Abigail Adriano (Kim) and Bryce Li (Tam) in the Australian production of "Miss Saigon" |
Directed by
Laurence Connor – Australian production directed by Jean-Pierre Van Der Spuy
Musical
Staging by Bob Avian – Production designed by Totie Driver & Matt Kinley
Costumes
Designed by Andreane Neofitou – Lighting designed by Bruno Poet
Sound
designed by Mick Potter – Projections designed by Luke Hall
Joan
Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House – September August 17th to 13th
October.
Official
Opening night on August 25th reviewed by BILL STEPHENS.
Seann Miley Moore (The Engineer) - Bryce Li (Tam) - Abigail Adriano (Kim) in the Australian production of "Miss Saigon" |
The timing for this production of Cameron Mackintosh’s new production of Boublil & Schonberg’s “Miss Saigon” could hardly have been better, opening as it does in the very week in which Australia is commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the war in Vietnam.
Although
labelled ‘new’ this production was actually premiered in London in 2014.
However Mackintosh has charged his director for the Australian production,
Jean-Pierre Van der Spuy, to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the
Australian casting to adapt and evolve this production, even to the point of
bringing in Australian designer, Jennifer Irwin, to redesign the Engineer’s
costumes.
As a result this spine-tingling production feels as unnervingly prescient today as when this show was first seen in Australia in 1995. From the moment the sounds of helicopter’s hovering overhead rattle the theatre during the overture, and a vulnerable, young Vietnamese girl, dressed in white, is glimpsed among the teaming bustle of Saigon, the musical sweeps the audience into the horrors of the lives of people trying to survive in a city under seige.
Abigail Adriano in the Australian production of "Miss Saigon" |
Loosely
based on the opera “Madam Butterfly”, this sung-through musical tells a similar
story focussing on the travails of a seventeen-year-old Vietnamese girl, Kim,
who falls in love with an American Marine named Chris. Chris rescues her from
the clutches of an opportunistic night-club owner, known as The Engineer, but during
the fall of Saigon, the couple are separated and lose touch with each other.
The
circumstances under which they’re eventually re-united provide the shattering
conclusion to her story.
Seann Miley Moore (The Engineer) in the Australian production of "Miss Saigon" |
Brilliant
use of darkness, shadows and haze in the production and lighting design constantly
confuse the eye so that evocative set-pieces swirl and glide around
the stage allowing it to transform seamlessly into gaudy nightclubs, squalid
dressing rooms, spectacular military parades, even a romantic candle-lit garden
for an impromptu wedding ceremony.
Perhaps the
most spectacular transformation of all is achieved with the staging of the fall
of Saigon, with its famous helicopter scene, which has never been more
convincingly portrayed than in this stunning iteration, the climax of which
leaves the audience ducking in their seats as the helicopter departs.
The Fall of Saigon in the Australian production of "Miss Saigon" |
But despite
the brilliance of the staging, it is the performances of the cast which linger
in the mind. Particularly that of newcomer, Abigail
Adriano, luminous in the central role as Kim.
Herself only
eighteen-years-old, and undertaking her first leading role, Adriano is heart-breaking
as the tragic Kim. Her acting is already extraordinarily assured, as is her
singing. Her duets with the young Marine,
Chris, sensitively portrayed by Nigel Huckle, provide a series of poignant high
points, especially their soaring performance of “The Last Night of the World”.
Abigail Adriano (Kim) and Nigel Huckle (Chris) in the Australian production of "Miss Saigon" |
However it’s Adriano's dramatic duets with other characters that best demonstrate her range and accomplishment. The superbly staged duet “I Still Believe” with Ellen (Kerrie Anne Greenland), and the terrifying “You Will Not Touch Him” with Thuy (Laurence Mossman), and especially her heart-rending solo, “I’d Give My Life for You”, which she sings to her little son, Tam, played on opening night by Bryce Li, one of six no-doubt equally adorable children who play this role.
The other stand-out
performance is that of Seann Miley Moore as The Engineer. Portrayed as a flamboyant,
opportunistic survivor, Moore dazzles with his flair and inventiveness
climaxing with his extended, show-stopping performance of “The American
Dream”.
i
Seann Miley Moore (The Engineer) and the Australian cast in "The American Dream. |
Throughout,
the singing of the large cast is superb with memorable highlights provided by
Kimberly Hodgson (Gigi) with “The Movie in My Mind, Nick Afoa (John) with “Bui Doi” and
Kerrie Anne Greenland (Ellen) with “Maybe”.
Apart
from the masterful staging, dazzling choreography and accomplished performances
on offer, there is also the additional pleasure of hearing William David
Brohn’s masterful musical arrangements for Schonberg’s magnificent score performed by the superb 25 piece
orchestra, conducted by Guy Simpson, who delighted in highlighting details like
Craig Driscoll’s wailing clarinet solo introduction to “The Last Night of the World”, while
insuring that none of the all-important lyrics were overpowered.
But, although
exhilarated by skill and pizazz of the cast and creatives involved in creating
Opera Australia’s stunning new production of this musical masterpiece, it was
hard to avoid the realisation, that Australia is
already reflecting on the continuing human cost of involvement in the terrible events, depicted
so powerfully in this musical, while searching for ways to prevent
threatened re-occurrences.
Whether you
will be re-visiting “Miss Saigon” or seeing it for the first time, this is a spectacular, thought-provoking production you should not miss.
(PS - At the risk
of being parochial, both
understudies for the leading role of Chris, Bill Bouchier and Sam Ward, cut
their theatrical teeth in productions by Canberra musical theatre companies, while Opera Australia’s Senior Producer, responsible for this production, Pella Gregory, is the daughter of well-known Canberrans, Gordon and Alpha Gregory OAM).
All images by Daniel Boud with the exception of the "Fall of Saigon" image which is by Matthew Murphy & Johan Persson.
This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.arts review.com.au