Tag Archives: Peter Groom

Dietrich – Natural Duty
★★★★

Wilton’s Music Hall

Dietrich - Natural Duty

Dietrich – Natural Duty

Wilton’s Music Hall

Reviewed – 19th November 2018

★★★★

“Groom’s is an assured and understated performance in which he deftly uncovers Dietrich’s often overlooked private life”

 

It is 1942. On the battlefields of North Africa, in a gold sequin gown, Marlene Dietrich takes to the stage to fight the war her way. Peter Groom re-enacts this in his one man show, Dietrich – Natural Duty, uncannily resembling Dietrich, or rather the illusory image of Dietrich that we all know and love. But this show is much, much more than an impersonation.

Using the artform of cabaret, Peter Groom gives us a potted history of the “the most famous German woman in the world”; born in Berlin, who becomes a huge Hollywood star. Groom concentrates on the war years when Dietrich’s homeland changes and she is forced to make the difficult choice of renouncing her German citizenship. This approach has the potential of becoming dangerously dull, but Peter Groom is a rare talent. He doesn’t preach or fall into the trap of exposition for one moment. Instead he gets right to the core, capturing the essence and the passion, ultimately delivering a short show that has the emotional impact of the war poems.

Wilton’s Music Hall is a perfect setting for this act. Groom enters and strikes up with ‘I Can’t Give You Anything But Love’. The show is interrupted by an imaginary interviewer which enables Groom to add humour to the poignancy, revealing the dismissive and self-deprecatory side of Dietrich too. Her observations about Hollywood, her disdain for method acting are perceptive, frank and hilarious. “I did as I was told and counted in my head until it was all over” she famously said of her work ethic on set, “… but maybe that’s sex for some people”.

It is one-liners like these that help make the show, and Groom has the unrivalled knack of throwing them away. He doesn’t milk the paradoxes; instead, with a deadpan delivery, he talks of Marlene being ‘relegated’ back to being a movie star after the war ends. It is one word in a split second, in which Groom summarises Dietrich’s spirit. She always referred to the ‘movie star’ as a different person, separate from the one noted for her humanitarian efforts during the war. What this show reveals is the personal cost of her decisions; the agonising choice of allying herself to the US – bombing the city in which her mother is still living. But if she doesn’t do this, Hitler might win. She could never go back to Germany – she tried to in the 1960s, but she was booed off stage as a traitor; bombs were put in the theatres.

Groom’s is an assured and understated performance in which he deftly uncovers Dietrich’s often overlooked private life. “Look me over closely, tell me what you see” he sings in his gorgeous, velvet falsetto. Dietrich’s best-known tunes are all here, including a heart-rending “Where Have All The Flowers Gone?”. The only reservation I have is the invisible accompaniment: I did wish, at times, for an onstage pianist. But when Groom tail ends the show with “Falling In Love Again” all is forgiven, and you do fall in love again; with the artist, the show. And with Dietrich.

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Veronika Marx

 


Dietrich – Natural Duty

Wilton’s Music Hall until 24th November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Songs For Nobodies | ★★★★ | March 2018
A Midsummer Night’s Dream | ★★★½ | June 2018
Sancho – An act of Remembrance | ★★★★★ | June 2018
Twelfth Night | ★★★ | September 2018

 

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DIETRICH: NATURAL DUTY

★★★★★

VAULT Festival 2018

Duty

Dietrich: Natural Duty

The Vaults

Reviewed – 25th January 2018

★★★★★

“Groom is a sensational storyteller, able to create vivid images of the world in which Dietrich inhabited, with nothing more than a microphone, a packet of cigarettes and a small table and chair”

 

In the depths of the deep, dark tunnels underneath Waterloo Station lies a microcosm of art, innovation and creative vitality. The Vaults has opened its doors for its annual arts festival, which boasts as being London’s largest. The sheer multitude of theatre shows, performance art, film and comedy going on within the next eight weeks makes it the capital’s own little slice of the Edinburgh Fringe. Dietrich: Natural Duty is a play mixed with a cabaret show that is not to be missed. Through song, vivid storytelling and drag, the life of the Hollywood legend, Marlene Dietrich is brought to life in this mesmerising and intimate one (wo)man show.

Right from the onset when theatre maker Peter Groom comes sashaying down the aisle poised and statuesque in full Dietrich-garb, he has the whole audience captivated. Big-eyed and pouty in a single spotlight, he croons his way through honky-tonk tunes of yesteryear. The voice of a British journalist suddenly pierces the atmosphere, startling Dietrich out of her performance. He asks a question about Marlene’s past that takes her reeling back to how everything began. We are taken on a journey through Dietrich’s early life in her hometown of Berlin, to being discovered by Hollywood, to the turbulent moment during World War II where she had to choose between Germany and the country she had now come to call home. Deciding to denounce her German citizenship and go on the road with the American troops, Dietrich makes it her duty to fight against her homeland and free her people from the grips of Hitler’s dictatorship. Trying to survive the deadly front by day whilst glamorously entertaining the Yankee boys by night, we watch the toll it takes on her during and after the conflict had ended, having to transition back into the role of the ultimate movie star of the Golden Age of Hollywood.

Peter Groom is a sensational storyteller, able to create vivid images of the world in which Dietrich inhabited, with nothing more than a microphone, a packet of cigarettes and a small table and chair. Songs are cleverly selected and placed within the show at relevant moments that helps to move the story along, performing not as a interlude but as integral, pivotal emotional shifts within Dietrich’s life. Groom gives a particularly moving rendition of the political song Where Have All The Flowers Gone? symbolising the actress’ anger with the war and the amount of pain it had caused. Dietrich: Natural Duty is a timely production, highlighting how we are living in tumultuous political times, where history could be repeating itself. However, as thought provoking as the themes this production draws up are, it is all done with a touch a class, comic coolness, and candour – all with the help of a bejewelled gown, smouldering looks, hip bumps and a fabulous wig of course.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

 


Dietrich: Natural Duty

Vaults Theatre until 28th January

 

 

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