First night review
It was full steam ahead for fun as the good ship SS
American, crewed by a talented Llangollen Operatic Society cast, headed out
into the Atlantic on its maiden voyage earlier tonight (Tuesday).
The society has a five-night run until Saturday at the Town
Hall with the classic Cole Porter musical Anything Goes, which is set aboard
the ocean liner as it journeys from New York to London sometime in the Jazz
Age.
And the opening performance was a real Blue Riband affair as
the 24-strong cast powered their way through a marvellous collection of songs,
some ship-shape acting and enough tots of humour to make a sailor groggy.
The story involves
madcap antics aboard SS American as she heads across the pond.
Billy Crocker is
a stowaway in love with heiress Hope Harcourt, who is engaged to Sir Evelyn
Oakleigh.
Nightclub singer
Reno Sweeney and Public Enemy #13 Moonface Martin aid Billy in his quest to get
the girl.
Along the way
there are some delicious renditions of memorable numbers such as Anything Goes,
You’re the Top and I Get a Kick Out of You.
Certainly getting
a kick out of her role as Reno Sweeney is Llangollen stalwart Louisa Jones who
vamps it up in fine style at Reno, a racy gal but with a heart of gold and a
voice like a touch of velvet.
A true song and
danceman who can also handle a range of spoof accents as he assumes different
guises to avoid a spell in the brig is called for when it comes the role of
Billy.
And that’s just
what it gets in the shape of relative Llangollen newcomer Paul Bailey.
His love
interest, Hope Harcourt, is nicely played by another member of the society’s
growing band of new singings, Danielle Chamberlain. She can act and she surely
can sing.
Bill Hughes, one
of Llangollen’s regulars, who can seemingly turn his hand to any leading role, superbly
fills the upper class shoes of Sir Evelyn Oakleigh.
A neat comedy
touch is applied by Richard Mascarenhas as the gangster Moonface Martin, who
ain’t nearly so bad as his reputed position as America’s public enemy number 13
suggests.
Bonnie, Moonface’s
moll, is played believably by Stephanie Cottam and Mrs Harcourt, Hope’s
battleaxe of a mum, is well handled by Jeanette Robinson.
More laughs come
from the direction of Llangollen faithfuls Tony Jones and Jan Bellis as a
couple of comedy Chinese men.
The songs – solos,
duets and three-handers – are all expertly performed and the chorus numbers are
toe-tappingly powerful.
The whole show is
a credit to director Chrissie Ashworth and the entire behind-the-scenes team
deserve applause every bit as warm as the ones directed at the cast as the
curtain falls.
The only pity is
that the first night audience was so small.
If you fancy a
real treat try a voyage aboard the SS American any time over the next four
nights at 7.30pm.
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