MARIE CURIE – THE MUSICAL at Charing Cross Theatre
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“The music is the highlight, even though it often feels it belongs to another story.”
Marie Curie, nΓ©e Maria Salomea Sklodowska, is remembered for her discovery of radium and polonium (the latter named after her native Poland); and for her huge contribution to finding treatments for cancer. The latter is what she is generally celebrated for, along with the hospital and charity that bear her name. Less is probably known about her years of obsessive scientific research and the opposition and misogyny she faced while trying to get her name onto the periodic table. The science goes over most peopleβs heads, whereas the enduring image is of Marie, buttoned up to the neck in black, gazing unsmiling into the camera.
An unlikely subject for a musical. But composer Jongyoon Choi and librettist Seeun Choun obviously decided to give it a go. After making the finals of the βGlocal Musical Liveβ competition in Korea it secured funding and eventually premiered in Seoul in 2018. Apparently, Tom Ramsayβs English adaptation (with lyrics translated by Emma Fraser) marks the first time a Korean musical is staged in English.
There are elements to this musical that would have many a physicist scratching their head. Its essence is not instantly discoverable despite condensing Marieβs story into a one act musical. It concentrates on her relocation to Paris, charting her struggle to fit into a manβs world. The narrative follows her research and discoveries, the adverse and tragic effects of these discoveries and the subsequent battles against corporate baddies. The love interest is supplied by fellow scientist and husband, Pierre Curie, although it is a bit of a cold fusion. The passion is reserved for the chemical elements, with love songs titled βRadium Paradiseβ (parts one and two no less). In fact, the show could have been called βRadium: The Musicalβ.
It opens at the end with Marieβs daughter, IrΓ¨ne (Lucy Young), reading her motherβs memoirs while Ailsa Davidsonβs spectral, black-clad Marie watches. Davidsonβs fine, pure voice sits well on the lush strings of the prologue as she guides the story back to the start. Rose Montgomeryβs changeable set is with her every step of the way, from the train carriage as it pulls into Paris, to the laboratories and the factories. On the journey, Marie meets fellow Pole, Anne Kowalska (Chrissie Bhima), a lowly factory worker who later becomes the voice of justice and moral reasoning. It takes a while to get there, though, with the bulk of the show comprising a song cycle leading up to Marieβs discovery of radium.
The tone darkens when the destructive side of radium manifests itself. Initially used as luminous paint for watches and clock dials, the painters were instructed to lick their brushes to give them a fine point. It didnβt take long for this practice to lead to a sharp peak in the death rate among the workers. Covered up as a syphilis outbreak (did they really think they could get away with that?), the factory boss (Richard Meek) finds himself at loggerheads with Marie.
It is refreshing to see the story focus on a relatively short time span rather than attempting to create an epic chronicle of the womanβs life. It lends a human touch, steering the piece away from docudrama. Marieβs later years and achievements are glossed over during the finale. We might not learn a great deal that we already didnβt know but instead we are joyously swept along by Jongyoon Choiβs sumptuous score, rich in violins, cellos and clarinet. The music is the highlight, even though it often feels it belongs to another story. Choiβs compositions are indeed stirring, yet the lyrics and subject matter donβt always echo the passion.
The passion, however, is undeniable in the performances, and we also come away with some pertinent reminders of the historical struggle of women with a society against them. But despite the beauty of the score, and Emma Fraser’s arrangements, there is a sense that this story belongs more to the spoken word.
MARIE CURIE – THE MUSICAL at Charing Cross Theatre
Reviewed on 7th June 2024
by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Pamela Raith
Previously reviewed at this venue:
BRONCO BILLY – THE MUSICAL | β β β | January 2024
SLEEPING BEAUTY TAKES A PRICK! | β β β β | November 2023
REBECCA | β β β β | September 2023
GEORGE TAKEI’S ALLEGIANCE | β β β β | January 2023
FROM HERE TO ETERNITY | β β β β | November 2022
THE MILK TRAIN DOESN’T STOP HERE ANYMORE | β β β | October 2022
RIDE | β β β β β | August 2022
VANYA AND SONIA AND MASHA AND SPIKE | β β β | November 2021
MARIE CURIE
MARIE CURIE
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