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Video of the Week: Inherit the Wind at the Old Vic

We head to the Old Vic for this week’s video recommendation. The wonderful Kevin Spacey stars in Inherit The Wind, a fab courtroom drama about the freedom of thought.

When it opened in September this year, the show got some great reviews. It’s currently running until 20 December. If this little snippet whets your appetite, book your tickets now. You won’t be disappointed.

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Thursday Theatre News: Hair, Petticoats and Star-Studded Lamps

Dreamboats and Petticoats returns to the West End in JanuaryThis week’s news is dominated by the news about Hair coming back to London’s West End!

We’re too young to know anything about the original(!) but we’ve heard our parents talking about it, recognise the songs (Aquarius and Let The Sunshine In) and it all the stories about it from the 60s sound incredible. (Plus, anything starring Elaine Paige, Richard O’Brien, Tim Curry and Paul Nicholas must’ve been amazing!)

It’s also exciting to have the first entire Tony-award-winning Broadway cast opening a musical in London. We’ve got to wait til April, but it’s down in our diaries to get tickets!

In other theatre news, Dreamboats and Petticoats, the musical inspired by an album of 50s songs, is due to reopen in January. From a successful touring show, this musical was so popular at the Savoy this summer, it extended its run by seven weeks!

And now it’s coming back: book your tickets to see it at the Playhouse from 6 January. Anyone out there seen it and want to tell us about it? We’re yet to catch this one.

If you’re looking for a shorter-term theatre fix, Panto season is very nearly upon us! We’ve had news from the Lyric that the rehearsals for Jack and the Beanstalk are well under way. Backstage, the Dame’s seven (count them!) dresses are almost finished, and the 4-metre-tall Giant is getting close to being brought to life…

Over at the New Wimbledon Theatre, we’ve heard news their panto has added another jewel to its star-studded Aladdin’s lamp. Anita Dobson (fresh from baring all in Calendar Girls, but best-known to the world as Angie Watts from EastEnders in the 80s) is the final star to share the role of the Genie of the Lamp alongside Ruby Wax, Pamela Anderson and Paul O’Grady.

Do you have plans to see any of London’s fantastic Pantos? Let us know which baddie you’ll be booing and hissing at over the Christmas season…

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Sister Act The Musical

Deloris van Cartier / Sister Mary Clarence (Patina Miller) and nuns. Photo by Catherine Ashmore

Seeing Sister Act The Musical with my very own sister was one of the highlights of my month. After the show I was on a high for the next week!

Having watched the 1992 movie starring Whoopi Goldberg, I was looking forward to seeing this comedy-crime-musical brought to the London stage. Sister Act The Musical is produced by Whoopi Goldberg and stars Patina Miller as Deloris.

The story: Deloris Van Carter witnesses her gangster boyfriend committing murder. She then joins the witness protection program and is hidden in a convent. Deloris makes friends with the nuns and soon blows her cover.

The show features a new score by Alan Menken packed with heavenly hits. Each cast member has their moment to shine. The show offers a good range of vocal talents and song types. Chris Jarman plays Deloris’ boyfriend Shank. He has a voice as smooth and deep as Barry White. The musical also includes impressive set pieces with a full nun choir!

As you might expect, I found myself looking to get my sister’s attention when Deloris sang the song Sister Act. In the end I found myself asking the question “Was Patina Miller on a par with Whoopi Goldberg in the lead role? The Answer: “Absolutely”.

I came away feeling that Sister Act The Musical was better than the movie. It’s well worth a trip to the West End.

Sister Act The Musical is booking at the London Palladium until 13 February 2010.

Have you seen a famous movie adapted for the London stage such as Breakfast at Tiffany’s or The Shawshank Redemption. Which was better: the film or the show?

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Thursday Theatre News: Cattrall and La Cage, Anthony and Awards, and Silence of the Lambs: The Musical!

