Tag Archives: Joe Bence

ROCK & ROLL MAN

★★★★

UK Tour

ROCK & ROLL MAN

Theatre Royal Windsor

★★★★

“An inspiring show about an inspirational man”

“No man had as much influence on the coming culture of our society in such a short period of time as Alan Freed, the real King of Rock n Roll”. If you were asked to whom the accolade belongs, it is unlikely you’d choose the clean-cut, checkered jacketed radio DJ with the boy-next-door looks and all-American smile. Despite appearances, Alan Freed earned his place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. His influence stretched further as he helped bridge the gap of segregation among Americans, presenting music by black artists on his radio program and arranging live concerts attended by racially mixed audiences. All the while concealing personal tragedy beneath the ‘regular guy’ exterior.

Likewise – don’t be fooled by the veneer of Gary Kupper, Larry Marshak and Rose Caiola’s bio-musical, “Rock & Roll Man”, that celebrates Freed’s life and career. On the surface a typical juke-box musical, yet as the layers are peeled back it is a fascinating piece of social and personal history. It is a familiar story but the angle that the writers take reveal some priceless gems. Alan Freed was a multifaceted character, his life cut short through alcoholism; his career cut short through mixing with the wrong crowd. Constantine Maroulis captures the essence of Freed with pitch-perfection; simultaneously innocent but with an unscrupulous determination that eventually ruffles the feathers of J. Edgar Hoover (played with delicious cartoon villainy by Mark Pearce).

From the start Freed rocked the boat, insisting on only playing the original songs by the black artists instead of the homogenised covers by the likes of Pat Boone. The show latches onto this, firmly putting the music’s legacy back where it belongs. Centre stage are Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, Chuck Berry (a brilliant Joey James – impeccably imitating the famous duck walk), Bo Diddley (an imposing Anton Stephans), Frankie Lyman (the versatile and velvet-voiced Marquie Hairston), LaVern Baker (the ever-watchable, rousing Cherece Richards) and, of course, Little Richard – given the requisite over-the-top campness and pure magnetism by Jairus McClanahan. Meanwhile Joe Bence is a dead ringer (in style and sound rather than looks) for Buddy Holly. Musical Director, Dominique Scott, leaves his bank of keyboards to play multiple cameos. Probably the hardest working MD in town he steals the show with his Jerry Lee Lewis routine, sweeping the keys with impossible glissandos, eventually straddling the piano, leaning precariously to replicate Lee Lewis’ ‘backward’ technique.

All of the singers multirole, giving snapshots of the many personalities behind the music. Shelby Speed seamlessly shifts from Freed’s mother to wife to daughter with deceptive ease. Gary Turner doubles as Leo Mintz, the record store owner who helps kickstart Freed’s career and later the gangster Morris Levy who propels it – but also unwittingly brings it crashing back down. It is in the latter part of the show that the drama truly unfolds. All along, hints of Freed’s alcoholism have been subtly tucked into the narrative, but when the ensemble launch into a harmoniously beautiful rendition of The Drifters’ ‘Smoke Gets in Your Eyes’ we see Freed alone, nursing his whisky bottle on the cusp of his downfall. The Payola scandal (the illegal practice of DJs taking bribes to play specific songs) led to Freed being blacklisted and unable to find work. It is a poignant moment that softly depicts a life falling apart.

Director Randal Myler cleverly frames the story within a dream-like courtroom trial. The establishment is the prosecutor – the musicians Freed championed are his defence. What is at stake is his legacy. History provides the verdict so it’s no spoiler to reveal the outcome here. It is all there in the music, which is uplifting and energised. Stephanie Klemons’ choreography keeps the cast in perpetual motion, weaving themselves around Morgan Large’s mobile set that shifts from record store to studio to stadium under the warm and vibrant hues of Tim Mitchell’s lighting. Gary Kupper slips in some original musical numbers, that are hard to pinpoint such is the chameleon quality of his compositions. But it’s the old favourites that get the feet tapping. Some are all too short, but with well over thirty numbers crammed into the evening it’s probably necessary. It’s pointless listing them – you know them all!

