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Mary Woodward Review

Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake, Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, Review:

**** (5 stars)

“Deeply Impressive

Is it really thirty years since Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake rocked the world of classical ballet and brought joy to the hearts of the rainbow community by showing that same-sex love was deep and real and passionate and just as right and as valid as that between heterosexuals?  Goodness me: I wasn’t young even then, and am now thirty years older – and still this ballet has the power to move me deeply as I become completely immersed in its magical, painful, realistic and fantastical world.

A prince is unhappily trapped in a stiflingly conventional household in which everything takes place with mechanical, almost robotic, military-style precision.  There is no room for such messy things as feelings – dear me, no!  The prince’s mother is tightly wrapped in magnificent robes – even her incredibly flowing white satin dressing gown seems stiffly starched and speaks of ironclad self-control [though she is not averse to encouraging the respectful attentions of uniformed lackeys].  The nearest she gets to showing any signs of humanity or affection is stretching out a hand towards – but never touching – her son, even when he is writhing in agonies of despair and loneliness.  He dreams of escape, of wild swans erupting into his bedroom, but wakes to the intricately synchronised routine of allowing himself to be washed and dressed and accompanying his mother to any number of state visits, openings, and appearances…

An encounter with a seemingly brainless blonde bimbo appears to offer him an opportunity to experience human affection – but between them, the Queen and the mysterious Private Secretary [undoubtedly a close relation of Machiavelli] put paid to that.  A disastrous visit to the [hysterically funny ‘old style’] ballet is followed by a most unhappy experience in a nightclub, after which the young prince finds himself on the edge of a lake, seriously contemplating throwing himself into it.

And this is where the magic begins… Swans, swans, and yet more swans appear: virile, masculine, full of energy and power, and the biggest and strongest of them all is mesmerisingly attractive.  A tentative, wordless conversation begins; the strength of feeling between them grows, and culminates in the Prince’s first ever experience of real love.  No wonder he feels on top of the world and spontaneously kisses the old woman who comes to feed bread to the birds in the park!

At a ball at the palace, princesses try to attract the Prince’s attention – he does his duty by them but is clearly not interested.  He’s more concerned about his mother’s behaviour, especially when a startlingly attractive tall dark Stranger appears.  There’s something very familiar about him, and the Prince is heartbroken when his approaches are rejected while the Stranger pays attention to the princesses and even the Queen.  Suddenly there’s a gun in the Prince’s hand: a shot is fired and someone falls dead.  The Prince collapses and is carried out as paparazzi rush to capture shots of the spectacle.

The Prince is incarcerated in ‘hospital’.  Horrifying mechanical attempts at ‘treatment’ and ‘healing’ are attempted, while the Queen is unable even to pat her son’s shoulder sympathetically.  She really just wants him to pull himself together and act as a true royal should…. Back in his bed, the Prince curls into a tiny ball.  Swans emerge all around him.  His own special Swan appears, wounded: the others attack him while the prince reaches out for him in despair – to no avail.  The swan is gone, the Prince is desolate: his horrified mother comes into the room to find him dead.  She can’t see above the bed her son, curled round the Swan’s neck – the lovers united in death.

The superbly synchronised, multi-layered choreography of the first scene always has me wishing I could watch it again and again – so much is going on all at once that it’s impossible to comprehend it all.  The ballet in the following scene is so cringingly awful, it’s a miracle that the performers are able to keep their faces straight as they demonstrate all the ‘qualities’ that give classical ballet so bad a name – vapid arm-waving and posturing; ridiculously passionless and feeble attempts at storytelling; all the worst cliches you can imagine… such a strong contrast to Matthew Bourne’s clear, clean, straight storytelling in which every glance, every tiny movement or gesture speaks volumes.

The costumes in the nightclub and at the ball – the use of black almost throughout with the shocking pink of the Girlfriend’s very brief dress and the striking strong red of the Queen’s ball dress – enhance the impact of these scenes.  The Prince is a very lonely figure, slender in his plain white outfit over which he dons his ‘official’ uniform of a vaguely military [or naval?] nature.  The Stranger is also clad in black, but stands out by his devil-may-care nature, in strong contrast to the repressively formal behaviour of everyone at court. 