Anthony Head returns to the London stage next yearWe start this week’s London theatre news by bringing you some exciting casting announcements:

There’s Anthony Head (from Buffy to Merlin to the Old Vic) leading the cast in Six Degrees of Separation from January next year; and a winning team in Kim Cattrall and Matthew MacFadyen, starring in Noel Coward’s Private Lives at the Vaudeville from February. It suddenly seems a long time until the start of 2010; we can’t wait!

Another West End show which has benefitted from its fab celeb casting has announced closing dates this week. The wonderfully camp La Cage Aux Folles has featured star turns from Graham Norton and John Barrowman, but it’ll be shaking its feather-boas for the last time at the Playhouse Theatre on 2 January. Book now, if you haven’t seen it yet! Fittingly, like a well-made transvestite’s glove, the actor who opened this revival in London back in 2007, Douglas Hodge will be back wearing the diamonds and dresses for the final curtain. It’s sad news for London, but we should be proud that this award-winning, sequin-filled show is headed to Broadway for 2010.

And we move from award-winners to awards season in Theatreland! The Evening Standard Theatre Awards shortlist was announced this week. Dominated by the Royal Court (well done Jerusalem, Enron, Mark Rylance, Samuel West, and my favourite, Rupert Goold), there’s also shows from the National (August: Osage County) and the Lyric (Punk Rock). The prize for best musical will be fought out between two revivals, A Little Night Music and Hello, Dolly!, and two new productions, Been So Long and Spring Awakening. Read the complete shortlist here.

The ES awards will be announced at the Royal Opera House on 23 November. After that, we’ve got the Theatregoers’ Choice Awards and the Critics’ Circle Awards. We’ll bring you news on those when we have it!

Do the Evening Standard Theatre Awards sound a bit too passive for you, waiting to find out who the critics have chosen to reward for their talents? Would you prefer to have your say in who wins what? Then you should sign up to be an Olivier Awards judge! The lucky panel get to see about 80 shows in a year, before helping pick the best of the bunch. Sound like a dream come true? Sign up here.

Finally for this week, we’re thrilled to hit your silliness buttons again with news about SILENCE! The Musical, an unauthorised parody of the cult classic, The Silence of the Lambs, coming to London next year. The show features Olivier award-winner Miles Western as Hannibal Lecter, and opens on 19 January at The Above the Stag Theatre in Victoria. Expect singing serial killers, songs with titles we just can’t publish here, and a chorus of tap dancing lambs…

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Thursday Theatre News: Inspector Extends, Shawshank Closes, and Seasonal Silliness

The Shawshank Redemption closes on 29 NovemberKeeping you up-to-date with news from London’s theatres and the West End

We’re pleased to let you know that J B Priestly’s An Inspector Calls is transferring, following its limited run at the Novello theatre this autumn. Book now if you’re looking for a classy theatrical treat this Christmas: Stephen Daldry’s multi-award-winning production is on at Wyndham’s Theatre from 3 December.

In theatreland, where there’s one superb success story, there’s generally an early closing to add to the mix. And so this week, we bring you news that The Shawshank Redemption will be closing on 29 November. (It had been booking until 14 February.) Similarly, Prick Up Your Ears, which originally starred Matt Lucas as Kenneth Halliwell, has also announced it will close three weeks early. The play’s struggled since the departure of Lucas, and despite good reviews for Con O’Neill, ticket sales haven’t sustained the show.

We can also tempt you with long-range news this week. Our mouths are watering at the prospect of seeing David Suchet (Poirot to you and me) and the wonderful Zoe Wanamaker in Arthur Miller’s classic All My Sons at the Apollo Theatre in May next year (such a long wait – it’s not fair!).

And we’re also excited about the next instalment from The Old Vic’s Bridge Project. Stephen Dillane, Michelle Beck, Christian Camargo, and Juliet Rylance, following her famous father into Shakespeare, take on two of the bard’s plays from June next year. Sam Mendes directs this tasty cast in As You Like It and The Tempest. Kevin, you’re spoiling us.

