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THE PRODUCERS

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Menier Chocolate Factory

THE PRODUCERS

Menier Chocolate Factory

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THE PRODUCERS

“Its biting, irreverent satire is the most delicious slap in the face youโ€™ll ever experience”

โ€œIt is shocking, outrageous and insultingโ€ฆ and I loved every minuteโ€. That is a quote from Mel Brooksโ€™ and Thomas Meehanโ€™s musical, but it could easily be the tagline of my review of Patrick Marberโ€™s revival at the Menier Chocolate Factory. There are a lot of minutes โ€“ about one hundred and fifty of them โ€“ but each and every one of them is an inglorious joy.

It is extraordinary how it has stood the test of time. Written in 2001, based on Brooksโ€™ 1976 movie, the bounds of good taste are annihilated. Itโ€™s a fun mind game to speculate as to whether it would ever get made today. Imagine the pitch. Camp Nazis goose-stepping while randy old widows tap dance with their Zimmer frames. Characters use sex as a way of extorting money. Jokes that rely on caricature, stereotypes and offending Jews and Gays. Pigeons with Swastikas and an abundance of limp-wristed โ€˜Heil Hitlersโ€™. A curvy secretary who needs her fix of daily sex each morning. And of course, the show-stopping play-within-a-play โ€˜Springtime for Hitlerโ€™ featuring the Fรผhrer in gold spandex. Absolutely not! Youโ€™d be out on the street at best. In jail at worst.

Yet โ€œThe Producersโ€ has not only survived, but it also feels more pertinent and relevant today than ever. Its biting, irreverent satire is the most delicious slap in the face youโ€™ll ever experience. Wrap it up in Paul Farnsworthโ€™s stunning array of costume, Lorin Latarroโ€™s gorgeous choreography and Mel Brooksโ€™ own score and you have the perfect Christmas present. It is thoroughly modern, yet the sense of vaudevillian nostalgia sweeps you off your feet from the opening bars to the final rousing chorus.

THE PRODUCERS

The premise is simple genius. Producer Max Bialystock bankrolls his Broadway flops by seducing rich, little old ladies. One day Leopold โ€˜Leoโ€™ Bloom, a nervy accountant comes to check on his books but inadvertently hits on the idea that Max could make more money from a colossal failure than a huge hit. Cue the hunt for the worst play ever written, the most lamentable director and incompetent cast. The show will close on opening night and Max and Leo keep the money raised. Butโ€ฆ well, you know the rest. You should. Iโ€™ve still yet to meet anyone who isnโ€™t familiar with the story.

The show needs a dynamic duo at its heart. And this production beats with the irresistible pairing of Andy Nyman and Marc Antolin as Max and Leo. Nyman is star material from head to toe, full of ironic cynicism and scheming lechery with a taunting twinkle in his eye. Antolin is simply superb as the anxious accountant with dreams of Broadway. They are the oddest couple, yet visually, physically and vocally they are the perfect match. Harry Morrison, as the over-eccentric, Nazi-centric, pickelhaube-wearing writer of โ€˜Springtime for Hitlerโ€™ adds a zillion shades to the word โ€˜hilariousโ€™, while Trevor Ashley takes โ€˜campโ€™ to the highest summits with his glorious portrayal of Roger de Bris, the flamboyant, failing theatre director. Joanna Woodwardโ€™s whimsical Swedish secretary adds love interest, sassy sexiness and a touch of tenderness. But we keep coming back to Antolin and Nyman, who steal the show so often they are in as much danger of winding up in jail as their characters.

The musical highlights are many. Antolinโ€™s โ€˜I Wanna Be A Producerโ€™, Woodwardโ€™s belting โ€˜When Youโ€™ve Got It, Flaunt Itโ€™ and Morrisonโ€™s high-spirited โ€˜Have You Ever Heard The German Band?โ€™ to name a few. And Nymanโ€™s โ€˜Betrayedโ€™ during which he brilliantly gives us a speed summary of the show. Not to mention, of course, the โ€˜Gay Romp with Adolph and Evaโ€™ in which the company, led by Ashley soar way, way over the top with the flamboyantly brazen โ€˜Springtime For Hitlerโ€™.

