tick, tick β¦ BOOM!
Bridge House Theatre
Reviewed β 4th October 2019
β β β β
βThe vocal mix of these three was goosebump-inducingly beautiful with some truly astonishing harmoniesβ
tick, tickβ¦BOOM! has aged very well since 1990. To listen to any other writer wonder whether heβs going to change the landscape of musical theatre with his work through the medium of an autobiographical musical would seem self-aggrandising at best. However, the writer behind this show was not just any writer, but Jonathan Larson, a man who would go on to literally change the landscape of musical theatre with his work (namely Rent). Itβs surprising just how well tick, tickβ¦BOOM! stacks up compared to the Pulitzer Prize-winning behemoth that succeeded it, although it is in no small part thanks to the Bridge House Theatreβs intimate and pared-back production.
The show centres on Jon (Alex Lodge), on the verge of turning thirty and subsequently having an existential crisis. In the midst of this he also has to contend with his roommate Michael (James Hume) moving to a flashier apartment due to his new high-paying corporate job, and his girlfriend Susan (Georgie Ashford) wanting to settle down away from the city. This leaves Jon under pressure to decide whether to continue pursuing his career as a musical theatre writer or to give up and lead a βnormalβ life with more psychological and financial stability. Itβs a dilemma that will no doubt feel very familiar to any creative trying to make it professionally, and is presented very truthfully here through its rock-centric score, with songs such as β30/90β² and βReal Lifeβ laying bare the anxieties and hopes that this kind of lifestyle will impose.
The story is not quite as slickly told as with Rent, with the feeling that Larson hadnβt quite found his voice yet β the man clearly idolised Stephen Sondheim and it bleeds through a little too much into some moments, such as in βSundayβ, a pastiche of Sunday in the Park with George placed in the cafΓ© Jon works at, which seems to be there just for pasticheβs sake and not to expand on the story, characters, or themes. However, most other numbers feel like they are quintessentially and organically woven into the fabric of the narrative, especially those towards the end of the show such as βWhyβ and βLouder Than Wordsβ.
The intensely cosy setting of the Bridge House Theatre made for some very intimate storytelling, and the performances revelled in it. Lodge portrayed Jon with a spectacular humour and charm that didnβt forsake his urgency and insecurity, while Ashford and Hume were both also excellent, and delightfully varied in the myriad of minor characters they also took on. The vocal mix of these three was goosebump-inducingly beautiful with some truly astonishing harmonies embellished into the score, with energetic accompaniment from musical director Jamie Ross. The absence of percussion was felt at times in some of the bigger numbers, although this perhaps wonβt be an issue if youβve never heard any of the songs before. Guy Retallackβs direction deftly utilises every inch of the space, bringing a stellar sense of dynamism throughout, and Richard Williamsonβs lighting design was especially notable in how effectively it established scenes, in terms of both setting and atmosphere.
Thereβs a sense of sentiment to tick, tickβ¦BOOM! given Larsonβs untimely death at the age of 35. As we see him fret about whether his work will ever reach a meaningful platform, itβs a little upsetting to know heβd never get to see how utterly epochal his writing would become. Itβs no doubt a smart move that this production steers away from the schmaltz, instead staying laser-focused on delivering a confident and slick love letter to creative crises.
Reviewed by Ethan Doyle
Photography by Jamie Scott-Smith
tick, tick β¦ BOOM!
Bridge House Theatre until 27th October
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Plaid Tidings | β β β | December 2018
Twelfth Night | β β β β | June 2019
Click here to see our most recent reviews