Music and new lyrics
by Stephen Schwartz
Directed by Emma
White
Musical Director:
Jenna Hinton
Queanbeyan Players
The Q Theatre,
Queanbeyan to 11 November
Reviewed by Len Power
2 November 2018
First opening off-Broadway in 1971, ‘Godspell’ has continued
to be popular internationally in revivals ever since. It had its first Broadway production in 1976
and the music and lyrics have had some revisions over the years. The show's structure is a series of parables,
mostly based on the Gospel of Matthew, interspersed with a variety of modern
music set primarily to lyrics from traditional hymns.
The show is really about the changes for good that the characters
undergo as a result of the influence of Jesus and his teachings. Whether the setting is realistic or abstract,
the cast need to display clear and appealing character traits that we can
identify with. Get that right and the
show can be profoundly moving.
It seemed a novel idea for cast and additional choir to sing
the opening of the show on the steps in the theatre’s foyer but then the time
it took getting the audience into the auditorium afterwards dispelled any atmosphere
that the opening had created.
It’s not clear what the director, Emma White, was trying to
achieve with this production. It looked
ugly and messy and the playing by the cast was uninvolving and artificially
cheery with awkward, undisciplined adlibs and poorly executed physical comedy.
Alexander Gorring was an unconvincing Jesus with unclear
diction and a lack of depth and consistency in his characterization. The other actors performed as a noisy rabble with
no individuality and no-one seemed to have changed for the better by the end of
the show. When Jesus says goodbye to the
group before the crucifixion scene, it should be intensely moving but that didn’t
happen in this production.
The usually delightful music score by Stephen Schwartz was
marred by too many flat notes sung by the cast members.
There were frequent distractions pulling the focus from
where it should be in a scene. While
‘Beautiful City’ was sung by Jesus, our attention was drawn to excessive movement
in the background where dinner was being served to the rest of the cast,
followed by the washing up being done during the singing of ‘On the Willows’. Staging the communion with Tim Tams and Coca
Cola substituting for the body and blood of Christ was in poor taste.
The lighting design by Jacob Aquilina often seemed to have
little to do with the action onstage and the actors were at times playing in
shadow when it was important to see their faces. Musical direction by Jenna Hinton was fine
but the sound design by Kyle Maley was occasionally unbalanced between cast and
orchestra.
‘Godspell’ isn’t an easy show to get right. This production was misguided and a disappointment.
Len Power’s reviews
are also broadcast in his ‘On Stage’ performing arts radio program on Mondays
and Wednesdays from 3.30pm on Artsound FM 92.7.