Thursday, May 24, 2012

Posted in Wales On Line


Review: Susan Boyle musical I Dreamed A Dream – The New Theatre, Cardiff




Susan Boyle at the end of the opening night of I Dreamed a Dream
Susan Boyle at the end of the opening night of I Dreamed a Dream
THE only sound that really struck a chord with me during I Dreamed A Dream – the Susan  Boyle musical, was actually  the vicious banging of a front door.
The noise, which was used to punctuate each chapter of Britain’s Got Talent’s greatest fairytale, symbolised the relentless bullying Boyle has endured since that fateful audition.
Of course, you can’t deny the facts. The Boyle Story is, as the  musical puts it, “one of numbers.” 500 million YouTube  hits, 16 million records sold  and three Guinness World Records. To sell any records at all  to the download generation is arguably an achievement in itself.
Yet even on the opening night of her own musical, Boyle was  being gossiped about. She had failed to make her much anticipated guest appearance without explanation. Yes, Scottish actress Elaine C. Smith was a brilliant Boyle having her work cut out portraying the absent legend, but it appeared it was the superstar herself that her fans had really come to see.
The Boyle story is, after all, hardly a well kept secret. The press sniffed out a fairy tale back in 2009 and travelled to her hometown of Blackburn,  West Lothian to get it. This musical seeks to pad out the story with some much needed  sensitivity by focusing on  Boyle’s childhood.
After being born deprived of oxygen at birth, her parents  were told ‘not to expect too  much’ which means that some  scenes were sprinkled with a  tad too much fairy dust for my liking. The scene in which  Boyle circles the stage with  first love John to A Perfect  Day, surrounded by whirls of  television studio mist, was just one example of the over-romanticising.
The first half was saved by the rowdier scenes, inspired by Boyle’s nine strong family of singers and her forays into Blackburn community life.
That said Boyle’s incredibly close relationship with her  mother, which left Boyle as her carer for many years, simply could not be captured through a handful of ‘70s hits.
It was actually the part of the fairytale that we already knew,  whether we wanted to or not,  that provided a punchier and, ultimately, more poignant second half.
It perfectly captured talent  show failure (Boyle actually  came second to dance troupe Diversity, remember), instant  celebrity, multimedia news and  the brutal bullying of the paparazzi.
The occasional vicious banging heard in the first half,  pervaded the second half, as  the audiences watched Boyle’s  decline into the exhaustion that is still said to dog her career.
Morgan Large’s set design, which comprised a wall of television screens, showed how  multimedia can be used to truly  enhance the theatre experience  by recreating the media frenzy that surrounded Boyle in the lead up to the BGT final.
Chances are if you’re going to  see I Dreamed a Dream then  you, like a million others, are probably a loyal Boyle fan. Even if you’re not, Smith’s  portrayal of Boyle will make you cheer.
3 out of 5
* I Dreamed A Dream runs until  Saturday. Tickets from the box  office on 029 2087 8889 or via  www.newtheatrecardiff.co.uk


Read More http://www.walesonline.co.uk/showbiz-and-lifestyle/showbiz/2012/05/24/review-i-dreamed-a-dream-the-new-theatre-cardiff-91466-31033336/#ixzz1voHgioyd

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