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Showing posts from September, 2019

Review of 9 to 5 at Milton Keynes Theatre, Milton Keynes

9 to 5 - The Musical is a 2008 show based on the original 1980 film starring Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and music legend Dolly Parton, who with this musical writes the music and lyrics expanding its content extremely successfully beyond the main song 9 to 5 itself. However, the question, is this worth your time in 2019? Simple answer, yes. This two-hour feast of colour, tunes and broad characters provides a ridiculously camp and surreal night of entertainment. The story such as it is (deliberately corny book by Patricia Resnick), revolves around three bold females dealing with the inequality in the workplace, while their lecherous boss seeks a crude conquest of one one of them "girls". It is a fascinating study in fact if you think deeply about how things have taken a long time to change, and not as one character refers, resolved in ten years. However, deep thinking isn't really the point of 9 To 5 , even if it attempts to have a message at its core. In the leads

Review of Buddy - The Buddy Holly Story at Royal & Derngate (Derngate), Northampton

When you finish watching the two hours of Buddy - The Buddy Holly Story , the briefness of it, and the fact that you have heard nearly everything that the great Buddy himself was able to give to the world enforces the sadness more. If it hasn't by the time of final spotlight, you will probably by then, have a tear in the eye, if any of Buddy Holly's music ever meant anything to you. Eighteen months is all that the world had of Buddy, and this show does make you feel how brief that period is. Buddy along with his The Crickets, went from nobodies at a backwater radio show in 1957 and onto total world recognition before his death in 1959. During that time a collection of perhaps unchallenged music showing this period of music was created. As Elvis was gyrating his hips, Buddy performed, in heaven forbid, his glasses. Thick rimmed ones at that. He wanted to be different, he challenged things, and yes, he would have created brilliant, innovative music for years, without any doubt.

Review of Two Trains Running at Royal & Derngate (Royal), Northampton

For regular theatre-goers, we always expect a little checklist of things that might occur during a show, and August Wilson's Two Trains Running , in this new co-production version between Royal & Derngate and English Touring Theatre, in particular, does two of them. The first, to challenge the audience, and looking around during the show at the predominantly white audience being told for the best part of three hours how awful the white man has been in the past, they were rightly challenged. A second checklist item would be, to cause debate, and as I wandered around post-show, as people were enjoying their drinks, I dipped in and out of several debates that, with this weaving themed play, were not by some distance tied just to one theme. So, in this, Two Trains Running ticks two boxes conclusively, but what of the rest? Two Trains Running is set in Memphis Lee's Cafe, a place of refuge for the likes of the rebel-rousing, Black Power radical and sure of himself Sterli

Review of The Entertainer at Milton Keynes Theatre, Milton Keynes

For those attending this remodelled version of The Entertainer who is familiar with the work of John Osborne, will probably notice the unfamiliar the most. Much of this play is set apart from the original, both timezone and main character are tweaked, this is the eighties now, and the tone of the comedy has drifted away from what would have been acceptable in the fifties. Indeed the whole feel of the piece seems wrong, so, could it possibly still work? Archie Rice is an on the slide comedy performer, "entertaining" the miserable hoards at the local theatre with his increasingly out of touch comedy. Times are a changing and Rice is not changing with them, unlike father and fellow, but retired, performer, Billy Rice, who saw the end coming, so sits at home shouting out racial slurs to his new neighbours instead. Into this comes Archie's daughter Jean, bringing emotion to the household, and Archie's wife Phoebe, who brings the sparks of friction. It's set for fun