Finally, silly season is nearly upon us with pantos and kids’ shows galore. And little sounds sillier than Stephen and The Sexy Partridge at the Trafalgar Studios. “Ever had a problem that really only a partridge could solve?” asks the show’s blurb. “And a sexy one, at that?” We’re not sure we have. But that doesn’t mean we’re not fascinated by Mighty Boosh director Cal McCrystal’s Christmas show, opening at the end of the month, featuring “bagpipe-playing potatoes, revolutionary hens, and dancing swans, and a love between one man and his bird.”

More next week…

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Love Bites at The Calder Bookshop Theatre

Love Bites posterLast night I was happy to discover a fringe theatre in London I’d never visited before. Positioned on The Cut, opposite the Young Vic, I must have walked past The Calder Bookshop Theatre many times, but never noticed it.

What makes this theatre unique is that, as its name suggests, it’s in a bookshop. I don’t mean in a room above a bookshop, but literally in the shop. We squeezed into the small shop, between walls of books, to see a series of short plays.

Love Bites is a showcase for new writing and currently features six shorts by various writers. All the plays are centred around the same bar and loosely based on the theme of love (with the emphasis on loosely).

The stories are really comedy sketches, apart from the third and most affecting play, Late One Evening, a conversation between a man who has been stood up and an intriguing older lady.

I was thoroughly entertained for two hours and, at just £10 a ticket, I’d highly recommend the show.

Love Bites is on at The Calder Bookshop Theatre until 13 November.

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Change: Magical Theatre From Arturo Brachetti

Change starring Arturo BrachettiGasps of wonder and spontaneous applause filled the Garrick Theatre last night as a Beefeater momentarily obscured himself with a sheet and dropped it to reveal a punk rocker. It was just one of many spectacular transformations made by magician and actor Arturo Brachetti during his new production, Change.

Change tells the story of a performer’s life as the artist spins his way in and out of spectacular costumes.

The art of quick change is centuries old and involves the use of props such as sheets, umbrellas and boxes to cover the performer for a split second as they change from one costume to the next.   

Part magician, part comedian, and a consumate showman, Brachetti’s signature show A Man of a Thousand Faces has been seen by more than one million people worldwide. 

Even a period of simple shadow play (probably so he can catch his breath) is charming.  Brachetti’s masterful performance really does need to be seen to be believed.

This delightful act, London-themed to further engage the audience, is one for the whole family – the children in front of me loved it. 

Change is at the Garrick Theatre until 3 January.

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Nation in Rehearsal at the Royal National Theatre

Nation starts previews at the National Theatre on 11 NovemberThis morning we were lucky enough to be invited along to watch a rehearsal of the National Theatre’s new show, Nation.

We headed deep into the bowels of the wonderful National Theatre (past a corridor with posters of people like Kenneth Branagh on the walls, and tiny, teasing name-tapes on the doors; we spotted one for Richard Griffiths – he gets a room to himself, other people were sharing) into a cavernous rehearsal room, dotted with actors, technical crew and stage hands.

Director Melly Still greeted us warmly, giving a quick synopsis of Terry Pratchett’s novel (read one here), which has been adapted for the stage by Mark Ravenhill. Mark was also watching the rehearsal with us, which was cool.

We then watched a few fantastic scenes where the lead character Mau confronts his enemies, and the new chieftain Cox, as well as his enemis’ god, Locaha. It was the final section of the play, where Mau’s extraordinary coming of age is finally realised.

From the short section we saw, with barefoot actors sporting few costumes, but lots of sportswear, we can tell you this looks like it’s going to be a really exciting piece of theatre. We were asked to imagine the 7ft effigy of Locaha, and excuse the actors shouting “bang!” rather than shooting pistols, but around these missing elements played a dynamic piece of very physical theatre with a real sense of tension, even in a short space of time. Despite it being just a rehearsal, we were gripped by Mau’s “swimming” on the arms of the ensemble, the struggle on the boat, and Mau’s final big decision…

The actors that stood out for us, even in just their rolled-up tracksuits and vests, were the super-good-looking Gary Carr as Mau, Paul Chahidi as Cox (looking nothing like his smiley picture this morning!) and Michael Mears’ creepily persuasive Locaha.

