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Susan Elkin reviews: Billy the Kid

Show: Billy the Kid

Society: National Youth Music Theatre (NYMT)

Venue: The MCT at Alleyn’s, Alleyn’s School, Townley Road, East Dulwich SE22 8SU

Credits: Music by Ben Morales Frost. Book & Lyrics by Richard Hough

Type: Sardines

Performence Date: 26/08/2021

Billy the Kid

Susan Elkin | 27 Aug 2021 12:40pm

Commissioned by NYMT in 2017, this revival showcases the talents of an enthusiastic, talented young company and, as ever, it’s the imaginative direction (lots of slow motion with chairs, for instance) which really lifts it.

Richard Hough’s feel-good, happy ending story is a long way from the historical facts about Henry McCarty – aka Billy the Kid – an outlaw who shot and killed eight men before being shot at age 21. Instead we meet a very young Billy (Charlie Wright) who, in a neat framing device is trying to find the courage to face down an aggressive group of bullies in his 21st century school.

Daydreaming as an escape, while the teacher recounts the events of the 1860s, Billy becomes a forceful, but ultimately moral, hero in his own story as we flash back colourfully to the saloon bar and the sauve-qui-peut of the days when the whole town was under a protection racket. With a hint of the Wizard of Oz the bullies and the nineteenth century gang are all played by the same actors. Other school characters reappear in different guises in his dream – a group of five leggy, sporty, all-American cheerleader types become a very good troupe of saloon bar dancers, for example.

And behind all this is Ben Morales Frost’s enjoyable score with all the off beat sequences and lyricism which evoke the world of late nineteenth century cowboy country. The inevitable hoe down scene is a delight. It isn’t quite Aaron Copland but it’s great fun.

Charlie Wright – only 14 and physically quite small – steals the show as Billy. He gives us wistfulness spliced with strength and pragmatism finally overcome by wisdom. It’s quite a nuanced performance and his singing is both sensitive and mature.

The support cast is strong and the piece is written to give lots of characters a moment in the spotlight so we hear a number of good soloists amongst whom Sophie Muringu stands out as Mary, the bar co-owner who becomes a moral support in Billy’s life. She sings beautifully and her acting is totally convincing.

We’re in Lincoln County, New Mexico and the atmosphere is spot on with some sultry lighting and wheel-on-and-off sets, the movement of which is integrated into ensemble action. The southern accents are harder for a young cast to nail and some of the vowel sounds are inappropriately distorted but these young people have worked together for only a short time and it really doesn’t matter much.

One of the things I like very much about NYMT  shows is the use of a vibrant youth band  and the habit of bringing them all on stage at curtain call. They play beautifully in this show and Olivia Howdle’s eloquent violin work really stood out for me.

This review was first published by Sardines: https://www.sardinesmagazine.co.uk/review/billy-the-kid/

I first read Fingersmith first in 2002, curious because it had been shortlisted for both Booker and Orange prizes. I remember vividly gasping aloud when I reached one of the best plot twists I have ever read – on pages 173 to 175, about a quarter of the way in to this brick of a novel. A week or two later my husband was reading it. I watched his reaction when he reached the same point. He too, visibly jumped and said “Oh!” aloud.

Well of course, when you re-read it seventeen years later you know the twist is coming but it’s still just as compelling. I found myself reading agitatedly, wanting to pull the characters off the page and shout “No, no – don’t go there! ” It’s intensely powerful story telling.

It’s not easy to summarise the plot without giving too much away  Let’s just say that it’s the story of two young women from very different backgrounds in mid Victorian Britain, who are confronted by a colourful band of beautifully drawn characters some of whom have a bit of moral grit but most don’t.

It’s clearly meant to be a 21st century riposte to 19th century blockbuster novels and other fiction. Hardly a page goes by when Waters doesn’t deliberately remind you of something else: Middlemarch (Mr Casaubon), The Woman in White (lookalikes and madhouse), Oliver Twist (thievery), Jane Eyre (mysterious attics), Mary Barton (illegitimacy)  HMS Pinafore (baby farming) and so on. The result is an intelligent, glorious melange and a magnificent page turner – I sat up until 2.00am to finish the reread even though I already knew how it ended.

