Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Posted in Bristol Culture


I Dreamed a Dream, Bristol Hippodrome

2052012
At most gigs, there will be people who leave as the band leave the stage for what seems like it will be the last time, yet to realise the etiquette of the encore. The same almost happened in the Bristol Hippodrome yesterday evening at the conclusion of the opening night of I Dreamed a Dream. Elaine C Smith and the rest of the cast take their bows, the curtain falls, the lights come on.
But these are not ordinary lights but spot lights, and coats are hurriedly put back on as the curtain rises. In place of Smith playing Susan Boyle is Susan Boyle herself, who unsurprisingly launches straight into her version of I Dreamed a Dream from her first audition on Britain’s Got Talent back in the mists of 2009, which here on YouTube has been viewed more than 90 million times.
It is such a well-known conceit that we applaud just at the right time when Smith performs it in her audition playing Boyle, and then later at exactly the same time when Boyle performs to rapturous applause.
Boyle’s life could have been written to be a novel, so it is no surprise to see her story being adapted for the stage.
The only surprise is perhaps the speed with which an unknown spinster from Blackburn in West Lothian has become such a public commodity that theatres could be full of her fans willing to see what is in actual fact a remarkably uninteresting life story before those five minutes on ITV in 2009 changed her life forever.
Smith, also credited as co-writer with Rab C Nesbit scribe Alan McHugh, plays Boyle through childhood to adulthood alongside a versatile cast who switch between roles as schoolyard bullies, persistent journalists, and friends and family.
The set reminded me of that for Nero at the Bristol Academy, a bank of television screens. And that was basically it. For the audition, Cowell and cohorts were on the screens, while for a dance in a village hall bunting was projected. Simple but effective.
Like Boyle herself, the musical of her life contains no razzmatazz, but is a story of the dreams of a very ordinary person becoming an astonishing reality, something which we can all dream.
I Dreamed a Dream, the Susan Boyle musical, is at the Bristol Hippodrome until May 5.

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