We were really interested in the foul-mouthed parrot, Milton, played by Jason Thorpe. At today’s rehearsal he was only wearing a kind of humped tail, and appeared briefly. But what we saw looked great. Melly says she sees Milton as one of the main sources of humour in the play, but also as a comic figure from the tradition of Lear’s Fool: one with a serious side to his jokes.

The rehearsal stage, domed with an interesting wooden crescent structure, serving as the sea, the beach, and possibly the whole world, revolved while actors drew spears and sang songs, evoking, Melly told us, the spirit of Polynesia. It was certainly an intense experience, being so close to the actors; we hope this intensity carries over into the Olivier after they’ve finished their six-week run of rehearsals and moved into the theatre proper.

There’s going to be lots of music in Nation too: the director promises “a colourful piece of musical theatre borrowing from the Polynesian aesthetic, without being tied to any particular reality.” A band consisting of a grand piano, two electric guitars, a classical harpist, and percussion (sometimes played by actors on stage) is being led by Adrian Sutton.

We don’t want to tell you too much and spoil any surprises. Nor, it seemed did director Melly. She was open enough about the relationship between Mark’s drafts, the novel, what’s possible for the actors and her visions for the play; she told us about the huge blocks of glass which will frame the back of the theatre, transforming the play’s aquatic moments with projected images of water; she revealed they’re still working on aspects of the staging…

However, asked whether Nation the play would open like the book does, with a tsunami, she simply said “Of course!” with a big smile, and waited.

The actors laughed and applauded her teasing: “How are we doing it?” she prompted. ”You’ll have to come and see!”

With free tickets for 15-25 year olds, and ticket prices for everyone else starting at just £10, we recommend that you do.

Nation starts previews on 11 November: book tickets here.

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Puppets for Grown-Ups at the Suspense Festival

Rust by Green Ginger

Puppets aren’t just for kids: there are companies all over the world producing puppet shows with grown-up themes.

Now some of the world’s top puppeteers are coming to London to perform at the adults-only Suspense London Puppetry Festival.

The programme encompasses everything from a raunchy puppet cabaret to a show about the life of Albert Einstein.

Don’t miss the brilliant Rust by Green Ginger, about two rival pirate radio stations.

The festival is organised by the Little Angel Theatre in Islington.

Creative Director Peter Glanville says, “People are engaging with puppetry in a way which is really quite exciting. War Horse, Avenue Q and Madame Butterfly are all part of that movement.”

The organisers hope the festival will introduce puppetry to new grown-up audiences. If you haven’t seen an adult puppet show before, book your tickets now!

Suspense is at venues across London from 30 October to 8 November.

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Visit London Asks: What’s Your Favourite London Musical?

That famous lift in Dirty Dancing The MusicalLast week we set stomachs rumbling and mouths watering with our question about your best London restaurants, in celebration of the London Restaurant Festival. Thanks to everyone who took part.

This week, our attention turns to theatre: namley musicals.

Today is Dirty Dancing The Musical’s birthday! It was three years ago today that the new musical opened at the Aldwych Theatre in London and broke all box office records with advance ticket sales of £11m.

And how is this brilliantly cheesy musical celebrating its 3rd birthday? With even more tickets going on sale! You can now book tickets to see Dirty Dancing right up until October 2010, taking the show up to its fourth birthday.

But Dirty Dancing is actually just like the Baby in the show in West End musical terms: yesterday The Lion King celebrated its 10th birthday. Celebrity guests arrived on a “yellow” carpet at the special 10th anniversary performance at the Lyceum Theatre. You can watch video footage of last night’s 10th anniversary show at the Official London Theatre website.

With both these wonderful shows celebrating success stories, we’d like to open up a debate, often heard in the VL office, to the world outside: what’s your favourite London musical? And why?!

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