Tag Archives: Brighton Theatre Royal

Salad Days – 3 Stars

Salad

Salad Days

Brighton Theatre Royal & Touring

Reviewed – 5th September 2018

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“As absurd plots go, Salad Days’ story is hard to beat”

 

‘In 1954, the Old Vic’s artistic director Denis Carey gave Julian [Slade] and Dorothy [Reynolds] just one month to write a summer show – words, music, everything. They did it.’ So writes Adrian Slade in the programme notes for this production, and it is a helpful introduction – placing us firmly in the period, and providing a clue as to the origins of this utterly bonkers musical confection.

As absurd plots go, Salad Days’ story is hard to beat: a young couple find themselves the guardians of a magical piano which bewitches people into dancing in public; the piano goes missing and a flying saucer appears to help track it down. This is clearly not a musical that takes itself very seriously, and yet the audience requires a level of sincerity in the production, particularly in 2018, to keep the show from becoming a dusty and risible period piece. It is a hard balance to strike, and one which Regan de Wynter’s production – initially at the Union Theatre in London and now at Brighton’s Theatre Royal ahead of a UK tour – generally maintains. For the most part, the show zips along with a great deal of effervescence and charm, and laughs are in plentiful supply. The comedy works best however, when it bubbles up from the pure silliness of the plot, or springs from the deft handling of physical business – special mention here to the marvellous hairdressers scene, expertly played by Wendi Peters. The scenes which rely heavily on running gags are less successful; these are the awkward interludes in which the show’s 64 years weigh heavily.

The songs, although fun, lack the biting wit of Cole Porter or the inventive musicality of Arthur Sullivan, and the choreography is lively but unremarkable. The lighting design is similarly serviceable, and the production design lacks coherence, particularly in terms of period setting – some costumes clearly coming from the fifties, but others from the twenties and thirties. The success of this production is thus almost wholly down to its committed and energetic cast, which had to work doubly hard last night to combat some very obvious technical issues with sound quality. (As a side note, this reviewer is not convinced by the need to mike up performers in a space the size of the Theatre Royal. All the singers are clearly capable of filling the theatre vocally, unaided). Despite these setbacks, the showstoppers shine through, and there are some lovely lyrical moments too. Maeve Byrne lights up the stage with Asphynxia’s fabulous nightclub pastiche ‘Sand in my Eyes’, and Lewis McBean’s warm tenor is a delight throughout. Also noteworthy are the splendid comic characterisation and sparkling vocal quality of Francesca Pim, and the physical precision and geniality that Callum Evans brings to the mute Troppo.

Salad Days is pure nostalgia – theatrical candyfloss if you will – and Brighton’s beautiful regency Theatre Royal provides the perfect setting to jump on the carousel and indulge in a sugary treat.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Scott Rylander

 

TheatreRoyalBrighton

Salad Days

Brighton Theatre Royal until 8th September then touring UK

 

 

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This is Elvis – 3 Stars

Elvis

This is Elvis

Β Brighton Theatre Royal

Reviewed – 9th July 2018

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by the end of the night, most of the initially static audience is on its feet swaying and clapping along

 

Over the last couple of decades, the back catalogues of much-loved bands have apparently become fair game for writers of questionable -albeit enormously successful- musicals. The likes of Mamma Mia! and We Will Rock You have taken on ABBA and Queen respectively, haunting the West End with their hackneyed plotting and airbrushed hits. This Is Elvis certainly doesn’t pass up the opportunity for a bit of one-dimensional drama, but that seems to matter very little to the audience; for them, it is clear that tonight’s show is all about the music.

Based around Elvis’ hugely successful Comeback Special of 1968 and his subsequent residency at the International Hotel in Las Vegas, we find the star at a turning point in his career, full of hope at the prospect at returning to live performance but plagued by the fear of failing to live up to his enormous reputation. In the background is the infamous Colonel Tom Parker, Elvis’ authoritarian manager who, whilst never appearing on stage, appears to have the singer firmly under his thumb. The tension between King and Colonel drives the drama. One wishes to get back to the basics of good old rock’n’roll, the other is simply out to line his pockets. To be sure, the story is all just an excuse to live out the fantasy of seeing Elvis in his prime, but for such a genuinely interesting time in music history, it surprising how flat the writers manage to make it. Throughout the first act, musical numbers are interluded with saccharine episodes that seem to go nowhere, and ultimately everything set in motion in the first half is completely forgotten by the second, resolved or not; the story is simply jettisoned in favour of music after the interval.

Then again, the second act is all the better for it. Once we finally reach Las Vegas, Steve Michaels’ Elvis is free to deliver what everyone clearly came here to see. There’s no denying the power of the songs themselves, and the band is incredibly tight. Presley classics are interspersed with those of other icons of the era such as the Beatles and Simon & Garfunkel (initially mistaken by Elvis for a law firm). Michaels himself never seems to tire, tearing through hit after hit, and even finding time for banter with the audience in between numbers. Only before the final song does he admit just how out of breath he is.

Ultimately, the show is an Elvis tribute act, albeit one with a talented live band and a gleefully game front man. Perhaps if the show remained truer to this fact throughout, it would feel more rounded and we might be saved some embarrassing attempts at southern US accents. None of this seemed to matter too much to the punters however; by the end of the night, most of the initially static audience is on its feet swaying and clapping along, and it would have taken a cold, cold heart not to join in.

 

Reviewed by Harry True

Photography by Pamela Raith

 

TheatreRoyalBrighton

This is Elvis

Brighton Theatre Royal until 14th July then UK tour continues

 

 

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