Rendezvous with Marlene. Ute Lemper.
Thebarton Theatre.Adelaide Cabaret Festival.June 8 2019.
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
In 1988, the French press was
hailing Ute Lemper as “the new Marlene” Feeling embarrasesd, Ute wrote to
Marlene Dietrich to apologize. To her surprise, she received a letter from the eighty seven year old legendary star,
thanking Lemper for the sweet note and inviting her to call her. Rendezvous with Marlene” is Lemper’s
account of what turned out to be a three hour phone conversation with Dietrich.
Music fills the air as Lemper
sidles from the shadows into the light to open Rendezvous with Marlene with her seductive rendition of Dietrich’s
classic Illusions,. In the husky,
sensual sound of Dietrich’s signature voice Lemper lures the large audience in Adelaide’s
Thebarton Theatre into Dietrich’s Paris apartment. For three hours, Lemper
recounts the conversation, assuming Dietrich’s
persona with the throaty, aging voice as the older Marlene, or adopting
an uncanny likeness in costume and posture to the iconic Blue Angel. With the
ease of a consummate performer, Lemper moves between the Marlene at the end of
the line and the young Lemper, starting out on her career, and already making a
name for herself as the new Marlene.
The narrative thread weaves through
the remarkable life of Dietrich, a glossary of famous encounters with the
artistic glitterati of her time ,of insatiable sexual adventures with leading
men and women , of wartime service, entertaining the troops and tireless activism for worthy causes that
saw her branded a traitor in her homeland. The past becomes the temple of her
dreams; the present the tomb of her past Lemper’s Dietrich is an old woman,
alone and reclusive in an apartment across from the apartment where her true
love Jean lived. Lemper’s version of Jacques Brel’s Ne me
quitte pas is a moving reminder of lost love and faded dreams. The
flamboyant femme fatale who lit up the shimmering screen has become the faded,
neglected dying star, estranged from her daughter and living out her lonely years
in self-imposed solitude. Lemper becomes her ardent biographer in story and
song.
For it is Lemper who is the star
of Rendezvous with Marlene, drawing
on an unique experience to discover the mystery and the magic of Dietrich’s
exceptional life and complex personality.
Throughout the show, Lemper exhibits her own exceptional talent and
dazzling stage presence in the songs that will always be identified with
Marlene Dietrich such as Friedrich Hollaender’s Falling in Love Again. Now a shining star herself, Lemper makes
Marlene’s songs her own. Her remarkable voice and phenomenal range revive Marlene’s
command of the cabaret gebre with Fritz Loesser and Friedrich Hollaemder’s Boys in the Backroom. The spectre of war
looms in the sombre melody of Norbert Schultze’s iconic Lili Marlene.
Dietrich’s versatility is evident
in her long collaboration with Burt Bacharach with songs such as What The World Needs Now while true
regret and longing for a glorious age echoes through the soulful melodies of Bob
Dylan’s How Many Roads?” and Pete
Seeger’s mournful Where Have All The
Flowers Gone?
Although the advertised
performance time of Rendezvous with Marlene
of two hours ran an hour overtime on
the uncomfortable seats on the flat floor of the vast proscenium stage of the
Thebarton Theatre, and suffered from
the lack of judicious editing of the conversation, aficionados of Marlene
Dietrich and Ute Lemper can revel in the rare opportunity to indulge in the
sheer pleasure of spending an evening in the company of two iconic chanteuses,
the enigmatic Marlene and the phenomenal Ute Lemper. Unfortunately I have no
programme to acknowledge the excellent musicians on piano, saxophone, violin
and drums. Tonight was a rendezvous with Marlene, Ute and her musicians to
remember.