And then there are the swans… every time I see this Swan Lake, I marvel at the close attention to detail.  Mute swans don’t ‘speak’ but they do grunt and snort and hiss – and here all these sounds are used to intensify the effect of their body language and behaviour.  They are wild, inhuman, and dangerous – even when the cygnets appear to dance to their iconic tune, they are no sweet and fluffy little creatures but strong, boisterous, and potentially as dangerous as their elders.

The entire cast are to be applauded for their performances, their many costume- and character-changes, the astonishing accuracy of their ensemble pieces, especially in the opening scene and at the night club, and for still being standing at the end of what is an intense and challengingly physical marathon.  There are many outstanding cameos, too numerous to mention. 

Fronting this impressive cast were the principals.  James Lovell’s Private Secretary got everywhere, did everything, and got up to who knows what when no-one was watching.  Katrina Lyndon’s icily formal Queen probably deserved a lot of sympathy as she wrapped herself in a mantle of ice, but was impossible to feel for, given her behaviour towards her son.  Bryony Wood’s Girlfriend was a marvel of comic timing, especially in the Royal Box at the ballet.  It was hard to tell what her true feelings were, but she didn’t deserve the fate she met. 

Rory Macleod’s Swan / Stranger double act was deeply impressive: athletic, strong, unexpectedly shy and gentle at times, and so endearing when he tenderly cradled the Prince in his wings.  But for me the outstanding performance was from Leonardo McCorkindale as the Prince – his vulnerability, the fragility of the mask he dons during his public ‘performances’: feeling things deeply even when constrained by the formalities of his royal role and constantly yearning for the affection he craved but was always denied – until he met his Swan…

Small wonder the performance was greeted by thunderous applause and a standing ovation at the final curtain.  Thirty years on, the magic is still there, and the message comes across loud and clear: love is real, and strong, and powerful, no matter who the two lovers are.  Thank you, Matthew Bourne: here’s to the next thirty years of your Swan Lake.

Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake, Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, runs until Saturday 12th April for more information and tickets go to: Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake

Brett Herriot Review

The Sound of Music, Broughton High School Theatre Edinburgh, Review:

*** (3 Stars)

Filled with classic musical joy!”

Astonishingly it’s been sixty six years since Rogers & Hammerstein most famous collaboration, The Sound of Music, made its debut in 1959 in Connecticut at the Shubert Theatre before moving to Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre starring the legendary Mary Martin in the title role of Maria.

The show went onto become a beloved classic for generations thanks to the 1965 motion picture adaptation  starring  Dame Julie Andrews as Maria. The show is also eternally popular with local and community companies and always draws the audiences so it’s no surprise that Edinburgh’s Forth Children’s Theatre have produced there third production of the show which is enjoying a week long run at Broughton High School Theatre and delivers a production filled with classic musical joy!.

The Sound of music adapted from the real life story of the Von Trapp Family singers tells the story of Captain Von Trapp, living in the mountains of Austria finding love again with his governess, Maria, sent to him from the local abbey, she has to discover the powerful truth of love of faith and love of the heart as she wins over the heart of Captain’s seven children. This is set against the turbulence of Nazi Germany’s sweeping power over Europe in the late 1930’s. Can they find true love and freedom? This musical will give you the answer.

This production directed by Aoife Summers, Choreographed by Jayne Orchard with musical direction from Jack Gardner delivers many astonishing performances from a truly gifted young cast but does get slightly bogged down due to its slow pacing and often clunky scene transitions. Given the show already has a lengthy running time (Act one coming in at 90 minutes alone) these longer than needed transitions make it feel all the longer.

