SuBo the musical treats the BGT star with TLC
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Does the world really need a Susan Boyle musical such as this one, that opened last night in Newcastle before heading off on a national tour? Surely her life has been plundered enough already?
A runner-up in Britain’s Got Talent in 2009, Boyle always struck me as a simple woman caught up in a tawdry media frenzy.
Already exploited and hounded to near nervous breakdown by fame vultures, doesn’t she deserve a rest, for heaven’s sake?
Double take: Co-writer and star Elaine C Smith is joined on stage by the real Susan Boyle for the new show about her life, called I Dreamed A Dream
Thank God, then, that this is an affectionate look at her life. The portrait of the 50-year-old from Blackburn, West Lothian, starts with a Dickensian image of a poor but happy family of Catholics, in which young Susan is inspired by a father whose singing ‘could stop a room’.
Early highs included a playground crush thwarted by Dad and a sortie on stage at the Happy Valley Karaoke Club – a last-chance saloon for would-be Elvis impersonators.
Otherwise, Boyle’s life was pretty uneventful. Until, that is, she decided to beat the depression that followed the loss of her parents and eldest sister by singing I Dreamed A Dream from Les Miserables on BGT. The rest is YouTube legend.
Cast: Ms Boyle stands between fellow actors in the production
This account of her life is in many ways a cocktail of schmaltz and hyperbole.
Schmaltz is delivered in the form of the tunes she grew up with – including Janis Ian’s torch song At Seventeen.
The singer performed on stage at the end of the opening night of the new stage production of her life
Hyperbole comes in the way that Boyle is once more set on a big, chintzy pedestal. But Elaine C Smith from Scotland’s caustic TV show Rab C Nesbitt brings a thick Glaswegian edge to proceedings – and hearty gags to match.
Smith does a fair bit of singing, too, and acquits herself well enough to make you wonder if she’s miming.
But then comes the bonus ball, and raison d’etre of the evening: a personal appearance by Boyle herself, brought on stage to give us her trademark wiggle, goofy thumbs-up and a couple of favourite songs. And that is when you remember that she really does have something special: a rich, sonorous voice with an affecting emotional quiver.
Ed Curtis’s production, performed before a bank of TV screens, is more than just a get-rich-quick scheme or a piece of craven hagiography.
It’s also a jolly good knees-up. Between moments of throat-clearing reverentiality and tear-stained crooning, there is much fun to be had.
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