Emily Pogson as Emily, with the ensemble |
OLIVER!
Book,
songs and lyrics by Lionel Bart. Based on the novel Oliver Twist by Charles
Dickens,
Director
Jude Colquhoun and Co-Musical director with Jenna Hinton. Choreographer Jodi
Hammond. Queanbeyan Players. The Q Theatre Queanbeyan. September 27 – October
6.
Reviewed by Phillip Mackenzie
Reviewed by Phillip Mackenzie
This production of Oliver! was above the average standard for
the Queanbeyan Players and, indeed, for
a number of local community company shows. The energy, discipline and clarity
of the choreography and the accompanying band in the opening chorus – 'Food, glorious food' – set the bar high
for the rest of the evening.
Since its first appearance on the London stage in 1960,
Lionel Bart's Oliver! has been a winner for both professional and amateur
companies world-wide. Adapted from Charles Dickens' novel, the musical tells
how the eleven-year-old Oliver, an orphan in a 'charitable' institution, is
sold into servitude in a funeral parlour from which he escapes to London, where he falls into the sleazy
underworld and is eventually rescued by a benevolent gentleman who, improbably,
turns out to be his grandfather so that, for the lad at least, everything ends
up happily-ever-after.
Jude Colquhoun is Director and, with Jenna Hinton, Co-Musical
Director, together with choreographer Jodi Hammond, presented a crystal-clear
rendering of the plot and development of the
multitude of characters; Colquhoun's set design was impeccable in its
simplicity and versatility – basically, half-a-dozen tall panels which could be
spun and rolled on casters into a variety of configurations with barely a pause
between scenes varying from a dreary workhouse, to an undertaker's parlour, the
dungeons and sewers of Queen Victoria's industrial London, and the morning brightness of a street market place ('Who Will Buy?').
Imaginative lighting by Jacob Aquilina was an essential part
of creating the appropriate mood for each moment – sometimes subtle, sometimes
dramatic, and rarely intrusive. The fifteen-piece pit orchestra deserved a
special round of applause for its clarity and sensitivity – the (alas,
anonymous) haunting violin accompaniment to Fagan's characterful 'Reviewing the
Situation' (Fiddler on the Roof eat your heart out!) warranting special
mention.
Janetta McRae's mammoth costume roster, from the grungy to
the gorgeous, impressively captured the period and the sound system worked a
treat – although the individual Cyborg-like bulbous mic devices used were so 20th
century.
As for the cast, hardly a foot was out of place. Without an
Oliver who could sing his heart out while acting and dancing like a trouper,
you don't have a play – and Willum Hollier-Smith did this job in spades, never
missing a beat in song or speech, reacting to his changing fortunes as any
eleven-year old would do, and blending in with the tribe of urchins with the
best of them. He was supported, especially, by Emily Pogson's tragic Nancy,
fiercely aware of her individuality but captive to her love for the nasty Bill
Sikes, played by Michael Jordan with a violence which might have been
rounded-out with a more pathological sense of evil.
Nancy's 'As long as he needs me' is no gimme, but Ms Pogson
brings it off with such conviction that the ambiguous reprise (is 'he' Sikes or
Oliver ?) could do with less force and more reflection.
Anthony Swadling's Fagin, Bill's companion in crime, conjured
up all the nefarious greed of his character, while managing to suppress some
glimpses of a nascent human insecurity in his highly-entertaining set-piece
'Reviewing the Situation'.
Mr Bumble (Chris Bennie) and Joss Kent (Artful Dodger) head a
further list of actors all of whom do considerable justice to their characters,
right through to David Leigh doing his best to put flesh on the cardboard
cut-out of Mr Brownlow and his entourage tucked away at downstage right.
And then the chorus:
there is so much to commend their disciplined individuality and energy managed
by Judi Hammond's well-judged choreography but here I must restrict myself to
my memory of the musically and visually gorgeous 'Who will buy' scene suddenly
turned on its head with the dramatic kidnap of Oliver.
Despite its uproarious 'Oom-Pah-Pah' opening, the second half
of the performance faded a little in comparison to its predecessor, although
'Who will buy' and Fagin's comic reprise gave the whole show a restorative
lift.
An Oliver! not to be missed!