That being said performances across the board are excellent especially from the companies leads. Maria McDonald takes on the title role of Maria and delivers a truly charming performance filled with heart and glorious vocals to boot; a career in the industry awaits this talented gem. Harry Aspinall’s Captain Georg Von Trapp shows real acting chops. His journey from strict authoritarian to losing his heart in a way he never though he would again is equally engaging as it is truthful. All seven of the von trap children shine in there moment in the spotlight especially Orla Harrison as Liesel Von Trapp who captures brilliantly the transition of teenage years to adulthood with ease. Special mention also has to go to Elyssa Tait as Mother Abbess whose peerless vocals provides a true show stopping moment to bring the curtain down on act 1.

The thirty strong ensemble company make the most of their stage time and deliver extremely well with Jayne Orchards (assisted by Mirrin Macleay) choreography that not only see the cast dancing but also the sets pillars. The show also features a classy 15 strong pit orchestra under the baton of Jack Gardiner who bring real polish and Gardiner has achieve many spring tingling vocal arrangements from the cast which is impressive given the age of the performers.

Production wise however work is needed to smooth the rough edges. Gavin Macleay’s set design does invoke the Austrian mountains well and the clever use of gauzes allows the orchestra to be brought into the piece but the stylisation of brick work is a strong choice that doesn’t always work. The show is lit well by lighting and sound designer Callum Farrell and given how expansive the venue is the lighting makes the most of its abilities. The sound design does have problems with a few mics failing to come on but this probably more opening night nerves that will ease as the show beds into its run.

FCT’s The Sound of Music delivers well and the directorial choice to really bring out the very best performances from the cast is inspired and if the company can tighten the transitions and smooth out the sound issues then a fourth star is within their grasp.

For now This Sound of Music offers up an engaging night of musical theatre fun that charms its audiences and those performances really do capture from the curtain up! So head to Broughton High School and see for yourself the hills coming alive to the sound of music.

Forth Children’s Theatre, Presents the Sound of Music, Broughton High School Theatre, Edinburgh, runs until Saturday 12th April, For more information and tickets go to: Upcoming Shows | Forth Children’s Theatre

Mary Woodward Review

Bite-sized concerts at the Brunton: Lark Piano Trio, Northesk Parish Church, Review

***** (5 stars)

“Deeply Moving”

Emma Baird, Helen La Grand and Anna Michels met as postgraduate students at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.  I for one am profoundly grateful that they decided to join together to form the Lark Trio: today’s lunchtime performance of Tchaikovsky’s piano trio moved me deeply, and I don’t think I was the only member of the audience to be so affected.

Tchaikovsky was determined that he would never write a piano trio, said Anna in her introduction to the performance. However, the death in 1881 of his close friend and mentor, the accomplished pianist Nikolai Rubinstein, deeply affected the composer.  During the following winter he wrote this trio, subtitled à la mémoire d’un grand artiste [to the memory of a great artist] and oh my goodness, it’s an utterly incredible work.

The first of its two movements sounded to me like a lament for a lost lover.  Joy and sorrow intertwined in a journey through memories full of emotion, passionate outbursts of grief and anger, overwhelming deep sadness, moments of calm resignation and acceptance, solemn lamenting, fiery, tempestuous outbursts, small gleams of glorious sunshine and happy memories, and restrained moments made all the more poignant because of that very restraint.  Three strong, individual voices sang out in brilliant melodies, singly and together, taking turns in leading and supporting each other, pouring out a torrent of feelings that swept us all along until the final slow funeral march gradually sank into silence.