And there’s another dimension. Whatever Queen Victoria may have thought about it, Waters, who is gay herself, is very interested in the experience of gay women in the past. She argues that they were always there, obviously, but are hidden from view in most fiction and historical accounts. She explores this in all her novels – bringing such women into the foreground. Fingersmith is no exception. There’s an unlikely, unexpected love story at the heart although that’s not the main plot driver.

The other unforgettable section of this novel are the “madhouse” scenes which are utterly horrifying. You read them hoping desperately that Waters has exaggerated the ghastly, condoned cruelty for dramatic purposes, only to reach her end notes and see the acknowledgement to Marcia Hamilcar’s book Legally Dead: Experiences During Seven Weeks’ Detention in a Private Asylum (London 1910). Then you realise what the reality of a 19th century “madhouse” was and recognise just how humane was Charlotte Bronte’s Mr Rochester who refused to put his wife in one.

Fingersmith was televised – fairly decently for BBC in 2005 – with a cast including David Troughton, Imelda Staunton and Sally Hawkins but of course, as always, the book is incomparably better.

Fingersmith2

Show: This Beautiful Future

Society: West End & Fringe

Venue: Jermyn Street Theatre. 16b Jermyn Street, London SW1Y 6ST

Credits: BY RITA KALNEJAIS. DIRECTED BY CHIROLLES KHALIL.

Type: Sardines

Author: Susan Elkin

Performence Date: 20/08/2021

This Beautiful Future

Susan Elkin | 21 Aug 2021 22:56pm

Photo: Steve Gregson


The story of young love thwarted by circumstances is a well worn path with landmarks such as Orpheus and Eurydice, Tristan and Isolde, Abelard and Heloise and, of course, Romeo and Juliet. This time we’re in Chartres at the end of the Second World War for a two-hander in which a German boy and a French girl are clandestinely enjoying each other’s company. It’s very sweet with a lot of charm and wit but it also packs quite a gutsy punch because of course it can’t end well – although playwright Rita Kalnejais gives us alternatives to ponder.

Otto (Freddie Wise) and Elodie (Katie Eldred) meet in a room in a house abandoned by a Jewish family – an irony because although Elodie knew and respected Mrs Levy, Otto idolises “Mr Hitler” and believes that the future with a “clean” nation of Germans looks wonderful. Another irony is that Germany has already lost the war. The D day landings have happened and the Americans are in Paris but deluded, indoctrinated Otto is convinced that he will be part of the force to march into Britain the next day, During the night that Otto and Elodie spend together, Katy Hurstwick’s sound design provides Lancasters overhead and a lot of menace – all outside the cocoon that the lovers are in – with the egg she has rescued and is incubating in his cap because chicks are a symbol of new life and hope.

Under Chirolles Khalil’s direction Wise and Elded work exceptionally well together. They have mastered the use of awkward, evocative silences for example and there’s a great deal of wordless communication – sometimes funny, often poignant and always effective. Eldred makes Elodie fresh, truthful and yearning – her character’s epilepsy, notwithstanding. It is very clear why Otto is so taken with her despite her being, effectively, on the “wrong” side. Wise (hair dyed blond to make him look more stereotypically German) brings a tragic vulnerability to Otto. He is really only a boy doing what he’s told and believing what those who’ve trained him have told him. Both actors are Drama Centre graduates (Eldred in 2018 and Wise in 2017) and clearly ones to watch.

Jermyn Street Theatre – almost at full capacity on press night – is the smallest producing house in London and it’s good to see it in good form, punching well above its weight again after all the problems of the last 18 months.

This review was first published by Sardines: https://www.sardinesmagazine.co.uk/review/this-beautiful-future/

Henrietta – National Youth Music Theatre

Picture: Konrad Bartelski

Henrietta, presented by National Youth Music Theatre, continues at The MCT at Alleyn’s, London until 21 August 2021.

Star rating: four stars ★ ★ ★ ★ ✩

Commissioned from Alex Parker and Katie Lam by NYMT for last year but, perforce, postponed until now Henrietta is a good piece for a youth organisation.

NYMT works with young people from age 10-23 which means there are children to play the juvenile roles along with competent performers in their early twenties able to play adults in their thirties and beyond with conviction.

It’s Amsterdam in 1944. Some Jews are in hiding, some people are trying to help them while others – we’re in the heart of the community with people who’ve known each other all their lives – agree with occupying Nazi policy or seem to.