You really do have to see it to believe it. In fact, shorten that sentence. You really do have to see it! It is selling fast and furiously, but donโ€™t worry too much. This show has โ€˜West End Transferโ€™ written all over it. I return to my opening line: โ€œIt is shocking, outrageous and insultingโ€ฆ and I loved every minuteโ€. You will too.

 

THE PRODUCERS at the Menier Chocolate Factory

Reviewed on 10th December 2024

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Manuel Harlan

 

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE CABINET MINISTER | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | September 2024
CLOSE UP – THE TWIGGY MUSICAL | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | September 2023
THE THIRD MAN | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | June 2023
THE SEX PARTY | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | November 2022
LEGACY | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | March 2022
HABEAS CORPUS | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | December 2021
BRIAN AND ROGER | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | November 2021

THE PRODUCERS

THE PRODUCERS

THE PRODUCERS

THE PRODUCERS

 

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A Christmas Carol

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The Old Vic

A CHRISTMAS CAROL at the The Old Vic

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A Christmas Carol

“The quality and theatricality of this production is unparalleled”

Few pieces of literature have had such a profound impact on how we think of Christmas today as Charles Dickensโ€™ A Christmas Carol. Has the festive season truly begun unless you’ve read the book, seen a TV adaptation or listened to the Great Gonzo and Rizzo the Rat tell their version of events? With so many adaptations across different mediums it’s hard to pick favourites, or see in advance what another one might bring to the table.

Enter Matthew Warchusโ€™ production at the Old Vic, now in its fifth year at the venue and with US, Irish and Australian versions on the roster. Having passed the poster for the show many times over the years, I have cynically thought this production would be more about fattening the goose of the Old Vic at a time of thin gruel for theatres. This may well still be true, but there are more joyful reasons I am now sure this show comes back, year after year.

The quality and theatricality of this production is unparalleled. The auditorium of the Old Vic is transformed with a cross-shaped stage to bring the audience in to the action, quite literally, with mince pies and satsumas handed out by ushers and actors before they seem to spontaneously start to perform. Recognisable carols are sung by the cast throughout, elevated by the tinkling of handbells and supported by a string quartet some of whose members occasionally grace the stage to play the fiddle alongside the chorus. It leans in to the best parts of live performance with aplomb – audience interaction, mesmeric set and resonant live sound to fully immerse the audience in Dickensโ€™ Victorian Southwark.

“The final act is full of Christmas magic that will have you gasping in awe”

Eccleston is fearsome as Dickensโ€™ miserly Mr Scrooge, a character whose name and exclamation of โ€˜Bah Humbugโ€™ have become shorthand for anti-Christmas sentiment. He embodies the tight-fistedness of the role, striding across the stage sweeping his tattered coat behind him and adding a Shakespearean flair to his enunciation. Jack Thorneโ€™s adaptation gives more depth to Scroogeโ€™s backstory, finding the cause of his fastidiousness to finance in the debt-ridden woes of his father and desire to provide for his first love Mr Fezziwigโ€™s daughter, Belle, artfully portrayed by Frances McNamee.

One of the reasonโ€™s this 180 year old story is so enduring is its message of hope and charity. Who couldn’t be moved by the Cratchit family? It’s not just Tiny Tim, adorably portrayed by Freddie Merritt as one of four actors on rotation, but the warmth and adoration of Rob Compton as Bob Cratchit for his darling wife despite the meagre mealtime offerings that warms the hearts of the audience and Mr Scrooge. His evolution to a man who โ€œknew how to keep Christmas wellโ€ is delightfully uplifting with so much to see and be excited by. The final act is full of Christmas magic that will have you gasping in awe as a result of Rob Howellโ€™s set and costume. Full credit due to the expertise of the full crew for delivering such a thrilling production.

Isn’t a production like this just what we love about Christmas? The ritual. The repetition every year of the same decorations, carols, movies. It allows us to live in a world where nothing has really changed, everything is simple, and there is promise that we can reset and start over again. No matter what there is to come or what has gone before, we are safe in the knowledge that at this time of year we know the next line, and the one after that. No matter if it’s Christopher Eccleston, Michael Caine, or Suranne Jones delivering it. Make this show a Christmas tradition, particularly if you have young children. It converted this Scrooge and will you too.


A CHRISTMAS CAROL at the The Old Vic

Reviewed on 22nd November 2023

by Amber Woodward

Photography by Manuel Harlan

 


 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

Pygmalion | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | September 2023

A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

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