How to follow that?  With a theme and variations which some think might portray incidents from the life of Rubinstein – there’s certainly a huge amount of variety of mood, character, and feeling in this movement.  A simple melody, full of feeling and with extraordinary rhythmical character is developed into a string of variations which give each instrument a chance to show off.  The piano begins,  having great fun while the strings play pizzicato; a noble melody, reminiscent of gypsy music, is passed from violin to cello; the piano dances in its upper register while the strings provide a drone bass; a rumbunctious waltz is tossed around by all three; the piano plays monstrous chords reminiscent of Mussorgsky’s Great Gates of Kiyev from Pictures from an exhibition; a delicate muted string line is tossed between the two players while the piano ripples with arpeggios, giving us a moment of calm before a mazurka, which is both lively and very formal, played with almost military precision, allows all three musicians the opportunity really to show off.  A wonderfully lyrical serenade, throbbing with passion, led into a fast, fiery and furious finale – risoluto e con fuoco –which had all three players obviously enjoying themselves, dancing around, now frenziedly, now nimbly, building and relaxing the tension through all the keys you can think of, scampering towards what seemed must be a magnificent climax but…

The music was celebrating what must have been a glorious life – and now we remember the beloved is dead.  The music comes to a stark and solemn ending, a funeral march with sombre strings and dry, detached chords on a piano which slowly falters to silence.

We all sit, so deeply moved it’s impossible to break that silence – and then erupt into tumultuous applause, richly deserved.  What an amazing work; what superbly talented musicians; what a memorable lunchtime!

Please please please may we have the joy and privilege of hearing the Lark Trio again at the Brunton  VERY SOON.

Bite-sized concerts at the Brunton: Lark Piano Trio, Tchaikovsky piano trio in A minor Op 50, Northesk Parish Church, Run Ended

Brett Herriot Review

Beauty and The Beast, Church Hill Theatre, Edinburgh, Review:

***** (5 Stars)

Calls to the child like heart in all of us!”

The beloved 1991 Disney animation Beauty and the Beast would launch the Mickey Mouse company into a glorious revival renaissance period that would see the film achieve classic status. The film would also become Disney’s first venture into live stage adaptations and the tale as old as time would become an Olivier award winning smash hit.

The show is now available to local theatre companies across the UK and Edinburgh’s long running Edinburgh Music Theatre brings the tale to life for a week long run at the Church Hill Theatre in a stunning production that truly calls to the child like heart in all of us.

 Beauty and the Beast with Music by the legendary Alan Menken, lyrics by the late Howard Ashman and Sir Tim Rice featuring a book by Linda Woolverton tells the tale as old as time of a prince forced to live under a enchantment due to his selfish ways only to discover that the power of true love can set him and his servants free.

EMT’s production beautifully captures the spirit of the animated original thanks to the ingenious use of a giant video wall featuring animation creative designs from the shows Director Louise Sables. Sables also ensures her top drawer cast are sprinkled in enough stage magic so it delivers to a professional level befitting any theatre in the country.

Performances are universally excellent with Wallis Hamilton Carmichael as Belle and Seb Schneeberger as Beast leading the company with beguiling performances that capture the characters beautifully and they have the vocals to match too. Andrew Hally’s “Cogsworth” and Peter Tomassi’s “Lumiere” are comedy joy and shine every time there on stage. Special mention must go to Lauren McAnna as “Mrs Potts” whose pathos rich delivery of the title song brings tears to the eyes in a stunningly emotional moment. Every Disney story needs a good baddie and Louis Delaney delivers in spades as “Gaston” he walks a fine line of villainy but succeeds thanks to his onstage partner “Le Fou” played with a wonderful physicality by the sublime Sean Vannet.

David Bartholomew’s “Maurice”, Sheona Dorrian’s “Babette”, Mia Hatch’s “Chip” and Sarah Louise Donnelly as “Madam de la Grande Bouche” all shine whenever they grace the stage as does Lindsay MacLaren, Elizabeth Martin and Amanda Woodhouse as “Les Filles”. The principals are joined by a twenty two strong ensemble company who truly bring Belles world to life especially when delivering Chanel Turner-Ross inventive and well executed Choreography.

Musically the show is a triumph with musical Director Libby Crabtree ensuring every ounce of emotion from the score is felt by the audience thanks to the peerless vocals onstage and gorgeous nine strong pit orchestra under her baton, it’s truly the cherry on the cake.

Production wise EMT has delivered well within the constraints of the intimate theatre that the church hill is. Jacob Henney’s lighting design captures the magic of piece perfectly and Rhys Tuner’s Sound design is faultless ensuring every lyric and note is heard with ease and never overpowers.