And at the centre of all this meaty tale is a sparky child (role shared between Charlie Herlihy and Ellie Jones across different performances) who wants to be a hero and whose origins suddenly turn out to be not quite what she has been brought up to believe …

Read the rest of this review at Musical Theatre Review: https://musicaltheatrereview.com/henrietta-national-youth-music-theatre/

Carousel – Open Air Theatre Regent’s Park

Picture: Johan Persson

Carousel continues at the Open Air Theatre Regent’s Park until 25 September 2021.

Star rating: four stars ★ ★ ★ ★ ✩

Rodgers and Hammerstein never sidestepped a gritty issue and their 1945 piece about domestic abuse is no exception – and could hardly, given how cases have risen during lockdowns, be more topical.

Yes, there are some very familiar good tunes in Carousel but there is also a great deal of profoundly shocking stuff – the audience gasped in horror more than once on press night – to make anyone who sees it think long and hard.

Of course the original, based on a short story by Ferenc Molnar, was set on the coast of New England. In Timothy Sheader’s thoughtful production we’re in the north of England and the cast members use their own accents, giving a rich variety and stressing the piece’s universality. The American references in the text don’t matter much either. It’s like seeing Julius Caesar set in a modern state. Your brain just accepts the relevance and allows for minor discrepancies …

Read the rest of this review at Musical Theatre Review: https://musicaltheatrereview.com/carousel-open-air-theatre-regents-park/

 

BBC Prom- Aurora Orchestra Nicholas Collon 11th August

Full biography - Aurora OrchestraEverything in this concert was beautifully played. First we had a warm, intelligent account of Rachmaninov’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini with Pavel Kolesnikov at the piano. Each and every one of the 24 variations was spelled out with sensitive attention to all those different styles especially in the pizzicato variation and the frenetic finale.

Then, eventually, we got magnificent performance of Firebird with every nuance lovingly leaned on. Because this is Aurora Orchestra (founded by Nicholas Collon in 2005) most of the players stood up for both works and the Stravinsky was played from memory which meant that players maintained continuous eye contact with the conductor and each other and that introduces a very unusual level of cohesion. Of course this is a narrative piece – it’s ballet music after all – and I have rarely heard the story telling so clear or so well articulated. The moment in this performance when the horn breaks in with that final haunting hymn-like tune will stay with me for a long time because Collon made it grow from the previous pianissimo passage like a flower bursting into bloom. The low level attempt at “staging” by altering the lighting, added nothing though. There was enough drama in the music. It needed no highlighting.

Having said all that though there were problems – at least as far I was concerned. The concert was introduced by Tom Service on stage. Now although I listen regularly to his informative Radio 3 programme The Listening Service and admire his fluent, knowledgeable enthusiasm, I don’t need Mr Service to tell me what I’m going to hear or to whip up applause with arm gestures like a pantomime character. I go to concerts for the music and really don’t care for any sort of chat in that context.

Moreover, In the middle of this concert we got a 20 minute musicology/music appreciation lesson – the sort of thing I associate with concerts for young audiences. It was well enough done in its way although I don’t relish being asked to hum. Service and Collon are an effective double act and Collon talked about Stravinsky’s use of intervals, illustrated by Aurora players quite interestingly. Orchestra members even sang a couple of songs which are part of the source material for Firebird. But you can get this sort of thing on the radio if you want it. In a concert hall I want music and in this case I would much preferred to have heard an extra work.

I also found myself irritated that in a concert billed as “no interval” audience members had to talk among themselves for 10 minutes while music stands and piano were taken off stage and various other bits of stage management were attended to. Several people, puzzled, tried to slip out and were turned back by staff.

It was, however, a good idea to run this concert twice. I attended the afternoon performance as part of a good sized audience. It was the later, evening performance which went out live on Radio 3.

This review was first published by Lark Reviews: https://www.larkreviews.co.uk/?p=6586

BBC Prom: Scottish Symphony Orchestra. Martyn Brabbins 6th August 2021

It was interesting programming – and apparently unprecedented at the Proms – to pair Pergolesi and Stravinsky as a way of highlighting the influence of the former on the latter. Of course we now know that the direct source material for Pulcinella came from his early eighteenth century contemporise rather than from Pergolesi himself but the influence is clear for all that.

