Tag Archives: Jersey Boys

Jersey Boys

Jersey Boys

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Trafalgar Theatre

Jersey Boys

Jersey Boys

Trafalgar Theatre

Reviewed – 23rd August 2021

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“There is a welcomed playfulness to the production”

 

Jersey Boys, the jukebox musical chronicling the rise of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, first debuted on the West End in 2008 before closing nine years later. Its revival at the newly renovated Trafalgar Theatre marks the show’s exciting return to the stage, made even more poignant after the original opening night was further postponed due to Covid-19 concerns.

The show opens with the chart-topping French cover of Oh What a Night (Ces SoirΓ©es-La) to demonstrate the band’s incredible international appeal. Certainly, this should come as no surprise, seeing as the band has sold an estimated 100 million records worldwide and survived the so-called British Invasion.

The story of the quartet’s rise and fall is told from the perspective of all four band members, the different seasons (Fall, Winter etc.) flashing on a screen above the stage to demonstrate this perspective shift. Though such a format presented a more β€˜well-rounded’ story of the group’s success, this did have a significant effect on the musical’s pacing with some scenes forgotten as quickly as they started.

This also led to some rather jarring tonal changes. The strangest perhaps was found at the end of the production where in the space of five minutes the audience mourns the death of Frankie’s daughter before jumping forward a decade to the band’s joyous induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. There is, simply put, too much history and character development to pack in to the two-and-a-half-hour show.

An impressive number of songs feature in the production but again we are unable to rest on any one scene for too long. The opening scenes are particularly fast-paced and almost discombobulating as we are shown the formation of the group. There is no concrete sense of how much time has passed between any given scene, and the occasional time stamp on the large screen would have been a helpful signpost for the audience.

The cast is phenomenal. The New Jersey accents are well executed though very occasionally border on comical especially when we are reminded of the group’s mob connections. Ben Joyce (making his West End debut) does an excellent job of delivering Valli’s iconic falsetto. His performance of Can’t Take My Eyes Off You is particularly beautiful and Joyce was visibly moved at the audience’s ecstatic response to his rendition.

Adam Bailey and Karl James Wilson (playing singers Bob Gaudio and Nick Massi respectively) are incredibly likeable and Benjamin Yates infuses the band’s ringleader Tommy De Vito with a braggadocious energy. The concluding speeches for each band member really allow the cast to come into their own and one cannot help feeling emotional as they update the audience on their lives in the present day.

There is a welcomed playfulness to the production. A particularly amusing moment occurs when Gaudio is implored to β€œplay the f***ing song” in reference to Can’t Take My Eyes Off You which at half-way through the second half was still yet to be played. This outburst generated raucous laugh from the audience who surely felt as though the show was articulating how they were feeling about hearing the iconic tune.

The choreography (Sergio Trujillo) is fantastic. The quartet and the various backing dancers are all perfectly synced with Joyce demonstrating some particularly impressive moves. Though not necessarily true to life, this did add a great pizazz to the performances of the more upbeat songs.

The sets (Klara Zieglerova) were relatively simple with props used more often than backdrops to convey a certain location. Some particularly impressive staging came in the form of the band performing as if on television. Facing a prop camera to the side of the stage, the front view shot of the band performing played on the screen above the stage, interspersed with presumably real clips of crowds at Four Season performances.

You would be hard-pressed not to enjoy this revival of the Jersey Boys. Though the production would benefit for slower pacing at some points, there is no shortage of excellent music, engaging story, and supremely talented cast.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

Photography by Mark Senior

 

Jersey Boys

Trafalgar Theatre until 2nd January

 

Reviewed by Flora this year:
Ginger Johnson & Pals | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Pleasance Theatre | June 2021
Godot is a Woman | β˜…β˜…β˜…Β½ | Pleasance Theatre | June 2021
Sh!t-Faced Macbeth | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Leicester Square Theatre | July 2021

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Jersey Boys – UK Tour

THE AWARD-WINNING, SMASH HITΒ WEST ENDΒ & BROADWAY MUSICAL

JERSEY BOYS

TO EMBARK ON SECOND UK & IRELAND TOUR
FROM DECEMBER 2017

 

Due to overwhelming public demand, the producers of JERSEY BOYS are delighted to announce a second UK & Ireland Tour, to open at the New Alexandra Theatre, Birmingham on 16 December 2017.

JERSEY BOYS first opened in London at the Prince Edward Theatre on 18 March 2008 and moved to the Piccadilly Theatre in March 2014. The Olivier Award-winning West End production will close on Sunday 26 March 2017 following nine amazing years in London. The first UK & Ireland Tour of JERSEY BOYS was a record-breaking success and ran for 18 months, from 4 September 2014 to 5 March 2016.

Photo by Helen Maybanks from the original UK TourΒ 

 

JERSEY BOYS is the remarkable true story of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons and their rise to stardom from the wrong side of the tracks. These four boys from New Jersey became one of the most successful bands in pop history, were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and sold 175 million records worldwide, all before they turned 30. The show is packed with their hits, including Beggin’, Sherry, Walk Like A Man, December, 1963 (Oh What a Night), Big Girls Don’t Cry, My Eyes Adored You, Let’s Hang On (To What We’ve Got), Bye Bye Baby, Can’t Take My Eyes Off You, Working My Way Back to You, Fallen Angel, Rag Doll and Who Loves You.

Winner of Broadway’s Tony, London’s Olivier and Australia’s Helpmann Awards for Best New Musical, JERSEY BOYS is the winner of 57 major awards worldwide and has been seen by over 24 million people worldwide. JERSEY BOYS can currently be seen across the United States on its US National Tour. The BROADWAY production closed on 15 January 2017 as the 12th longest running show in Broadway history.
JERSEY BOYS is written by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice, with music by Bob Gaudio and lyrics by Bob Crewe. The National / UK & Ireland Tour production is staged by the entire original Broadway creative team, led by director Des McAnuff and choreographer Sergio Trujillo, with scenic design by Klara Zieglerova, costume design by Jess Goldstein, lighting by Howell Binkley, sound by Steve Canyon Kennedy and projection design by Michael Clark. The orchestrations are by Steve Orich and the music supervision and vocal arrangements by Ron Melrose.
The UK & Ireland Tour of JERSEY BOYS is produced by Dodger Theatricals and Ambassador Theatre Group, with Joseph J Grano, Pelican Group, Latitute Link and Rick Steiner.

 

www.JerseyBoysUKTour.com

 

 

Tour Dates

 

16 Dec 2017 – 6 Jan 2018

Birmingham New Alexandra

0844 871 3011 www.atgtickets.com/birmingham

On sale 10 March

 

9 – 20 January

Liverpool Empire

0844 871 3017

www.atgtickets.com/liverpool

On sale 23 March

 

23 January – 3 February

Milton Keynes Theatre

0844 871 7652

www.atgtickets.com/miltonkeynes

On sale 23 March

 

6 – 17 February

Stoke Regent Theatre

0844 871 7649

www.atgtickets.com/stoke

On sale 23 March

 

20 February – 3 March

Hull New Theatre

01482 300 306

www.hulltheatres.co.uk

On sale 24 March

 

20 – 31 March

Sunderland Empire

0844 871 3022

www.atgtickets.com/sunderland

On sale 23 March

 

3 – 14 April

Glasgow King’s Theatre

0844 871 7648

www.atgtickets.com/venues/kings-theatre

On sale 23 March

 


 

Further dates to be announced – click here and follow thespyinthestalls.com to keep up to date

 

 

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