* The splendid cast of Oliver! line up.
Just like the hungry little lad in the title, Llangollen Operatic Society
Young ‘Uns’ production of the evergreen musical
Oliver! at the Town Hall leaves the audience begging for more.
Although there are lavish helpings of top-class entertainment from start to
finish, it’s hard to get enough of the mouth-watering characterisations and
delicious singing from a talented cast of more than 40 youngsters.
So good is it that at times it’s difficult to believe that you’re watching
kids not seasoned adults tackling the Lionel Bart masterpiece based on the Dickens’
classic
Oliver Twist.
But with the notable exception of Chris Simms who is on loan from the “grown
up” operatic society to lay on a marvellously mischievous Fagin, the rest of
the actors are five to 18 year olds.
The acting and singing talent just keeps being served up in course after
tasty course.
Connor Phillips pads up to neatly portray the overweight and painfully
pompous workhouse boss Mr Bumble, ably assisted in the comedy routines by Holly
Broadbent as his shrewish assistant Widow Corney.
It’s Bumble who balls out little Oliver for daring to ask for another
ladleful of gruel and didn’t the cute, curly-haired Rhys Penge as our orphaned
hero receive the bad news with the perfect balance of pathos and indignation?
In fact, young Rhys goes on to shine throughout in his centrepiece role, never
missing a line or a lyric and bringing a tear to many an eye as he sings the
plaintive
Where is Love?
At the grim funeral parlour where he flees to escape the nightmare of the
workhouse, Oliver encounters the appalling Sowerberry family, headed by Will
Edwards as the oily undertaker and with Megan Howlett as his overbearing wife.
Both are highly proficient in the respective parts as is Zoe Nicholas as
their dopey daughter Charlotte. The two girls’ reactions as a feisty Oliver
fights to get out of the coffin in which they’ve placed him and are sitting
atop to keep him there for everyone’s safety is something to behold.
Another vile character Oliver meets at the undertakers is apprentice Noah Claypole
and, although he doesn’t have too big a slice of the action, the part is very
convincingly played by Cassius Hackforth.
Poor Oliver’s fortunes hardly improve when he hot-foots it to London after
leaving the awful company of the Sowerberrys because it’s there he falls in
with the worst of bad company, Fagin who heads a band of junior thieves, and
arch-criminal Bill Sykes. The only saving grace is Bill’s long suffering girl
and Fagin graduate Nancy.
Operatic stalwart Chris Simms gives Fagin just the right balance of villainy
and humour and delights with his interpretation of
Reviewing the Situation.
Sykes doesn’t work unless he’s portrayed as a thoroughly evil psychopath,
and Wilf Wort does not disappoints in the part. Again, he’s only in his teens
but he can certainly act and manages to send a shiver down the spine with the
way he batters and eventually murders the faithful Nancy. At one point in the
action he even spits at her for real, hopefully missing the excellent Joanna
Stallard.
Joanna has a singular talent all of her own. Acting, singing and even
dancing are clearly second nature to her and, as Nancy, she is quite simply
superb.
Her powerful and deeply moving rendition of
As Long As Needs Me was a show-stopper in the truest sense. She
also leads the exuberant action in the drinking song Oom-Pah-Pah which is performed
with such gusto by the entire cast that some of the audience would love to have
got up on stage and joined in too.
Also well up there with the stars of the show is Charlie Hackforth as the
Artful Dodger. He simply radiates confidence as Fagin’s cheeky chappy
apprentice and reaches out over the footlights in way which belies his years.
All the supporting roles are very competently filled and when the whole cast
team up for the chorus numbers it’s a colourful and melodic spectacle to
remember.
Providing the backing for all this is a live four-piece orchestra skilfully led
by musical director Elen Mair Roberts who also provides a mean violin solo to
accompany Fagin in
Reviewing the
Situation.
This
Oliver! – the Young ‘Uns’ 25
th
annual show - is a fine tribute to new artistic director Christine Dukes. She had
the same role with famous Youth Theatre at the Stiwt in Rhos for 14 years, and this
wealth of skills and experience shines out.
Oliver! opened on Thursday night
and still has two performances to go today – a matinee at 2.30pm and the evening
show at 7.30pm. Catch one of them if you can!
Tickets are available door or, if you’re lucky, from Llangollen Tourist
Information Centre (01978 860828), Jades Hair and Beauty, Gwyn Davies,
Butcher, or Stella Bond (01978 860441). Tickets cost £8 for adults and £5
for concessions.