Elaine C. Smith and Susan Boy
Vivienne Kennedy reviews Susan Boyle musical I Dreamed A Dream at Bristol Hippodrome, playing until Saturday 05 May
Last night (Tuesday 01 May) I visited the Bristol Hippodrome to watch I Dreamed A Dream, a musical based on the life of Susan Boyle, runner up of Britain’s Got Talent in 2009.
The show’s co-writer, Elaine C Smith, also takes the starring role, playing Susan Boyle as she is today to narrate a look back at the star’s life so far. A story described as a magical fairytale.
Act One covers Susan’s life from her birth, on 01 April 1961, when the doctor who delivers her, played by Elaine’s writing fellow co-writer Alan McHugh, tells her new parents not to expect too much of their new baby daughter, through to the death of her mother shortly before Susan’s first audition for Britain’s Got Talent.
The audience see moments from Susan’s school days, from the joy of being accepted for the choir to the pain and humiliation of being bullied, something we are told she wishes we hadn’t seen. We see her enjoy family parties and we see her dance with her first, and only, boyfriend, John. We see her first public performance as a singer, at a local karaoke evening; and we see heartache, when her father forbids her to see John anymore and then at the deaths of first her father, then her elder sister and finally, at the end of the Act, her mother.
Act Two tells Susan’s story from the moment she first saw a television advert for Britain’s Got Talent until her first live performance after recording her first album, in front of a thousand people at the Rockefeller Centre in New York.
Elaine C Smith was fabulous throughout the show, it is obvious that she has observed Susan very carefully and she captures the singer’s personality and mannerisms perfectly; my colleagues and I all agreed that at times we forgot that we weren’t actually watching Susan Boyle.
Elaine is supported by an excellent cast; I particularly enjoyed the performance of Karen Mann as Mrs Boyle, she has a wonderful singing voice and her characterisation of Susan’s mother was impressive, she seemed to age in front of our eyes in the moments after the death of her husband.
One of the busiest cast members is Andy Gray who takes on four roles altogether, as a bullying reporter taunting Susan after her first two television appearances he has created one of the most hateful characters I have ever seen on stage; I am sure I wasn’t the only person in the audience who wanted to yell at him to “just leave her alone.”
My favourite moments included Stuck in the Middle with You, a song and dance routine performed by the Britain’s Got Talent audition hopefuls, including a big-footed clown and a blue bewigged dancing trio, and a medley of three songs – How Great Thou Art, The Prayer and Scarlet Ribbons – sung by Susan and her parents towards the end of Act One. Elaine’s versions of Susan’s most popular songs I Dreamed A Dream and Wild Horses drew wild applause from the audience, who started to clap as soon as she sang the first notes of the former song.
Visually the show is very impressive with a clever set comprising a multitude of TV screens designed by Morgan Large and lighting by Ben Cracknell. Choreographer and movement director Nick Winston also deserves a mention, every single movement on stage has been well thought out and cast members move props and furniture on and off the stage as if their steps are part of an elaborate dance routine. I always appreciate live music at any show and I Dreamed A Dream’s musicians, led by Musical Director Kennedy Aitchison, did a fantastic job last night.
I was lucky enough to interview Elaine C Smith for Guide2Bristol a couple of weeks agoand one comment she made stuck in my mind –“I said to her (Susan) that I would feel I’d done my job if the audience were on their feet before she came on.” – I was thrilled for her when the Bristol Hippodrome audience rose to their feet as she took her final bow.
Elaine’s final bow wasn’t quite the end of the show, the audience were soon back on their feet when the announcer uttered the magic words “Ladies and Gentlemen, Miss Susan Boyle” and the stage was once again lit up to reveal the singer herself stood in the spotlight; she treated us to two songs – I Dreamed A Dream and Who I Was Born To Be – and we got to witness her trademark wiggle too. She has a beautiful voice.
Susan Boyle’s story is uplifting, it gives us all hope that our dreams can come true, whatever obstacles we face upon the way. The show has sad moments but it also has a great deal of comedy, some fantastic musical numbers and I am pretty sure that the entire audience was smiling as they left the theatre. It was great that Susan Boyle did appear on stage last night, but if she hadn’t I still would have left the theatre feeling that I’d seen an excellent show.
I Dreamed A Dream runs at the Bristol Hippodrome until Saturday 05 May with performances at 7.30PM each evening and matinees at 2.30PM today (Wednesday 02 May) and on Saturday. Tickets are priced from £15 to £39.
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