The unmitigated high point of the show has to be Lauren McAnna’s (alongside playing Mrs Potts) staggering Wardrobe design. The costumes knock the eye out and while they capture the essence of the original look of the Broadway show they also feel fresh and relevant for a show which has celebrated its thirtieth anniversary and incredible achievement for a local company.  

EMT’s Beauty and the Beast is everything you could wish for and so much more and is a perfect evening of musical theatre magic that rightly deserves its standing ovations and sold out performances its currently enjoying.  You never know you might just be lucky enough to get a return ticket for an EMT show that will go down in history as setting the bar to stratospherically new heights! Wonderful stuff indeed.

EMT Presents Beauty and The Beast, Church Hill Theatre, Edinburgh, runs until Saturday 5th April, For more information and tickets go to: Beauty and the Beast – Edinburgh Music Theatre

Brett Herriot Review

Titanique, the Criterion Theatre, London, Review:

***** (5 Stars)

The true heart of the ocean of comedy musicals!”

James Cameron’s 1997 motion picture retelling of the Titanic disaster featuring the beguiling love story of Jack and Rose has been parodied many times but none more successfully than in 2017 when Titanique debuted in Los Angeles.

Featuring a book by Tye Blue, Marla Mindelle and Constantine Rousouli this comedic tour de triumph retells the movies story from the point of view of Celine Dion, Played by the stunning Lauren Drew in the performance of lifetime. It’s a one hundred minute long romp blending Dion’s hit songs with up to date musical and cultural references in a show that simply can’t fail to raise a smile with its joyful heart.

This show directed by book writer Tye Blue features an outstanding ensemble cast lead by Drew as Dion and everyone of them shine and no wonder as it features the very best of the current generation of west end stars.  Rob Houchen “Jack Dawson” and Kat Ronney “Rose DeWitt Bukater” are everything Leo and Kate were and so much more delivering excellent comedy timing and honey soaked vocals throughout. Darren Bennett “Victor Garber”, Charlotte Wakefield “Molly Brown” and Stephen Guarino “Ruth DeWitt Bukater” equally shine and make the most of there on stage time.  Every show needs a good baddie and west end star Jordan Luke Cage delivers in spades as “Cal Hockley” he enshrews panto villainy but captures the comedic potential of the character beautifully.

In the role of Seaman/Iceberg is strictly come dancing break out star Layton Williams who works hard especially in drag as “Iceberg” but as with all the shows Williams does heis simply being himself on stage rather than a character, that being said he does himself awfully well! Rounding out the onstage company are three powerhouse vocalists, Adrianne Langley, Madison Swan and Rodney Vubya who bring extra sparkle and magic to the songs which are delivered in polished style by musical director Adam Wachter and his four piece onstage band.

Production wise this is a show that can hold its head up high with any of the bigger productions and theatres in the west end and proves that while the Criterion is one of the more intimate venues it’s a beacon for the arts. Gabriel Hainer Evansohn and Grace Laubacher’s scenic design perfectly captures the essence of Titanic’s grandeur but also the golden era of musical theatre. This is enhanced by Alejo Vietti stunning costume design that perfectly recreates Jack and Rose from the film alongside the other characters but also ensures Layton looks stunning in full stockings, Heels and silver glittering drag. Paige Seber lighting design makes the most of the Criterion’s stage and auditorium and gives true musical glamour to the whole show which is ably supported by the excellent sound design from Lawrence Schober.

Titanique was due to have limited run in the west end but has proven so popular it’s been extended into 2026 and its the true show of the moment and brings to the stage the one thing we need more than any other right now in our lives and that’s Laughter! This is a joyous extravaganza that is the true heart of the ocean of comedy musicals and long may its heart go on! Unmissable! So grab those tickets now!!!

Titanique, the Criterion Theatre, London booking until January 2026, For more information and tickets go to: Titanique the Musical