It is rare that a juke box musical can artfully conceal social commentary. The racial prejudice of Hoover and the suspicion of the Civil Rights movement are examined (and lampooned) head on, but it is never thrust into a polemic. The show is purposefully superficial. The only thrusting going on is in the rhythms and the music. And a lot of be-bop-a-lula-ing. And rockin’ and rollin’. The feelgood energy is infectious and we lap it up, along with the songs which are the delicious and glossy icing on the cake. Who cares what the ingredients are? The music brings it all into harmony. Food for thought. “Rock & Roll Man” is vital – in both senses of the word. An inspiring show about an inspirational man.



ROCK & ROLL MAN

Theatre Royal Windsor then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 11th March 2026

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Pamela Raith


 

 

 

 

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Review of Lord Dismiss Us – 3 Stars

Dismiss

Lord Dismiss Us

Above the Stag

Reviewed – 26th October 2017

⭐️⭐️⭐️

 

“has a great deal of brio and charm … though doesn’t quite escape the strictures of its time”

 

Michael Campbell’s novel, Lord Dismiss Us, adapted for the stage this year by Glenn Chandler, was published 50 years ago in 1967, the same year that the Wolfenden report took the first steps toward the decriminalisation of homosexuality. As a longstanding London LGBT theatre, Above the Stag is hosting the show, produced by Boys of the Empire Productions,  in response to this milestone event.

David Shields’ design expertly transformed this Vauxhall railway arch into a boys’ public school, and it worked well for the audience to arrive into an atmosphere of schoolboy tomfoolery, as too did the moments in which, under the aegis of David Mullen’s Headmaster, we were transformed into fellow pupils, attending school assembly. The plot lines are familiar territory to a 21st century audience – stolen moments of forbidden love, the emergence of the creative self – and many of the characters too have resurfaced in different guises over the past 50 years, from the compassionate, culturally alive teacher Eric Ashley, to the camp clergyman Reverend Starr. As a result, it is a difficult task for a contemporary production to convey the very real risks present to these men in the late 60s – both those emerging into their adult lives as well as their teachers and mentors – and thus the show romped along with gusto, but lacked the emotional gravitas which could have led to a more intense theatrical experience.

There was some terrific work from Lewis Allcock as the beleaguered Eric Ashley; his performance provided moments of true tenderness and passion and was the beating heart of the show. David Mullen’s Reverend too was truly touching at times, although occasionally he lost veracity and veered towards caricature, perhaps as a result of Mullen’s double role, and his need to define the Reverend against the humourless Scottish Head. Joshua Oakes-Rogers was convincing as Terry Carleton, as was Joe Bence as Nicholas Allen, the object of his affections, but Carleton’s journey from louche poseur to a young writer in love could have been explored further, and this reviewer would have liked the perpetually-smiling Nicky to have been a little more pole-axed by his final kiss. Matthew McCallion’s wonderful breakout moment in the play-within-a-play provided a welcome counterpoint, and special mention too must go to Jonathan Blaydon for his excellent Peter Naylor, whose playful physicality was a joy to watch.

Julie Teal, as Cecilia Crabtree, had the unenviable task of putting light and shade into a wholly unsympathetic and somewhat underwritten character; despite some deft touches of characterisation, Cecilia remained a product of the time in which she came into being. Indeed, the treatment of women in the play – other than Cecilia we don’t see any, and we are merely given some unflattering imitations of girls from the visiting girls’ school – is one way in which the piece has dated detrimentally.

Ultimately, though this production has a great deal of brio and charm, Lord Dismiss Us doesn’t quite escape the strictures of its time, and therefore remains an entertaining evening, rather than an exciting one.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by PBG Studios

 

Above The Stag Theatre

 

LORD DISMISS US

is at Above the Stag until 19th November

 

 

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