The Biograph Girl
Finborough Theatre
Reviewed – 24th May 2018
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“Occasional ripples stir up the action but the whole staging needs a good shake up”
Commissioned as part of the Finboroughβs βCelebrating British Music Theatreβ series, βThe Biograph Girlβ is playing on the London stage for the first time since its 1980 premiere. With book and lyrics by Warner Brown and music by David Heneker (the composer of βHalf A Sixpenceβ) it is a celebration of Hollywoodβs glorious era of silent film, charting the fifteen years during which the industry transformed itself from its disreputable, βfleapitβ beginnings through to the birth of the first talking pictures and its glamorous multi-million dollar prime. In 1912, no self-respecting actor would appear in the βflickersβ, as they were referred to, but by 1927, those same artistes, with the help of trail blazing moguls, laid the foundations of the movie business and launched the Hollywood star system.
The show is a nostalgic reminiscence of the silent movies, a tale of the heartbreaks and triumphs of the key players, concentrating on the flawed genius of director David Wark Griffith, along with Mary Pickford and Lillian Gish, both of them great silent film stars. Mary Pickford was known as βThe Biograph Girlβ β after the studio β though this telling of the story fails to justify her having the titular role. This is very much Griffithβs story, played with a cool assurance by Jonathan Leinmuller. Sophie Linder-Leeβs Pickford, while emulating the original character, replaces her outward innocence with petulance which distances her from the audienceβs sympathy. Instead Emily Langham quietly pulls focus with her sensitive portrayal of Lillian Gish – the βFirst Lady of American Cinemaβ.
The intimate space of the Finborough captures the ad hoc feel of early cinema where everything was done on a shoestring and sets were often cramped and improvised, and in this way the piece certainly lends itself to the confined dimensions of the theatre. The almost total lack of set however, whether a deliberate concept or one dictated by budget, strips the play of any sense of location. Likewise, Holly Hughesβ choreography abandons any perception of the period.
What does capture the moments of nostalgia and hold our attention is Warner Brownβs book and David Henekerβs music. The tunes are sophisticated yet still memorable. One particular highlight is Joshua C. Jacksonβs heartfelt rendition of βRivers of Bloodβ, a politically charged number that was cut from the original production. The cast deliver the ensemble numbers with a collective poise that emphasises Henekerβs skills as a composer, while Musical Director Harry Haden-Brown calmly navigates them through the score. Sometimes too calmly.
And there lies the problem with this production: there is no turbulence. Occasional ripples stir up the action but the whole staging needs a good shake up. Director Jenny Eastop has missed a whole bag of tricks and has merely delivered a monochrome product that should be fizzing with flashes of light and shade. It is a gift of a story, and a much more innovative staging is needed to do justice to this hugely talented cast too. The subject matter (and Henekerβs music) is too important. In his heyday, poetic beauty was something David Wark Griffith most wanted from the screen. He felt that the motion picture industry was losing sight of that, declaring later in his life: βWe have taken beauty and exchanged it for stilted voicesβ. Eastop should take note.
Reviewed by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
The Biograph Girl
Finborough Theatre until 9th June
Related
Previously reviewed at this venue
Booby’s Bay | β β β β | February 2018
Returning to Haifa | β β β β | March 2018
White Guy on the Bus | β β β β | March 2018
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