Musical Direction by Nicholas Griffin
Supa Productions at the ANU Arts Centre to 28 September 2013
Review by Len Power 14 September 2013
Supa
Productions’, ‘Footloose’, based on a popular 1984 movie, is a slight 1998
Broadway show with a clichéd book, a stack of pop tunes - only a few of which
are memorable - and an overlong running time.
The large, mostly young, cast of this production almost get away with it
with their enthusiasm and energy, especially in the rousing finale of the show.
Anyone
directing this show needs to decide how to make the thin story line
playable. This production opted to play
it modern and straight and the result was a lot of tedium between musical
numbers. It might have been more fun
played as a satire of the 1980s or even in a cartoon style.
Luckily,
we had three very talented and appealing singers in Claudia Tetrault-Percy,
Kirrah Amosa and Zoe Priest to open the show with a rousing ‘Footloose’ and
continue on with ‘Somebody’s Eyes’, ‘Holding Out For A Hero’, with the
excellent Eliza Shepherd and ‘Let’s Hear It For the Boy’. Maureen Read and Christine Forbes also shone
with ‘Learning To Be Silent’, again joined by Eliza Shepherd. The full cast numbers were well sung by the
company but a sound imbalance with the orchestra often drowned out the singers
and made lyrics impossible to hear.
Aside from the sound imbalance, Nicholas Griffin’s orchestra played the
score very well.
The
costumes which were co-ordinated for the show by Emma Tatum might be modern
dress but a musical should still display an overall style in its costumes. Tim Stiles’ costume for the Reverend screamed
‘trailer trash’ rather than ‘fine, upstanding citizen’. It was also hard to believe that the Reverend
would allow his daughter, Ariel, out of the house in the sexy hotpants and
skimpy top she was wearing.
The
ugly set by Jordan Kelly and Dan Kempton showed no thoughtful design and added
nothing to the show.
More style in keeping with a Broadway show in
the choreography by Nikole Neal rather than pointless Rock Eisteddfod steps
would have been more interesting to watch and there was a noticeable variation
in dance skills amongst the large cast.
The dancing often took the focus away from the lead singers, too,
especially in the ‘Holding Out For A Hero’ number, where the singers virtually
disappeared behind a mass of jiggling dancers.
In a Broadway musical, the dancing should complement the number, not
gang up on it.
First
time director, Jordan Kelly, worked with too large a cast to keep full
control. The scene in the gymnasium, for
example, was a distracting melee of people shuffling around with nothing much
to do. Many of the young cast also
lacked basic stagecraft. More work
needed to be done to ensure the focus of certain scenes was where it needed to
be. Emotional scenes either lacked
energy or were right over the top and needed stronger direction to make them
believable.
This is
a difficult show to get right, given the lack-lustre material you have to start
with. Unfortunately this production was
not up to Supa’s usually high standard.