HOME PAGE
SEARCH CurtainUp REVIEWS FEATURES NEWS (Etcetera) ADDRESS BOOKS Broadway Off-Broadway BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London Los Angeles Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES On TKTS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead NYC Weather |
A CurtainUp London Review
125th Street by Lizzie Loveridge
The musical is set on a night in 1969 when Civil Rights protests seized up much of the transportation system and stopped the star performers reaching the Apollo. A whole show starring amateurs was put together and, in the Buddy mould, the second half of the show delivers this improvised, tribute concert, a splendid programme of great Sixties numbers. The first half of the musical is more problematic as it attempts comedy with the deliberately ghastly ageing television presenter Tony Sorrento, (Domenick Allen) and Lorrie Kincaid, (Philippa Walker) the equally cringe making television floor manager who tells the audience where to applaud, laugh and shut up! The first act also introduces the talented amateurs as people, wannabes who staff the theatre in the costume department, behind the scenes and in catering, and local wide boy, looter Luther "the Alley Cat" Pearce (Gilz Terea). The choreography is of the dancing with a microphone stand ilk but there is nice arm and hand action from the stand in Four Seasons, well three of them are stand ins - it seems one made it to the Apollo that night. The set effects are bright lights and swirling smoke, nothing too high tech or original. I have my reservations about the inclusion of amateur singers. Not the well rehearsed Mr Lowe, but the two invitees from the audience, in the middle of the show, one of whom, a Margaret Thatcher lookalike, gave us "Kansas City" which was ok but the second with a shaky rendition of "My Way" was not something I expect to hear after paying top West End prices for a seat. Is the logical extension of reality television, Karaoke theatre? Can we look forward to the amateur spot in Hamlet when a member of the audience is invited to speak the "How do all occasions inform against us" soliloquy? The rest of the audience gave these two a great hand in the spirit of British fair play where such support is given to the underdog. I confidently told my companion that this interlude was to allow a big scene change behind the curtain. Wrong! Same old set. I did however enjoy immensely the second half of Sixties numbers sung superbly: classics like Otis Reading's "Respect" and Percy Sledge's "When a Man Loves a Woman", a real treat for Soul mates. The ensemble give some very talented performances but is the whole any better than the Sixties night at your local pub? I hope that Kevin Morrow (lead "amateur" Georgie Blues), Jia Frances (Dionne singalike Debbie), Ray Shell (a glorious transsexual Gracie), Peter Dalton (shy Bish Bosh with a deep register to die for) Johnnie Fiori (the supportive Mabeline) and Gary Bryden (Shades Jackson) find a worthy vehicle for their talent and I'll be queuing up to see them.
|
6, 500 Comparative Phrases including 800 Shakespearean Metaphors by CurtainUp's editor. Click image to buy. Go here for details and larger image. |