BEDA day 3: Musical theatre

It’s an exciting time for musical theatre right now, but it’s not all good news. Whilst the musical adaptation of Victor Hugo’s LES MISÉRABLES is celebrating its 25th year on the London stage, (PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, an adaptation of the Gaston Leroux novel, will be doing the same next year) newer musicals and Broadway transfers are not enjoying such longevity.
AVENUE Q, Jeff Marx and Robert Lopez’s Sesame Street-inspired look at modern life in New York City is leaving the West End this October after just over four years here. The entire Broadway company of HAIR’s revival transferred to London in April, only for the show to close this September with no opportunity for a local cast to take over. And who can forget SPRING AWAKENING’s four month run at the Novello last year? I regret not seeing it.

The balance between satisfying the hardcore fans of shows such as Avenue Q, (me, for instance) opening new shows and not going out of business is tricky. Avenue Q alone has had three West End homes during its run, as has Les Mis – but because it expanded, whereas Avenue Q’s been shunted around town.

Last year I set out to make a documentary investigating the effect the global recession on UK theatre. Mostly it has not had a hugely adverse effect – a fact demonstrated in the enormous number of people who flocked to see both David Tennant and Jude Law’s respective HAMLETs. But the draw there, it has to be said, was the celebrity. This is not to detract from the acting abilities of Tennant or Law – (the latter I cannot vouch for, but I think we all saw the RSC/BBC Films HAMLET screened last Boxing Day) in the case of Shakespeare it is a positive thing, introducing David and Jude’s fans to the Bard. But with last week’s announcement that SHREK THE MUSICAL would “star” Amanda Holden when it opens next year, is Theatreland becoming saturated with celebrity?

When her casting was revealed there was much mockery and dissent, from fans, musical theatre students and performers. With her role as a judge on BRITAIN’S GOT TALENT, many people forget she is an actresss – anyone remember CUTTING IT? Still, I don’t know about her talent as a singer or stage actress, and for the many young people graduating from (musical/) theatre courses, it must be depressing seeing not one of their own making it big, but yet another celebrity parachuted in to a show. I’ve got nothing against Amanda, but she is hardly a big name amongst anyone who doesn’t watch BGT. If SHREK THE MUSICAL is a good show, people will come. Word will spread. The revival of OLIVER! is currently playing at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, where SHREK will premiere next May. That show had the benefit of weeks of prime-time BBC One airtime to publicise and cast it, and it still isn’t very good. A better example is LEGALLY BLONDE. The London production started previewing last December and opened in January. I was at the gala night and enjoyed myself. Although the lead roles of Elle and Warner were played by fairly well-known people, it’s more of an ensemble cast and while Sheridan Smith is a star, she doesn’t dominate. Arguably more famous than both her and Duncan James (who played Warner) is Peter Davison, who plays Professor Callaghan. When I interviewed him, I asked what he thought of shows relying on celebrities to prop up shows or attract audiences. He said that he thought whatever gets people through the doors is fine, as long as the performers are good.

Do you like (musical/) theatre, and do you have a favourite show? Sorry this is a bit rambling – most of what I write is only seen by me (including this, apparently) and is in the form of news articles, not this personal outlet. So I’m still finding my voice 🙂

Update: I hope Neil Patrick Harris’s production of RENT at the Hollywood Bowl goes great this weekend. Lots of people have complained about Vanessa Hudgens as Mimi, seeing as how she is apparently a role model for girls and a lap-dancing drug addict is not conducive to a good image, but I don’t think artistic choices should be influenced by pressures like these. Sure, set a good example, but you shouldn’t not do something for such reasons. Why would kids who like HSM even be interested in RENT? If she turns out to be rubbish that’s another, completely separate, matter.

Even better update: I have now booked my ticket for the LES MIS Concert at the o2 in October! Very happy about this. Rebecca Caine (original Cosette) suggested I save the money and just buy the DVD instead – the first and only mention I’ve seen of there being a DVD, so obviously she knows something we don’t – but I have now asked for a ticket as a graduation present, which is excellent.

BEDA day 2: What’s a graduate to do?

Here is a link to my friend Becky’s BEDA post on how she feels after graduating, and I was happy when I read it as I am exactly the same. It is scary how many doors are open to graduates, and which to choose. I don’t mean there are opportunities being handed round on golden plates, because there aren’t. I mean the rest of our lives are laid out before us and, although it sounds clichéd, we can do anything. Except, y’know, the recession and stuff (I made a documentary about how it’s affected one of my favourite things, if you didn’t know). But hopefully you get from mine and Becky’s posts that inside our heads right now it’s like a washing machine (as I type this, I don’t know where this metaphor is going either) of confusion as we try to work out what we really want to do with ourselves, and how to make that happen.

Do you have firm ideas of what you want to do, or how you see your life going?

BEDA day 1: a delayed start

I am starting today and am going to try to do it for the rest of the month. Maybe I’ll carry on until September the 5th, then it’d be BEDFAM. Blog every day for a month. Which is more of a mouthful, but essentially the same thing.

I downloaded the Kindle app to my iPhone a few months ago and have been reading my first eBook on it – the first eBook that I haven’t read the actual book equivalent of first, that is. In this case, that’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (no spoilers please!).

