Music by John Kander
Lyrics by Fred Ebb
Directed by Jim
McMullen
Musical Direction by
Chris Ronan
Canberra Philharmonic
Society to 25 March
Review by Len Power 9
March 2017
‘Chicago’, first produced on Broadway in 1975, has gone from
a modest success originally to become a phenomenon that audiences flock to regardless
of how many times they’ve already seen it.
The story of ‘Chicago’ focusses on two women on trial for
different murders. The show satirises
corruption in the legal system as well as the publicity circus that makes
celebrities out of criminals. There’s a
vaudeville element to the show dictated by the way many of the numbers are
performed.
‘Chicago’ needs two very capable female leading players and
Philo’s production is blessed with the great Canberra duo, Vanessa De Jager as
Roxie Hart and Kelly Roberts as Velma Kelly.
As Roxie, Vanessa De Jager is an almost Marilyn Monroe type which works fine. She sings extremely well and gives a
performance full of depth, humour and real emotion. The character of Velma Kelly doesn’t have the
same depth of character in the script, but Kelly Roberts plays this hard-bitten
dame with great assurance and sings brilliantly.
Will Huang as the ‘prince of the courtroom’, Billy Flynn,
the lawyer defending Roxie and Velma, sings his songs with great charisma but
his deliberate line delivery slows the show down. There’s good work from Jonathan Rush as Amos
Hart, Shell Tully as Matron ‘Mama’ Morton and Ben Wilson is a very strong Mary
Sunshine. The large and enthusiastic
chorus sings and dances the show very well.
The set design by Ian Croker and Jim McMullen looks good and
has all the right period elements. The
placement of the orchestra to one side of the stage caused some sound balance
problems for those of us sitting on the opposite side of the auditorium and the
music under the dialogue scenes is far too loud. Apart from that, the orchestra under the baton
of Chris Ronan, played the jazzy score very well.
Costumes designed by Jill McMullen followed the black
lingerie style of the 1996 Broadway production.
It was well executed but it would be good to see a production of this
show that comes up with something original.
There was really good choreography by Emily Appleton and Hannah Carey
and the cast danced it very well.
The production lacked pace and subtlety. The farcical courtroom scene is much funnier
if played at speed and there was too much shouting of lines from the cast for
no apparent reason. Nevertheless, the show
is as entertaining as always.
Len Power’s reviews
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