I Dreamed A Dream - The Susan Boyle Musical. Alhambra Bradford -Thursday 12 April 2012
Published by: GRAHAM CLARK on 15th Apr 2012 | View all blogs by GRAHAM CLARK
If you thought a musical about Susan Boyle’s rise to fame would be a damp squid then think again. This musical is a story of her meteoric rise to fame from humble beginnings in Blackburn, Lothian to global icon. At times funny and also sad, this is a glossy interpretation of her life and personality but it still, somehow rings true.
Elaine C Smith best known as Mary Doll - the long suffering wife in the BBC2 comedy Rab C Nesbitt plays the part of Susan perfectly and she has her voice and mannerisms that make you think you are watching the real Susan Boyle.
The musical begins in April 1961 when Susan is born. The adult version of Susan is always present narrating the story line. We learn how there were 10 family members living in the family home. Her strong bond with her mother and father is forged and is one that will last until they pass away later in the play. The story traces how Susan was bullied at school to having her first boyfriend; “other people have boyfriends, not me” she recalls. Her father’s dominance over her life comes to fruition even further when he stops her seeing her boyfriend telling her that “you are not ready to have a boyfriend yet.”
The songs performed provide a soundtrack to her life so whilst the part of the show that is set in the early 1970’s we get to hear Dawn’s Number 1 hit, Knock Three Times and Christie’s hit Yellow River.
After the upset of loosing her first boyfriend she channels all her energy into her singing and enters a local talent contest, winning £1,000 with the first prize but events take a turn for the worse when her father dies and she dedicates all her time to looking after her mother.
The second half of the show commences with her mother passing away and shows Susan in a depressive state with her not bothering to get dressed and sat around all day in her dressing gown watching daytime TV and eating packets of biscuits. Whilst watching TV one day she sees the advert for the auditions for Britain’s Got Talent and goes to the regional auditions in Glasgow. Things will never be the same again.
We see her passing and going through to the next round and how her first audition became a You Tube phenomenon and all the media attention it brought with the press hounding her and knocking on her front door. The knocking is a noise that keeps cropping up loudly in the play – as if the outside world is trying to penetrate her inner world.
After coming second in the grand final she thinks it is all over but with the help of a new manager who gives her the confidence to move on we see her triumph and become the global star she is today.
The songs performed in the second half work well with Tears for Fears’ Mad World being sung when the press start to hound her through to the Crowded House track, Don’t Dream Its Over being sung when Susan comes second in the grand final.
Everyone likes a story where the underdog wins and this is a show that delivers mainstream entertainment without patronising the audience. At certain performances of the show the real Susan Boyle appears at the end of the show performing a couple of songs, sadly she was not appearing at this performance but it did not matter as Elaine C Smith had done a tremendous job playing Susan.
The whole show is an unexpected surprise.
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