Do any of you (theoretical you that is, unless anybody reads this – hello!) have eReaders (such an awkward name, no?) or iPads or Kindles? I do not buy in to this idea that they are going to take off in any big way. The paperless office was touted as coming 15 years ago, and today computers put more ink on paper than ever.

Saying that, having used both the Kindle app and Apple’s iBooks app, I much prefer the Kindle. It automatically remembers where I am when I switch apps or go to the home screen, whereas with iBooks you have to tap Library for it to remember. iBooks is also laggy, at least on my iPhone and the iPad I tried it on on launch day. I was in the Apple Store in Cardiff that morning.

Meeting the Doctor


Peter Davison
Peter Davison. Image by /Sizemore/ used under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA license

One of the only disappointments I had when making THE PHANTOM RECESSION was that I wasn’t able to interview Peter Davison in person. Not only would the audio quality have been much improved but the whole dynamic is different when face to face. Nevertheless I was very grateful for the time he gave me.

In late June I was walking along the Strand looking for a Sainsbury’s Express when I noticed a rather tall man wearing dark glasses, a cream suit and a boater-style hat walking towards me. As we approached each other, I realised it was Peter trying to avoid being recognised in the break between his matinée and evening performances in LEGALLY BLONDE. I continued walking then reversed and swiftly caught up with him, introducing myself and walking covertly beside him. He stopped and – though I cannot be certain he genuinely remembered our interview, he offered his hand to shake, which I took. I thanked him for his appearance and he said it was no problem.

Friendliness is always appreciated by me, especially in such situations. Writer Russell T Davies says in THE WRITER’S TALE that anyone who buys in to the personality someone gives off when being interviewed is a fool, but Peter wasn’t wearing his media hat. He was actually wearing a hat strongly reminiscent of the one his Fifth Doctor sported, which is what first alerted me to him. So while yes, while being interviewed in certain situations celebrities are in their cool and in control modes, some people are just nice. I could name a few others on either side of the nice fence, but I’ll leave it there.

Spare some change?

Loose change
© Copyright Gary Kirk 2010

I’ve spent most of the last three years living in the city of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire. Whilst walking the streets I have been approached many times by individuals – the same people time and again – asking for money. Often late at night and sometimes twice in the dame day, they have walked in front of me, even when with friends or clearly listening to music, presenting their standard sob story. It was always the same, alleging that the Salvation Army hostel had turned them away, they had nowhere to sleep and would I give them some money?

No.

What was he going to do with it, get a room at the Best Western? It was clearly a con, repeated daily. I called the Salvation Army hostel this group of scammers claimed slammed the door in their faces and was told this would never happen. The hostel manager told me staff would turn people away only if they were intoxicated or recreational drug users.

Today on my way home, somebody stopped me to ask if I had twelve pence. I automatically delivered the old chestnut (“I haven’t got any change”) but it got me thinking. There is a difference between busking or begging and simply asking strangers for cash. It would never enter my head to ask people in the street for money if I didn’t have enough for something. I didn’t know what he wanted the 12p for, nor did I ask. But where do you draw the line? I want good tickets to the LES MISÉRABLES 25th anniversary concert at the o2 Arena in October; is it acceptable for me to go asking strangers for donations to my entertainment fund? Of course not, the idea is ridiculous. But people continue to ask for all sorts, from cash to favours – this week I was asked if I had a lighter and if someone could borrow my phone. Certainly not!

Documentary update

I’ve decided to make my documentary available publicly on this website. What I have done so far – I have lots more material from both Peter Davison and Liz Thompson – is part one. The second part I haven’t created yet, but it will be more raw than the first part. Look forward to it in the coming weeks!

A finished documentary

After seven months, my radio documentary is finished. It’s finished to the standards required originally, but not quite to my satisfaction. It’s currently fifteen minutes long, but I have some great unused material which I’d love to include.

My plan is to work on an extended version of the documentary, containing more raw audio than the current programme. I’ll upload it here when complete.

Journalists in the spotlight

Journalists should report impartially on the news – they should never become the story themselves. So why, tonight is “Kirsty Wark” the second trending topic on Twitter and “Adam Boulton” the fifth?

Kirsty Wark was interviewing a French politician on Newsnight earlier and apparently her shoes, outfit and the way she walked attracted the attention of enough Twitter users to propel her to the top of the trending topics list – even after an earlier incident involving Sky’s Adam Boulton and Labour “adviser” Alastair Campbell, live on Sky News. The video can be watched below, but essentially Boulton got pretty angry at the man who once called me a hard taskmaster.

In a third incident, the BBC’s Nick Robinson is under fire for his “partisan spin” – according to MP Ben Bradshaw. Emma Freud called him an “obvious Tory” and comedian Chris Addison noted he was “editorialising massively”.

Update 7:52am, 11/05/2010 Alastair Campbell has written his own blog entry about his experience on Sky News yesterday.

There is no real point to this blog entry, only the observation about journalists becoming the story. Secondly, I wanted to see where exactly this post goes on my new-look website.

We love it, yeah, yeah, yeah!

This is good news, and this is even better.

If it’s too much effort to click on two links, I’ll summarise: EMI have announced all their music available digitally will soon be DRM-free. Added to this catalogue will soon be the music of the Fab Four – The Beatles. Excellent!