Billy Elliot the musical
May. 28th, 2008 01:23 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Billy Elliot?
Brilliant. No. Really. Brilliant. If you liked the film? The musical is *better*. If you haven't seen the film? Go anyway. The staging. The dancing. The singing. The acting. The dialogue. The choreography. All. Fucking. Brilliant. (and lots of swearing. :g:)
The *entire cast* is amazing. (looking at the soundtrack from 2006, it appears several of the cast, especially the ensemble, are still the originals) Special mention to Nana who's really funny, and Michael who had the audience in hysterics, and Mr. Braithwaite, whose role is seriously expanded and does some of the best comedy dancing *not* done by the Trocks, and then there's the one-liners given to George the boxing coach. mwhahahaha. Plus, we must just hug the little kid who wanders in and out of the entire thing.
But seriously, the choreography? There's this bit in the 'Solidarity' song where you've got the ballet girls trapped between the fighting miners and coppers, then dancing in and out of them. Kinda jaw-dropping. Oh, and any time Billy's onstage.
The miners' strike and issues are more omnipresent than in the film (film had it as background, musical has it as a major theme), and the expansion of some characters means it's funnier and more haunting. The bit with his mum's letter had the audience in floods of tears.
My *only* pout is that when we see the adult Billy (set to the Swan Lake music) he's not in the Matthew Bourne version outfit. Pout pout pout, says the Matthew Bourne addict. But yeah. One. Single. Peeve. (that whole dance sequence is entrancing, though)
Admittedly some of the references and songs, eg, 'Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher' will probably go straight over people's heads if you're not familiar with the period -
andromakie, was it you who said this? And yeah, they did make a joke about the americans in the audience not getting one bit, so who knows how much they get it on Broadway. If you are familiar, the references fuel your emotions something chronic.
BTW : Elton John, what the hell have you been wasting your life on before this?
Mum of course found it rather amusing that I couldn't get rid of the Geordie accent during the interval.
Oh, and it is bloody weird to hear a musical sung in a Geordie accent. You're used to hearing generic American or Deep South or Cockney, but Geordie's a new one. Not to mention it's often the case that dialogue's done in accent but the songs are sung in normal voice (which is often nothing like their natural accent due to diction training). Next stop, Brummie. Anyone for the life of Shakespeare? :g:
Now I want to see them do it for touring and put it up in Newcastle. Admittedly you'd have to modify a bunch of the scenery stuff, but some of the throwaway jokes are infinitely funnier if you were brought up with Geordie relatives, so god knows how much funnier they are if you're actually Geordie. (plus of course the general period/emotional ties)
Brilliant. No. Really. Brilliant. If you liked the film? The musical is *better*. If you haven't seen the film? Go anyway. The staging. The dancing. The singing. The acting. The dialogue. The choreography. All. Fucking. Brilliant. (and lots of swearing. :g:)
The *entire cast* is amazing. (looking at the soundtrack from 2006, it appears several of the cast, especially the ensemble, are still the originals) Special mention to Nana who's really funny, and Michael who had the audience in hysterics, and Mr. Braithwaite, whose role is seriously expanded and does some of the best comedy dancing *not* done by the Trocks, and then there's the one-liners given to George the boxing coach. mwhahahaha. Plus, we must just hug the little kid who wanders in and out of the entire thing.
But seriously, the choreography? There's this bit in the 'Solidarity' song where you've got the ballet girls trapped between the fighting miners and coppers, then dancing in and out of them. Kinda jaw-dropping. Oh, and any time Billy's onstage.
The miners' strike and issues are more omnipresent than in the film (film had it as background, musical has it as a major theme), and the expansion of some characters means it's funnier and more haunting. The bit with his mum's letter had the audience in floods of tears.
My *only* pout is that when we see the adult Billy (set to the Swan Lake music) he's not in the Matthew Bourne version outfit. Pout pout pout, says the Matthew Bourne addict. But yeah. One. Single. Peeve. (that whole dance sequence is entrancing, though)
Admittedly some of the references and songs, eg, 'Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher' will probably go straight over people's heads if you're not familiar with the period -
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BTW : Elton John, what the hell have you been wasting your life on before this?
Mum of course found it rather amusing that I couldn't get rid of the Geordie accent during the interval.
Oh, and it is bloody weird to hear a musical sung in a Geordie accent. You're used to hearing generic American or Deep South or Cockney, but Geordie's a new one. Not to mention it's often the case that dialogue's done in accent but the songs are sung in normal voice (which is often nothing like their natural accent due to diction training). Next stop, Brummie. Anyone for the life of Shakespeare? :g:
Now I want to see them do it for touring and put it up in Newcastle. Admittedly you'd have to modify a bunch of the scenery stuff, but some of the throwaway jokes are infinitely funnier if you were brought up with Geordie relatives, so god knows how much funnier they are if you're actually Geordie. (plus of course the general period/emotional ties)
no subject
Date: 2008-05-28 04:07 pm (UTC)Film = T-Rex = good
Musical = Elton John = BAD.
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Date: 2008-05-28 04:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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