Friday, March 16, 2012

Article from the ChronicleLive.co.uk

Interview: Elaine C Smith on playing Susan Boyle - VIDEO


Elaine C Smith and Susan Boyle
Elaine C Smith and Susan Boyle

I Dreamed A Dream gets its world premiere in Newcastle next week. Entertainment Editor GORDON BARR meets Elaine C Smith, who takes on the role of Susan Boyle
IT’S no mean feat tackling the role of a person not just still alive but who remains very current on a global scale too. That’s just the task Elaine C Smith decided to take on to play the lead in the Susan Boyle musical I Dreamed A Dream.
She was Susan’s first choice, despite them never having met before, and now they are the best of pals.
I caught up with the pair recently during early rehearsals for the show, which gets its world premiere at Newcastle’s Theatre Royal on March 23.
There is a definite chemistry between Susan and Elaine and it’s easy to see why the former Rab C Nesbitt actress – she played Mary Doll – was Susan’s first choice.


Plus having seen some of the rehearsals, it’s a role Elaine seems made for.
“When they asked Susan who she would like, she said there’s a Scottish actress – and I didn’t know that Susan would even know who I was – and it was me, so it was Susan’s idea,” recalls Elaine.
Forget a movie, though, this is a musical, in the flesh, with Susan appearing at the end of some performances.
It has been put together by Wallsend-born Michael Harrison – the man behind the popular Theatre Royal pantomimes and responsible for the revival of Chess two years ago – and Elaine herself.
“I have worked with Michael for many years, and he had seen a bit in the press and I said I’d never get the movie, they would cast Michelle Pfeiffer, not me,” continues Elaine.
“We laughed and I said once the movie’s out, we should do the musical. He laughed, put the phone down, and 10 minutes later phoned me back and went ‘we should do it now’.
“I said ‘don’t be ridiculous, we’d never get the rights – Simon Cowell, Sony, Susan’s a megastar. Michael then pursued it.
“We went to Susan’s house one day for tea, we had a laugh and that’s how it all started. Michael directed me in pantos in Glasgow and we had co-produced things together. He’s a fabulous man.”
I Dreamed A Dream charts the life story of Susan Boyle, who captured the hearts of the nation and the world on Britain’s Got Talent three years ago.
The unassuming woman from Blackburn in Scotland is now one of the world’s biggest-selling acts and the run of I Dreamed A Dream in Newcastle, from March 23 to 31, will see more than 100 fans jet in from all over the globe to catch it.
“For me it’s a magical story. It’s a fairy story in the best sense of the word,” Elaine tells me. “It’s a contemporary Cinderella, if you like. It’s not about the prince carrying you off. It is about realising your own potential.
“To all those young girls out there who think the only route in life is to get married and have kids, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but that if you don’t look a certain way, if you don’t sound a certain way, if you don’t live a certain way, all that stuff.
“I do a lot of that in my stand-up – if you’re not tall, thin, blonde and gorgeous and 16, then forget it. Our society seems to be a bit obsessed with that.
“For me, Susan’s story, and Susan emerging when she did, was all about us looking and going ‘we’re more than this, we’re more than the surface’.
“Susan, when she sung, touched everybody’s hearts that way. That, for me, is where the magic of the story is.
“Anybody could go out and do a Susan Boyle night if they wanted, and do a sing-a-long-a-Susan, but this is actually a theatrical representation of her life and it’s interesting.
“For me, what was fascinating was Susan’s life before Britain’s Got Talent and when we get to Britain’s Got Talent we then feel we’re rooting for the girl that was there, as opposed to when you walked out on the stage, they weren’t rooting for her.”
Chatting to Elaine and Susan it is easy to see the latter is at ease with her life story unfolding in shape of the former.
But Elaine admits: “I did say at the beginning this is going to be hard – if we were doing a musical about your life and suddenly you see your mum and dad portrayed on the stage, suddenly you see bits of your family, bits of your past, painful bits. What must that be like?
“Susan’s a fantastic advocate. I loved the fact that she stood up and talked about bullying and the affect that it had had on her.
“It seemed we couldn’t do a musical and not touch on a bit of that.
“Susan kept saying ‘dramatic licence’. We’ve got such similar backgrounds. I realised the other day when I was looking at the living room scene – this is our living room as well. That’s what the common thing is as well, that we want to reach out to the audience to say Susan’s experiences were lots of our experiences.
“This is an ongoing story. Susan’s story is very much at the beginning. Susan touches people because she doesn’t try to. We all smell a phoney from a mile off.
“As writers we had to think, where shall we take it? We’ll take it to the point where she goes to America and that wonderful scene where it’s at the Rockefeller Center and she sings when her album has gone to number one.
“We know the rest of the story to a certain extent up to now and so that seemed a great point to leave the story.


Read More http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/entertainment-in-newcastle/theatre/2012/03/16/interview-elaine-c-smith-on-playing-susan-boyle-72703-30553438/#ixzz1pJVbyNoi

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.