Tag Archives: Ashley Day

ALBATROSS

★★★

Omnibus Theatre

ALBATROSS

Omnibus Theatre

★★★

“deftly captures the cracks radiating through a fractured relationship”

Martha Loader’s award winning writing returns with ‘Albatross’, a sharp look at intergenerational strain within the escalating climate crisis. Like the ice sheets Alice studies, the piece has some cracks despite solid foundations.

Glaciologist and single mum Alice makes a flying visit home after a grim discovery in the Antarctic, but her mum’s welcome isn’t exactly warm. Will Alice choose a career the world sorely needs, or find her wings clipped by family expectations?

The award winning Loader offers an incisive look at motherhood through two women shaped by starkly different choices. One sacrifices everything to nurture a family; the other sacrifices family to save millions. Loader smartly flips Coleridge’s ‘Rime’ on its head: this Antarctic traveller is undone not by nature but by humanity for defying the expectation she stay home to raise a family. We get a sense of the complex forces at play, delivered through deft interruptions and simmering subtext. A couple of moments would benefit from more build up, particularly in the final unravelling, but the piece remains compelling and thoughtfully crafted.

Patrick Morris effectively pulls the icy Antarctic into their home, with a clever mix of video and lighting. The pacing is well judged, as is the rise and fall of tension. A few scenes remain static, though, and don’t quite tap the emotional depth the story promises. The sex scene’s indistinct noises and lack of movement land oddly, and the buzzing, flickering albatross doesn’t fully connect. The sense of time isn’t always clear, which may be channelling disorientating polar nights but makes the late night work call feel a bit incongruous.

Composer Michaela Polakova conjures a vast, desolate soundscape, full of distant Antarctic winds and abstract tones so evocative I almost don’t realise one passage is a phone ringing.

Chris Dobrowolski’s set is stunning, the flotsam and jetsam of a house ruined by natural disaster left stranded on their own jagged icebergs. The quirky angles of the white goods convey everyday peril despite being entirely functional – a fitting metaphor for Eve’s casual disregard of the climate crisis. Bravo! Paul Bourne’s lighting design is subtle yet striking, catching both Alice’s icy coolness and Eve’s warmer glow with ease.

Caroline Rippen’s Alice feels tightly wound from the off, giving her ice cream themed breakdown real bite and believability. A little more light and shade in places would heighten her arc even further. Agnes Lillis’ Eve radiates an easy, sunlit warmth befitting the family matriarch, shot through with just enough narcissism and insecurity to keep her compellingly human. Morris’ Martin effectively captures the trapped bewilderment of an outsider dropped into a family drama, though further shifts in tone would add welcome depth.

‘Albatross’ deftly captures the cracks radiating through a fractured relationship. Backed by confident writing and striking design, it’s a piece with clear potential. It will be interesting to see where it flies next.



ALBATROSS

Omnibus Theatre

Reviewed on 28th May 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Ashley Day


 

 

 

 

ALBATROSS

ALBATROSS

ALBATROSS

An American in Paris – Previews

PREVIEW PERFORMANCES BEGIN SATURDAY 4th MARCH FOR THE TONY® AWARD-WINNING NEW MUSICAL


AN AMERICAN IN PARIS

Previews begin Saturday 4 March 2017 for the highly anticipated new musical, An American in Paris. Reduced prices (up to £10.00 off) apply at all performances from Saturday 4 March – Friday 31 March 2017.

Christopher Wheeldon’s stunning reinvention of the Oscar® winning film features the sublime music and lyrics of George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin and a new book by Craig Lucas. Directly following celebrated engagements in New York and Paris, this critically acclaimed and multi award-winning new musical officially opens on Tuesday 21 March 2017 at the beautifully restored Dominion Theatre.

