Bad Girls the Musical
Upstairs at the Gatehouse
Reviewed – 27th February 2019
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“Rebecca Eastham, making her directorial debut, succeeds in bringing together an exceptionally talented cast and crew”
Britain is known for many cultural accomplishments, its contributions in theatre arguably taking centre stage. However, in my opinion, Britain does not do musicals. At least, we donβt do them well. Besides Andrew Lloyd Webberβs cloying melodramas (and βBilly Elliotβ- that was quite good) our West End musical contributions have been meagre. So, the idea of transforming a βhard-hittingβ British prison drama into a βhard-hittingβ British prison musical – an already tricky concept – seems an unlikely formula for theatrical brilliance – a previous West End outing lasted little more than a couple of months. Nonetheless, βBad Girls: The Musicalβ comes to Upstairs at the Gatehouse to try its luck.
The premise does what it says on the tin. There is of course a lot of precedent for prison shows, and βBad Girls: The Musicalβ doesnβt waste any time defying expectations. Youβve got all the usual tropes – a couple of corrupt guards, a young up-and-comer trying to make things better, and a tired warden whoβd prefer to turn a blind eye. The inmates are similarly predictable – vulnerable newcomer who canβt hack it, idiot bullies looking to take your lunch money, and so on.
The production itself is well done. Rebecca Eastham, making her directorial debut, succeeds in bringing together an exceptionally talented cast and crew. Considering the limitations on prison decor (grey on grey), Andrew Exeterβs set design does well to create something interesting. Fly-posters with β#MeTooβ and βIβm With Herβ slogans hang just outside the prison gates – a nice solution to the fact that the playβs themes are about a decade behind the current political conversation. The outside worldβs progress makes no odds to the goings-on inside prison, is what I imagine these posters are supposed to suggest. Prison cell panels on wheels create varying spaces and divisions on stage. They also allow the inmates to remain on stage at all times, cleverly creating a row of cells behind whatever scene is taking place.
The talent on stage is quite spectacular. A four-piece band (directed by Ben David Papworth) works very hard to provide the entire soundtrack. Nicole Faraday (playing Shell Dockley), who featured in the original βBad Girlsβ TV drama, has a beautiful, honeyed voice as well as great comic physicality. In fact, nearly the whole cast showcases amazing vocal ability, and there are quite a few moments where sitting in such a small auditorium with so many talented singers feels very exclusive.
There are a lot of power ballads which, I suppose, lend a nice opportunity for the vocals to shine – one can easily imagine a heart-felt βBad Girlsβ number being belted out on X-Factor semi-finals. But itβs a bit weird to have so many moments of attempted earnestness beside songs like βAll Banged Up Without The Bangβ (βThis little chassis needs a full front prangβ). Whatβs more itβs these songs and scenes, jam-packed with sexual innuendo and comedy, that are genuinely entertaining, and if only the writers (Maureen Chadwick, Ann McManus and Kath Gotts) had done away with their bid to be βhard-hittingβ, they might have written a very successful musical comedy.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
Bad Girls the Musical
Upstairs at the Gatehouse until 3rd March
Previously reviewed at this venue:
A Night at The Oscars | β β β β | February 2018
After the Ball | β β β | March 2018
Return to the Forbidden Planet | β β β | May 2018
Kafka’s Dick | β β β β | June 2018
Nice Work if You Can Get It | β β β β | December 2018
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