Saturday, April 21, 2012

Posted by ABC News


Susan Boyle musical a hit with fans, critics

Updated March 29, 2012 09:54:52
Fans came from as far away as Australia to see the premiere of a new musical based on the life of reality TV star Susan Boyle, and early reviews suggested the trip was not wasted.
I Dreamed A Dream, named after the song that made Boyle a global celebrity via YouTube in 2009, premiered at Newcastle's Theatre Royal in northern England this week and the reviews have so far been mainly glowing.
"In matching the gutsy good humour of its heroine without stooping to hagiography, this is a delight that deserves to go far, and fast, as she has done," said Dominic Cavendish in a five-star review in the UK's Daily Telegraph.
Patrick Marmion awarded the show three stars out of five in The Daily Mail, writing: "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."
Boyle - who shot to fame after auditioning for TV show Britain's Got Talent - is portrayed in the musical by Scottish actress Elaine Smith, although the 50-year-old makes a brief appearance in a rousing finale.
Smith, best known in Britain for her role in television sitcom Rab C Nesbitt, said the musical should help audiences understand Boyle's sometimes difficult life - both before she found fame and fortune and after.
"If we were going to do a stage show it was going to be theatrical and magical and tell the fairy story, but tell the darkness of it as well," Smith said.
"You had to be tall, thin, blonde, gorgeous, and talent didn't matter any more, and I think for all of us, myself included, when you see Susan it was about judging a book by its cover.
"And it made us all sit back and say 'Oh wait a minute, talent matters'."
Producer Michael Harrison praised Boyle for handling the pressure of the media and public spotlight since her appearance on Britain's Got Talent.
Boyle's audition rendition of I Dreamed A Dream from Les Miserables has been watched hundreds of millions of times on the internet and she has gone on to sell tens of millions of records under the watchful eye of music impresario Simon Cowell.
The meteoric rise to fame of the former Scottish church worker, whose age and appearance turned her into what some commentators described as a media "freak show", took its toll early on when she was admitted to a clinic after a breakdown.
"I think the way she's dealt with it all is remarkable," Harrison said.
"Because you suddenly go from being on your own in a working class village in Scotland to global superstardom and I think that affects anybody and I think she continues to handle it brilliantly."
Fans came from far and wide to attend the premiere.
"I decided back in June to attend the Susan Boyle musical ... even though at that stage Susan hadn't been announced as appearing in the show," said Cathy Garroway, who travelled from Sydney.
Jeannie Odom, from California, said Boyle had proved her doubters wrong.
"Susan is everybody, she's your sister, she's your neighbour, she's the person you sit next to in church and sing with," she said.
"For her to have the courage to get up on Britain's Got Talent and walk out and take a chance of being accepted and heard, everyone was snickering at her. And once she opened her mouth and began to sing, no-one was snickering."
Boyle, who pulled out of planned media interviews before the musical's premiere, is expected to appear and perform at most of the shows.
It plays in Newcastle until March 31 before going on a tour of Britain and Ireland.

Interview done in March.
Express.co.uk
SUSAN BOYLE STORY IS TAKEN TO THE STAGE


Story Image
Wednesday March 28,2012

By Neil Norman









THERE are only two acts who can legitimately claim the internet was midwife to their careers. The first is The Arctic Monkeys. The second is Susan Boyle.
We may have to wait a while for a musical based on the former but the SuBo extravaganza is with us now. And it is going to be around for some time to come.
Having witnessed Elaine C Smith play out the highs and lows of Boyle’s life so far, it was a moment of sheer theatrical magic when the curtain rose at the end to reveal the real Susan Boyle delivering the title song and Who I Was Born To Be.


Susan Boyle's rise to fame has been celebrated in a musical

Co-written by Smith and Alan McHugh, this is a long way from the lazy jukebox musicals littering London’s West End.  While it is played straight down the chronological line, from birth to the present, necessitating a few dull passages of narrative exposition, it is peppered with inventive scenes and designed with the skill of a Pink Floyd concert.

Banks of TV screens flicker and buzz on the huge back wall of the recently restored Theatre Royal, with faces of the participants occasionally featured as they appear on stage.

More...
 Susan Boyle to star in the Jubilee pageant
 Susan Boyle's cameo role wows fans
 I've conquered my demons says Susan Boyle
The scenes shift effortlessly from one to another at the click of Smith’s fingers, as if Boyle were her own Fairy Godmother.
Whenever the soft pillow of sentimentality threatens to suffocate us, Smith and McHugh deliver a sharp kick in the ribs – like the ferocious school bullying scene or hysterical Happy Valley karaoke bar where deluded impersonators strut their woeful stuff. “Don’t give up the day job,” sneers the club owner (Andy Gray) to the Elvis impersonator.

“I hav’nae got a day job,” Elvis retorts. And the line-up of freaks and weirdoes for the Glasgow auditions of Britain’s Got Talent is an entire show in itself.

The script is terrific, with proper acknowledgement of the envy Boyle’s success sparked in others, the toll it took on her health both mental and physical and her initial treatment by the savage apostates of the press. Smith is astonishingly good as Boyle, not impersonating her so much as capturing her essence, and she is supported by an amazingly versatile cast, among whom James Paterson stands out as Boyle’s father.

A hugely uplifting evening.

I Dreamed A Dream: The Susan Boyle Musical, Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne, March 23-31, then touring until June 23, Box Office 08448 11 21 21

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