The cast is headed by the original, award-winning Broadway stars Robert Fairchild (as Jerry Mulligan) and Leanne Cope (as Lise Dassin), together with Haydn Oakley as Henri Baurel, Zoë Rainey as Milo Davenport, David Seadon-Young as Adam Hochberg and Jane Asher as Madame Baurel. Ashley Day is the alternate Jerry Mulligan (and he will assume the role from Monday 19 June 2017). The company also features Julian Forsyth and Ashley Andrews, Sophie Apollonia, Zoe Arshamian, Sarah Bakker, James Barton, Alicia Beck, Chrissy Brooke, James Butcher, Jonathan Caguioa, Jennifer Davison, Katie Deacon, Rebecca Fennelly, Sebastian Goffin, Alyn Hawke, Nicky Henshall, Genevieve Heron, Amy Hollins, Frankie Jenna, Justin-Lee Jones, Robin Kent, Kristen McGarrity, Julia J. Nagle, Daniela Norman, Pippa Raine, Aaron Smyth, Todd Talbot, Max Westwell, Jack Wilcox, Carrie Willis, Stuart Winter and Liam Wrate.
The new musical An American in Paris premiered in 2014 at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris to ecstatic reviews before transferring to the Palace Theatre on Broadway, where it became the most awarded musical of the 2015/16 season, including four Tony® Awards. A major North American tour is currently playing.
An American in Paris features many of George and Ira Gershwin’s most iconic songs including I Got Rhythm, ‘S Wonderful, I’ll Build a Stairway To Paradise and They Can’t Take That Away from Me, together with George Gershwin’s sweeping compositions including ‘Concerto in F’ and ‘An American in Paris’.

Jerry Mulligan is an American GI pursuing his dream to make it as painter in a city suddenly bursting with hope and possibility. Following a chance encounter with a beautiful young dancer named Lise, the streets of Paris become the backdrop to a sensuous, modern romance of art, friendship and love in the aftermath of war…
An American in Paris is directed and choreographed by the internationally renowned, British-born Christopher Wheeldon. An Artistic Associate of the Royal Ballet, Wheeldon received an OBE in the 2016 New Year’s Honours ‘for services to promoting the interests and reputation of British classical and theatrical dance worldwide’. He is the recipient of a Tony® Award and two Olivier Awards. The set and costumes are designed by the multi Tony® Award-winning West End and Broadway designer Bob Crowley (The Audience; Mary Poppins and Christopher Wheeldon’s productions of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and The Winter’s Tale) with projections by the celebrated British designers 59 Productions (War Horse; London 2012 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony).
With music and lyrics by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin and a new book by Craig Lucas, the new musical An American in Paris is directed and choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon with set and costumes designs by Bob Crowley, lighting by Natasha Katz, sound by Jon Weston and projection designs by 59 Productions. The musical score is adapted, arranged and supervised by Rob Fisher with orchestrations by Christopher Austin and Bill Elliott, dance arrangements by Sam Davis and musical supervision by Todd Ellison. The UK Musical Director is John Rigby.
An American in Paris is produced in London by Stuart Oken, Van Kaplan, Roy Furman, Michael McCabe and Joshua Andrews.

 

Photography by Matthew Murphy is from the original Broadway production 

 

Robert Fairchild is appearing with the support of UK Equity, incorporating the Variety Artistes’ Federation, pursuant to an exchange program between American Equity and UK Equity.

 

 

AnAmericanInParisTheMusical.co.uk

 


Listing

AN AMERICAN IN PARIS

 

Dominion Theatre

268-269 Tottenham Court Road, London W1T 7AQ

 

Previewing from: Saturday 4 March 2017

Opening: Tuesday 21 March 2017

Monday to Saturday 7:30pm
Wednesday* & Saturday matinees 2:00pm

[*First Wednesday matinee 29 March 2017]

 

Reduced prices (up to £10.00 off) apply at all performances from Saturday 4 March – Friday 31 March 2017

 

Box Office

0845 200 7982

AnAmericanInParisTheMusical.co.uk