We began with an exquisitely moving account of Pegolesi’s Stabat Mater with the blending of voices – Carolyn Sampson, soprano and Tim Mead, counter-tenor – so subtle that at times it sounded like a single person miraculously able to sing two lines. The crystalline, vibrato-free purity was magical too. Then there was the Quae moerebat in which Mead and the orchestra duetted with subtle sensitivity like a baton being passed back and forth. The final Quando corpus morietur – the ultimate moment in a mother’s anguish for her son – was an edge-of-seat, lump-in-throat moment and it’s just as well that Pergolesi provides a relatively jolly Amen after it or the very well deserved applause would have felt inappropriate.

Brabbins (a short notice substitute for Joana Carneiro) is an unassuming conductor and a safe pair of hands in the best possible sense. He knows exactly how to deliver this gorgeous quasi-operatic eighteenth century stuff with all its colourfulness, variety and precision. He beats time unashamedly and the cohesion was spot on.

Then after the interval came a real change of mood – marked even before it started by the entrance of Carolyn Sampson in scarlet dress with glittery jewellery rather than the simple sober black she’d worn for the first half. The original 1919/20 version of Pulcinella was a hybrid “ballet in one act with song” and this is what was performed at this concert although many of us may be more familiar with the shorter orchestral suite which Stravinsky arranged later in 1920.

Sampson was joined by tenor Benjamin Hulett and bass Simon Shibambu all of whom did a good job especially in the Andante when the three come together as in an opera by, say, Mozart until the tenor leads off into some unlikely harmonies before his challenging patter song – all delivered by Hulett with warmth.

I also admired the verve of all that off-beat pizzicato scrupulously played by SSO and stressed by Brabbins as the winds deliver their many solos in this sparky narrative tale of skulduggery and love told in a series of reworked eighteenth century. And the dramatic jazzy trombone solo is always fun. The unexpected glissandi rang out with wit, thanks to principal trombonist, Simon Johnson who earned his moment of individual applause at the end.

This review was first published by Lark Reviews: https://www.larkreviews.co.uk/?p=6579

BBC Prom – Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Vasily Petrenko- 4th August

Vasily Petrenko | IMG Artists

Reshaping was the theme of this concert: Ralph Vaughan Williams reinventing Thomas Tallis, Respighi constructing a concerto based on plainchant and Mendelssohn responding to the Reformation, complete with protestant chorale. And it was noteworthy for another reason: Vasily Petrenko is RPO’s new Principal Conductor and this was his first concert in that role although he has, of course, conducted RPO many times before.

The opening Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis was glorious. The Royal Albert Hall acoustic and the distancing of the nine piece chamber orchestra on a higher level at the back ensured that every note and cadence sang with all the required wistful poignance. The musical rapport between them, the main orchestra and the string quartet at its heart ensured that we heard nuances that no recording ever captures.

Ottorino Respighi’s 1921 Concerto Gregoriano was new to me – and I expect to most of the audience. It gets few outings and this was its first performance at the Proms. It was also a Proms debut for diminutive Japanese violinist Sayaka Shoji who is 38 but looks two decades younger. It’s a substantial, ambitious work, often modal and inspired by Gregorian chant. Maybe Respighi tried to pack too much in because it feels pretty indigestible. Perhaps he should have taken the reshaping even further and made it into two concerti. Nonetheless Shoji seemed to play it with aplomb although I have no other performances to compare it with. I liked her beautiful sostenuto double stopping in the Andante and the intriguing passages in the finale when violin and timpani were centre stage (put me in mind of the much later Patricia Kopatchinskaja cadenza for the Beethoven concerto) and another nice bit with horns.

Mendelssohn’s D major symphony, ‘Reformation’ has never quite achieved the popularity of his earlier ones which is a pity because there are some splendid things in it – although it is arguably the most disjointed of Mendelssohn’s first five symphonies. Under Petrenko’s strange, fluid (is he double jointed?), octopus-like finger waving control the chorale ‘Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott’ was a delight and principal flautist Emer McDonough certainly deserved the applause Petrenko directed her way at the end. There was pleasing lightness from the woodwind in the Allegro vivace and admirable clarity and cohesion from the strings in the Andante. We got a deal of warmth and excitement too partly because of Petrenko’s ability to create – almost choreograph – the quietest possible piano and pianissimo passages.

This review was first published by Lark Reviews https://www.larkreviews.co.uk/?p=6575