NEXT TO NORMAL at Wyndham’s Theatre
β β β β β
“as close to extraordinary as is physically possible”
Many years ago, as a young father, I often interrupted my childrenβs playtime by asking what they were doing. They never thought it an intrusion β always happy to answer. One particular day, in response to the question my daughter responded with βIβm trying to be normalβ. Five minutes later she had completely forgotten the conversation (possibly the ice cream van, or the urgent matter of shouting at her little brother took precedence), but it lingered with me for some time. I think I had answered in my usual flippant way with something like βjoin the clubβ or βarenβt we all?β. I never thought of bursting into song. Decades later the perfect answer is delivered to me from the West End stage.
βI donβt need a life thatβs normal
Thatβs way too far away
But something next to normal
Would be okay
Yes, something next to normal
Thatβs the thing Iβd like to try
Close enough to normal to get byβ
When Eleanor Worthington-Cox delivers the lines towards the end of the second act in Tom Kittβs (Music) and Brian Yorkeyβs (book and lyrics) astonishing musical, thereβs not a dry eye in the house, yet thereβs also a collective feeling of elation that ripples through the auditorium. βNext to Normalβ obviously addresses the subject of mental health but it never feels that way. The message (if there is one) or the answer (there isnβt one) runs subliminally beneath a musical that soars to the heights.
Worthington-Cox is Natalie, the daughter to Diana (Caissie Levy) who grapples with her bipolar disorder. In principle it is Dianaβs story. A heart-wrenching one. In reality it is everyoneβs story. Levy is simply stunning in the lead role, capturing with undiluted precision and sympathy all the highs and lows of her roller-coaster condition, guiding us through the funny moments to the achingly sad and tragic. Levy is surrounded by five other lead players, for this is an ensemble piece. Husband Dan (the magnificent Jamie Parker) battles to understand, often picking up the pieces and trying to get through another day. Initially it all seems normal. The angst-ridden daughter and the waif-like son, Gabe (Jack Wolfe), getting ready for school. But how quickly it all unravels – until the bombshell arrives quite early on. It wonβt be long before the whole capital knows the twist, but until then Iβm keeping mum.
The medical profession is not so much made fun of, but scrutinised with comic genius by the writers. Trevor Dion Nicholas plays two different doctors β the aptly named Dr. Madden and Dr. Fine β lightening the mood with darkness each time he arrives on stage, littering the space with pill boxes, black humour, dubious cures or just the aura of a Rock God. Another subplot is supplied by the blossoming relationship between Natalie and school chum Henry (Jack Ofrecio) which mirrors the elder coupleβs in a frighteningly authentic, cyclical way. Jack Wolfe, of course, is sublimely shadowy as Gabe. Whilst his character is fighting to be seen and not forgotten, there is no denying that the beauty of his voice can be heard near and far and the tones will be remembered for a long time.
The musical will linger in the memory for even longer. The score is magical. One moment light and catchy, another aching and haunting. The manic βItβs Gonna be Goodβ sits comfortably alongside Levyβs aching rendition of the soaring βI Miss the Mountainsβ. Vulnerability and despair, heartache and longing, love and guilt have all never been served better in song. Interspersed between the numbers are some brilliantly succinct one-liners that sum up decades of medical hypothesis. The fact that they are dressed in cloaks of humour add poignancy to the already impassioned performances. βMost people who think they are happy havenβt thought about it enoughβ
Nobody has to think hard at all to realise that βNext to Normalβ is as close to extraordinary as is physically possible. βThere will be lightβ, we are told in the uplifting closing number. But it is far from a cloying sentiment, as a tangible question mark still hangs in the air. And for the moment, the light is refracted through tears – of sadness and of joy. Heart-breaking, heart-warming and life-affirming, this musical is more than a must see.
NEXT TO NORMAL at Wyndham’s Theatre
Reviewed on 26th June 2024
by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Marc Brenner
Previously reviewed at this venue:
KING LEAR | β β β β | October 2023
OKLAHOMA! | β β β β | February 2023
LIFE OF PI | β β β β β | November 2021
NEXT TO NORMAL
NEXT TO NORMAL
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