“a clever interpretation of a classic story with some impressive performances from a talented diverse cast.”
The Robert Louis Stevenson story of the nature of humanity and potential for us all to choose to do both good and evil is vividly explored in a new musical opera version of “Jekyll and Hyde” by a dynamic young cast in the Studio performance space at Chickenshed Theatre. The audience enter the Studio along a Victorian street and sit on four banks of rather uncomfortable bench seats facing each other across the cobbles. Flickering street lamps and Victorian smog set the scene. A bridge and sewer below face down to Jekyll’s house and the evocative set designed by Constance Villemot is well used throughout.
The writing team (music by Dave Carey and Hannah Bohlin with lyrics by Paul Morrall) chose to use modern music and words to update the story for today. With director Jonny Morton, they also made the decision to reorder and perform the story chronologically to make it more accessible to a modern audience.
The opera requires careful concentration as it moves quickly through events with two halves of around thirty five minutes each. The music has been prerecorded but all the singing is live. There are twenty-one songs in a variety of styles and enough repetition to make the audience feel familiar with the music during the show.
Chickenshed has an inclusive ethos and the cast reflected this. The dual role of Jekyll/Hyde was performed by Nathaniel Leigertwood. He contrasted the two roles most effectively and the physicality of his transformations and violence as Hyde clearly scared two audience members opposite me. Nathaniel has long dark curly hair which he released from a ponytail as Hyde and used to disguise his face most successfully. His friend and lawyer Utterson was played by Demar Lambert and Dr Lanyon was sung confidently by Finn Kebbe. Sir Danvers Carew was performed by Ecevit Kulucan and Poole by Will Laurence. Vocal performances were generally strong although there were moments when the score was too demanding for individuals.
The chorus were both dancers and singers and their performance was pivotal to the success of the production, with dynamic choreography by Michael Bossisse. The lighting by Andrew Caddies really enhanced the opera throughout. There is a clever piece of stagecraft at the end of the opera which surprises the audience and allows them further insight into the dilemma that Jekyll has faced, forming a neat conclusion to the opera. This is a clever interpretation of a classic story with some impressive performances from a talented diverse cast.
“the stilted opening gives way to a no less thought-provoking play
Told from the perspective of the seemingly deaf and mute patient ‘Chief’ Bromden, ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ takes place in a psychiatric ward in 1950s Oregon. The impetus for the story is the arrival of R.P.McMurphy, a gambler who has tried his luck feigning psychopathy to spend a sentence in the relative relaxation of an asylum rather than toiling on a prison farm. However, he finds that things won’t be such plain sailing when he meets the inimitable ‘Big’ Nurse Ratched.
As the weak and pliable Dr Spivey (Jonny Morton) explains to the patients, the ward is a microcosm of society at large. Whilst on one level we are watching corruptions of power and primitive tolerance of mental illness in fifties asylums; one can also read this as a allegory for the much larger machinations of state action and punishment of those who challenge the status quo. Particular attention is drawn to notions of masculinity, often tied up in sexual prowess, and how the power this exercises over individuals can have devastating consequences.
Olivier Leclair is excellent as the dynamic, lovable rogue McMurphy. His antics bring life to the ward developing a sense of camaraderie between the characters and building their confidence through fun and friendship.
Paul Harris gives a standout performance as Harding, whose droll and cerebral manner feels out of place from the rest of the patients. Harris’ feisty challenge of McMurphy builds perfectly in intensity, until he flips from anger to resignation to comic effect. Bradley Davis’ stoicism as Chief Bromden creates a steady pace which anchors the piece, whilst Lauren Cambridge as Candy Star makes a big impact during her short appearances, acting as a bright and stark contrasting female figure to the controlled and cruel Nurse Ratched, played by Belinda McGuirk.
Robin Don’s set design is relatively sparse but carefully considered. The window, which is the only link between the ward and the outside world, looms over the middle of the stage, illuminating the centre floor with rings of painted light slowly fading to grey. This acts as a constant reminder of the possibility of escape from the patients, in some cases voluntary, commitment to the ward.
The 1975 film version of the story, starring Jack Nicholson will inevitably be a draw for audiences. And although the energy of the piece is carried by a few members of the large cast, the stilted opening gives way to a no less thought-provoking play.