Monday, April 9, 2012

From the Sunday Times - IDAD Article

On the forum today

Title:Also showing
Author(s):
Source:Sunday Times (London, England). (Apr. 8, 2012): News: p18.
Document Type:Article
Full Text: Sunday Times
Full Text: 
Byline: Jane Edwardes, Maxie Szalwinska and Lisa Verrico

I Dreamed a Dream Theatre Royal, Newcastle ****

The only moment of suspense came after the curtain call, when an audience heavy on white hair wondered aloud whether the real Susan Boyle would step on stage and sing. She did, as she hopes to at every performance of this musical based on her life, blowing kisses and belting out two of her hits, in a sparkly dress, to a standing ovation.

That there was no suspense in the previous two hours was scarcely a surprise. The Susan Boyle story is a modern fame fable, and a script based on the singer's bestselling autobiography (cowritten by Elaine C Smith, who plays Boyle brilliantly) reveals nothing new. Yet this feelgood musical is frequently laugh-out-loud funny, steeped in Boyle's self-deprecation and excellently acted by a compact, versatile cast -- playing parts running from the classmates who bullied the dowdy "dafty bird" to hapless fellow contestants on Britain's Got Talent.

A simple set suits the gutsy, glitz-free production. A bank of bulky old televisions serve as both a backdrop and a constant, looming reminder of how the misfit Boyle broke out of Blackburn, in Scotland. The same stairs work in every scene. The costumes could have been bought at Bhs.

There is a lovely symmetry to the script. The heartfelt first half deals with Boyle's dark pre-fame days, albeit dancing around her depression with jokes about eating biscuits; the second looks at her overnight celebrity, including a fabulous, fantastical set piece at the television auditions, when the contestants become a dancing band singing Stuck in the Middle with You. Yet both describe a woman desperate to fit in, whose lack of ordinariness has made her extraordinary.

The songs -- about two dozen of them, few sung in full -- never sound shoehorned in, whether well-known Boyle covers (Perfect Day, Wild Horses) or not (At Seventeen, Paper Roses). Smith doesn't sing like Boyle, but boy, does she look like her. When the pair hug and high-five at the show's close, it's like seeing double.

That Boyle appears every night sums up the anti-star quality that her fans love her for, and that this new show captures from start to finish. LV

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