Living the Dream
The Susan Boyle Musical – I Dreamed a Dream
Cliffs Pavilion, Southend
Running until: Saturday 12 May
Box Office: 01702 351135
Web: southendtheatres.org.uk
Theatre Review by: Michelle Norris
Looking at the audience at the Cliffs Pavilion as Susan Boyle sings her iconic number I Dreamed a Dream is something I’ll never forget. Some hold their hands to their faces, while others blink away tears and although I try to fight my own urge to cry, I can’t help but succumb to her powerful and emotional performance closing The Susan Boyle Musical in Southend.
We’ve all heard of Susan – her rise to fame onBritain’s Got Talent and her struggle to cope with the attention from the media. However, the musical takes us back to a time before Susan was famous, telling her ‘fairy story’ – warts and all.
Opening to a quiet chorus of ‘I Dreamed a Dream’, Elaine C Smith enters the stage, introducing herself as Susan, but not the Susan we know. Instead she represents Susan’s inner narrative – the thoughts she tries to convey but just doesn’t know how.
From her difficult birth, leaving her with learning difficulties and her days being bullied at school to the moment she first picks up a microphone to sing at a karaoke bar, Susan’s life journey is played out with a number of musical numbers. And although the first half did seem to drag slightly for me, it’s only after her audition for Britain’s Got Talent that the audience really got to understand her pain.
Shown on stage with the use of the hurtful headlines and personified in the shape of reporter Gavin Jackson, the vile voice of the press slowly tears her down. But it’s Susan’s nativity, helplessness and plain innocence that hit home – this is not a pity party, but more of a chance to understand her confusion and inability to cope with being thrust into the tabloid spotlight.
Yet, when the cast take their bows, I couldn’t help but feel a little subdued. As Elaine said herself, stories usually have a beginning, a middle and an end and Susan’s is still going. However, for a production like this it felt as though there was a need for a conclusion…and that came in the form of Susan Boyle herself.
Taking centre stage, the reality and power of the story was suddenly right infront of us. Dressed in a sparkling black dress, black tights and matching black shoes, Susan confidently sang a note perfect rendition of the song that propelled her to stardom I Dreamed a Dream. Then with her trademark wiggle and a bit of banter with the audience, she treated us all to the beautiful I Was Born to Be.
Overcome with emotion, it was a true privilege to hear her sing. And as she took a bow with Elaine C Smith, there was only one word that came to mind as the whole theatre took to their feet for a standing ovation: The evening was truly ‘magical’. And if fairy stories like Susan's are real, we can all take a moment to make our own dreams come true.
Picture Credits: Keith Pattinson
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