Unfortunate: The Untold Story Of Ursula The Sea Witch
Underbelly Festival Earls Court
Reviewed – 23rd June 2022
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“Elliotte Williams-NβDureβs Ursula grabs the reigns and takes supreme control”
βThe Wizard of Ozβ has had βWicked, βSleeping Beautyβ has had βMaleficentβ, βThe Hundred and One Dalmatiansβ had βCruellaβ; and now βThe Little Mermaidβ is dragging the villain centre stage with βUrsulaβ; Fat Rascal Theatreβs take on Disneyβs take on Hans Christian Andersonβs βThe Little Mermaidβ. With a bit of a mouthful for a title – βUnfortunate: The Untold Story of Ursula the Sea Witchβ – the stress is on the βUnfortunateβ, although there is nothing unfortunate about this scandalous, sexy, subversive, salacious story.
If the delivery is wicked (in every sense of the word: old, new and urban), the premise is noble. What if Ursula wasnβt bad? If she were a victim of circumstance, prejudice, and cancel culture. If you can dig beneath the laughs, the slapstick and the outrageously catchy tunes (and youβll need a pretty large spade) you will discover a character who has more dimensions than Disneyβs hi-tech animation wizardry could ever produce.
Banished over an unfortunate incident involving a sea cucumber, Ursula is later called upon by King Triton to sort out his wayward daughter Ariel. Sheβs not the heir he hoped for; she just wants to be βwhere the dicks areβ. Yes, you read that correctly. Not the most subtle or profound witticism but it does make for a hilarious and irresistible earworm of a song. Like the rest of Tim Gilvinβs score, with Robyn Grantβs and Daniel Foxxβs book and lyrics, this musical washes over you in gorgeous waves, pulling you under so you donβt care about when you can next come up for air.
Originally an hour-long tsunami of a show, the writers have spent the pandemic expanding it into two acts. It seems that this might have diluted the impact and lifted the plot from the anchor that is Ursula. But before it can drift too far, Elliotte Williams-NβDureβs Ursula grabs the reigns and takes supreme control. A commanding performance with an equally commanding presence. We root for her from the outset and, while her journey isnβt the grandest arc in theatre, we see the effects of her personality on the other charactersβ journeys. Miracle Chanceβs ditzy, petulant, TOWIE inspired Ariel is certainly taught a thing or two by Ursula. The messages are unaffected by the tongue-in-cheek delivery. βItβs unfortunate you have to lose your voice to get a manβ she croons just before interval.
George Whitty, as the glittered and bearded Triton, casts his stunning voice into the air β enough to keep the upturned, purple cow that is the underbelly inflated all on its own. All the company are in fine voice, and on finer form, particularly the starry and mesmerising Allie Dart-Munro as Sebastian, the Irish crab, among other voices of reason, redemption and ridiculousness. Such is the versatility of this ensemble cast, one of the biggest surprises of the evening is delivered at curtain call when we realise they are only number six in total. It is all aided by the puppetry (puppets directed, designed and built by Hugh Purves with co-designer Abby Clarke) and costumes (Cory Shipp): works of art in themselves.
With a collection of songs that are intelligent, funny and memorable; and with a storyline that is bold, brave and rebellious, βUnfortunateβ is as far removed from Disney as you can get. βWe Didnβt Make It to Disneyβ exemplifies its intentions as the cast make a celebration of banishing any attempt at grabbing a family audience. Leave the kids at home, folks. Enjoy the X-rated humour in the company of like-minded grown-up children.
A little rough around the edges, βUnfortunateβ¦β is not quite watertight. A few bits of flotsam and jetsam could be dredged, but its London premiere breaks onto the shores of Earls Court in a tidal wave of irreverent madness, mayhem and musicality. Go and get swept away.
Reviewed by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Craig Sugden
Unfortunate: The Untold Story Of Ursula The Sea Witch
Underbelly Festival until 16th July followed by UK Tour
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