons a beach house with a sweep of gauzy curtains, complete with decking, dune grass and playful hints of what’s to come. A pew like row of chairs, complete with Bibles, comes into its own. Chuma Emembolu’s lighting tracks the show’s emotional shifts with precision, peaking in a striking moment in ITU. Slick transitions keep everything flowing confidently. Dodsworth’s video design has some standout moments, with demonically deranged seagulls and a darkly ironic death scene. Stylist Gabrielle Vazquez gives Morrison a polished lost boy look, pairing a simple vest and shorts with a glitzy brooch and chic scarf.

‘Sugar Daddy’ is a show about feeling lost which – perhaps fittingly – feels a little lost itself. But Morrison’s barbed jokes, incisive style and commanding stage presence make it well worth a watch.



SUGAR DADDY

Underbelly Boulevard

Reviewed on 14th March 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Mark Senior


 

 

 

 

SUGAR DADDY

SUGAR DADDY

SUGAR DADDY

Ute Lemper: Rendezvous With Marlene

★★★★★

Online

Ute Lemper

Ute Lemper: Rendezvous With Marlene

Online

Reviewed – 25th November 2020

★★★★★

 

“This is beautiful and captivating storytelling through music and memory”

 

“Welcome to my rendezvous with Marlene. It is a true story that indeed happened in the year 1987, in Paris… Marlene Dietrich was a ‘woman of the future’. And that woman of the future gave me a message, for us – in that future today. Let’s go back in time”.

So begins Ute Lemper’s cabaret style show about Dietrich’s extraordinary life; a dialogue in words and music recorded at Alan Cummings’ club in New York. The starting point is a letter Ute wrote to Dietrich apologising for being dubbed the ‘New Marlene’. Ute thought she was nothing of the sort – she was just at the beginning of her career in theatre and music, whereas Marlene was looking back on a long, fulfilled life of movies, music, love stories and stardom. But out of the blue, returning to her hotel while appearing as Sally Bowles in “Cabaret”, Ute received a telephone call from Marlene, and that conversation forms the basis of this show.

“They know my voice, my legs, my movies… but they don’ t know me”, intones Ute in the distinctive, off-key, husky voice of Marlene’s. The telephone had become, by now, her only connection to the outside world and for the next three hours, if we are to believe the narrative, Dietrich poured out her life story. And believe it we do, as Ute slips back and forth in time, playing both herself and Marlene with reverential attention to detail. Ute not only captures the mannerisms and cadences and key moments, but she digs deeper and inhabits her thoughts too. We get a deeply personalised account of this ‘woman of the future’, who renounced her native Germany in protest at the Nazi regime and who challenged the men around her including world leaders. We follow her from the beginning; from the Weimar cabaret, her thrust into stardom with ‘Blue Angel’, her contribution to the American war effort, her Hollywood career, her eventual return to Berlin despite the hostility she received there, her humanitarian efforts and her final solitude. And, of course, the love affairs.

At the core are the songs. Iconic, and forever associated with Dietrich. Backed by a five-piece band led by pianist Vana Gierig, the modern flavour complements the sensual richness of Ute’s vocals. ‘Falling in Love Again’, ‘Just a Gigolo’, ‘One for my Baby’, ‘Illusions’, ‘Lili Marleen’, ‘The Ruins of Berlin’, ‘The Laziest Gal in Town’, ‘Ne Me Quitte Pas’, ‘Where Have All the Flowers Gone?’… and more. It is safe to say that Ute improves immeasurably on the originals. She is in top form here, stretching way, way beyond Dietrich’s limited range technically and emotionally. Her rendition of the songs reveals as much about the private vulnerability of Dietrich as do the anecdotal facts.

This is beautiful and captivating storytelling through music and memory. A loving montage directed and edited by Evan Quinn as we follow Ute following in Marlene’s footsteps. In 1992 she was hired to play Lola in ‘The Blue Angel’ in Berlin; exactly sixty-four years after Marlene was the ‘Blue Angel’ in Weimar times. She had been twenty-eight years old at the time and Ute was, also, twenty-eight. Ten days before opening might, Marlene passed away. Ute was there at the funeral.

“So, what was it that Marlene wanted me to tell you?” Ute asks in the closing moments of the cabaret as we come full cycle. “She wanted to talk about people, nations, stupidity, the empowerment of women, the intelligence of women. She wanted to talk about history. Never to forget. And always to remember.” This parting plea, urging us not to repeat the mistakes of the past, runs deep as she closes with a few bars of ‘Where Have All the Flowers Gone’, followed by a stirring and emotive rendition of Bob Dylan’s ‘Blowing in the Wind’. One thing is for sure: Ute Lemper’s performance is unforgettable.

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Russ Rowland

 

 

Ute Lemper: Rendezvous With Marlene

filmed at Club Cumming in New York with Alan Cumming and Ute Lemper as producers, will be streamed again globally on Saturday, 5 December 2020 at 19.00.

Click here to book

 

Recently reviewed by Jonathan:
Buyer and Cellar | ★★★★ | Above the Stag | October 2020
The Great Gatsby | ★★★★★ | Immersive LDN | October 2020
The Last Five Years | ★★★★★ | Southwark Playhouse | October 2020
The Off Key | ★★★ | White Bear Theatre | October 2020
What a Carve Up! | ★★★★★ | Online | October 2020
Little Wars | ★★★★ | Online | October 2020
Right Left With Heels | ★★★★ | Online | November 2020
Marry me a Little | ★★★★ | Online | November 2020
Falling Stars | ★★★★ | Online | November 2020
Ute Lemper: Rendezvous With Marlene | ★★★★★ | Online | November 2020

 

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