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Cruisin'

Sat, 27 Oct 2007, 12:28 pm
Melina30 posts in thread

I went to see Cruisin' ('The New 50s Rock 'n' Roll Musical') last night at the Regal Theatre in Subiaco.

The costumes, sets and band were very impressive. Definitely gave the overall vibe of a professional show.

The dancers were very tight, smiley and had high energy at all times - they are to be commended for bringing that true flavour of 50s 'peppiness' to the show! Special note must go to Ben Hamer as Neville - his energy and facial expressions were great to watch.

Katherine Jenkins, who played Rosa, was a breath of fresh air. Sensitive acting and a beautiful voice.

Tina Jackson, as Giovanna, was also very good. I read in the program she has played this role before and it's obviously paid off. Great characterisation and a lovely voice. Pity she didn't have more to sing.

Andre Ford as Vinnie did very well. Seems he's a newcomer to the theatre scene - so that made his performance even more impressive.

The Murphy brothers were well received, and Glen Shorrock is certainly a showman - he received some good laughs.

One of the main things that let this show down was the script. The dialogue is weak, rambling and characters sometimes sound like they're talking in circles. (I wasn't sure if this was due to lines being forgotten at times?)

A little more thought might also benefit the delivery of dialogue. At times some actors were delivering lines in a rambling fashion without, it seems, really realising the meaning behind them. Then when they suddenly became upset or angry - there seemed no real motivation for it.

The show dragged a little and I believe one of the main factors in this was that all the action/plot points happening in the first act. The second act was made up almost entirely of 'reaction songs' and associated dialogue. Ie: characters continuously asking eachother 'are you okay' and explaining through words or song why they are upset.

That might sound a bit of a strange complaint, but in script-writing is it essential that plot points must continue throughout to keep the story chugging along and motivate the next action etc etc. I realise this is of no fault of the actors last night, but it's still an important point when looking at the show as a whole, and may explain why Cruisin' has been a school production for many years. Naturally, there is a place for reaction songs, but they're better placed in a well-crafted denouement.

In the same regard, some scenes seemed unnecessary. The wedding scene and the streetscene would be examples of this. While they were probably enjoyable scenes to do - once again - every thing that happens on stage must happen for a plot-motivated reason (not just to cover set changes... as may have been the case for one of them).

The opening scene seemed a little awkward as well... perhaps something went wrong? I wasn't too sure what was going on...

I must admit that having paid over $70 (ticket plus booking fee) for this show, I feel cheated. If it had have been a bit cheaper, I would've been happier, but no matter whether the show is studded with 'pros' and 'Idols' that type of pricing must realistically equate to performance/show quality.

Nevertheless, congratulations to all for a very high energy effort. I am well aware of the trials and triumphs of putting on shows so well done and thanks for all your hard work.

 

Thoughts

Fri, 2 Nov 2007, 11:29 pm
I went to the Saturday matinee. My overall impression was that it's an uneven production and overly long. The positives: there were some good songs particularly the slower numbers/ballads where the band didn't drown out the singers; there was a certain energy and enthusiasm; some of the set designs were quite good; some performances were well done - Vinnie, Giovanna, Rosa (understudy), Chris Murphy's part. The problems were the repetitious dialogue - the whole Italian family thing was done to death as was the generation gap commentary between the old home ways and the new rock n' roll. The opening scene did jar and has been mentioned other scenes were superfluous - the wedding and the Sister Immaculate scenes for example. The story is quite simple and cliched (Battle of the Bands, boy meets girl, coming of age) but that kind of suits the 50s setting if only the exposition wasn't so hamfisted. The transition between scenes was a bit clunky with music played over curtain. There were times when the dialogue scenes didn't flow and that seemed to be an issue with lines and timing. Shorrock only once had a song that truly showed off his vocal talent. And, as mentioned, the band drowned out the singers in some of the more up tempo numbers. Also, I hate to say it, but the actor playing Pamela didn't have a good singing voice at all. This certainly could be tightened - play down the Italian angle and the repetition that surrounds this - it's the 50s - parents and teenagers of any ilk were at odds over the 'new music'. Take out the extraneous scenes - if the climax is the Battle of the Bands (with it's predictable but unavoidable conclusion) then chart the course to this and the obstacles to the main character (Vinnie) and not get distracted by incidentals. After the climax with Vinnie's big moment and reconciliation with the father we go to (and linger on) a secondary character's triumph (Giovanna) which seemed terribly odd. Most of all, it needed more humour - there were some light-hearted moments which breathed life into the production and countered the dialogue heavy melodrama. More of this would go a long way to helping the tone of the piece. One of the cleverest pieces of writing was the 'Joe Dolce moment' that was funny and a knowing wink to the audience. In all, I enjoyed parts of this, was frustrated by others, pleasantly surprised at some of the performances (not being an Idol watcher I didn't really know who the Murphy brothers were); liked the attempt at pulling off a period piece musical and thought some of the songs were quite good. Keep the songs, be ruthless with the dialogue and plotting and this could evolve to another level.

Thread (30 posts)

Cruisin'Melina27 Oct 2007
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