Writing down what I think about theatre I've seen in That London, whether I've been asked to or not.
Showing posts with label Oscar Hammerstein II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oscar Hammerstein II. Show all posts
Tuesday, 10 May 2022
Theatre review: Oklahoma!
Regular readers of this blog will both know I traditionally have certain reservations about musical theatre pioneers Richard Rodgers & Oscar Hammerstein II - namely that if it weren't for the famous and beloved tunes, their work would fall somewhere between "horribly dated" and "nightmarishly distressing" and not get staged anymore. One of their shows I hadn't seen before - I don't think I've even seen the film - is their original, genre-defining hit Oklahoma! But Daniel Fish and Jordan Fein's production, which transfers to the Young Vic from New York, promised to come with a radical, twenty-first century reimagining of the musical Western about farmers trying to squeeze a bit of singing and dancing in between the relentless dry-humping. Because Fish and Fein's approach to the show is to dispense with any euphemisms and cuteness, and strip it down to a story about people who just want to have sex with each other (whether or not the other party is entirely consenting, because Hammerstein.)
Sunday, 25 July 2021
Radio review: Rodgers and Hart and Hammerstein
A rainy Sunday afternoon after a fairly quiet week of live theatre is as good a time as any to dip back into the Drama on 3 archive of radio plays on BBC Sounds, and an original play written by Sarah Wooley and directed by Abigail le Fleming. Rodgers and Hart and Hammerstein is, as the title gives away, a story all about theatre and particularly the formative years of Broadway musicals, but you'd be right if you suspected that one of the main draws for me was wondering if we'd get to hear Oscar Hammerstein II explain just what attracted him so much to stories whose lead characters have killed a man, honestly it's no big deal why does everyone keep going on about it, who hasn't killed a few people, if anything it's a positive and you should definitely marry off your daughter to him. Sadly this particular bit of psychological insight isn't one we get in what is for the most part a highly sympathetic look at three men who between them largely defined what the Broadway musical was.
Tuesday, 16 August 2016
Theatre review: Allegro
Much as I have issues with Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II - mainly to do
with the varied and jaw-dropping ways they find to be offensive, and the fact that
"Some Enchanted Evening" on a loop for three hours doesn't constitute a musical -
there's no denying the position they occupy in American musical theatre -
essentially regarded as its creators - and the love for them worldwide. So the fact
that one of their shows has never actually been staged in the UK before has to make
you wonder why, while still being fascinated to find out what it's actually like.
Their third collaboration after big hits Oklahoma and Carousel,
Allegro tanked on Broadway in 1947 but Southwark Playhouse's perennial
re-interpreter of classic musicals, Thom Southerland, and his choreographer Lee
Proud throw everything at this attempt to make sense of the story of Joseph Taylor
Jr (Gary Tushaw,) a talented small-town doctor who's disillusioned when he takes a
high-paying job in a big city.
Wednesday, 27 April 2016
Theatre review: Show Boat
Before Rodgers and Hammerstein were a thing there was Kern and Hammerstein, Oscar
Hammerstein II writing book and lyrics for a number of shows with music by Jerome
Kern, although of these only Show Boat is particularly remembered and revived
- and indeed credited with creating the 20th century American musical. Daniel Evans'
production from Sheffield has been quite rightly praised as it moves to London,
although however stellar the production and performances are they can only go so far
in papering over the many problematic elements. Starting in the 1880s and spanning
approximately 40 years, Show Boat follows Magnolia "Nola" Hawks (Gina Beck)
from her time as a teenager on the steamboat run by her father Cap'n Andy (Malcolm
Sinclair,) which goes up and down the Mississippi every summer, stopping off at
small towns and playing from their repertoire of melodrama. Nola's mother Parthy
(Lucy Briers) would never hear of her daughter taking to the stage herself, but when
their leading lady is chased out of town for being secretly mixed-race, she gets her
chance.
Thursday, 30 August 2012
Theatre review: Carousel
I'm going to take a wild stab in the dark and say Rodgers & Hammerstein weren't feminists. After a rather unfortunate experience with South Pacific I'm not sure what took me back to the Barbican a year later for more of their back catalogue, this time Carousel in a production by Opera North. This is one of Rodgers & Hammerstein's more regularly revived musicals, and the production has had some glowing reviews, but it won't be getting one from me. Julie Jordan (Gillene Herbert or Katherine Manley - multiple performers are listed on the website and the Barbican had no notice board up to say who was performing tonight) is a female lead (I'd tell you more about her character if she had one) who falls for Billy Bigelow (Eric Greene or Michael Todd Simpson.) He's just been fired from his job at a carnival carousel but they get married regardless, and within weeks he's smacking her about - in what I'm sure is meant as some kind of running joke, Billy keeps complaining that people have got him wrong: "I didn't beat her, I hit her."
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