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Into The Woods - Roleystone Theatre

Thu, 15 Apr 2010, 11:24 pm
DazzaB5 posts in thread

I had the good fortune this Saturday just gone to drive up the hill to Roleystone Theatre and see their current production of Sondheim's Into the Woods. As a blanket statement at the beginning of my review, I would like to say that before I saw this production, I would not have believed a community theatre would have been able to pull this show off so well. A pleasant (and most enjoyable) surprise!

The production was set very cleverly, with large books present on the apron that would open to create staging for that particular fairytale. For example, the book entitled Rapunzel would open up to reveal Rapunzel in her tower. Very clever and effective. My one small gripe with this was the addition of a Red Riding Hood book that never opened. I understand that this was clearly built to balance the set, however, I personally feel in this case that the set would have worked equally well with one book on one side and two on the other - but that could be part of my personal vendetta against symmetry ;) Upstage of the apron, the designers created a wood for the performers to get lost in that exhibited a beautiful fairytale book quality with its simplicity while avoiding "cardboard cut-out syndrome". And apart from the odd jolted fly in, the crew are to be commended for their manipulation of the intricate details of the set.

I would also like to offer my profound respect to Musical Director Matt Austin. The understanding of Sondheim's score and the precision with which Mr. Austin controlled both the orchestra and the performers on stage is to be commended. In my humble opinion, a Sondheim musical doesn't have room for error - the lyrics are convoluted, the melodies rarely go where one would expect them to and more often than not there are more people singing separate parts than there are orchestra members. The music in this production was sublimely crafted and controlled; a strong testament to the discipline and efforts of an extremely talented MD - well done indeed.

As for individual performances... Well, it's very difficult to pick stand outs from the cast, as the whole ensemble put in a performances that I feel they can be proud of. Pretty much every character had their own stand out moments: be it the two Prince Charmings' Agony (stunning comic timing); or Jack's Giants in the Sky (breath-taking vocal control - it would be easy to belt, but to draw the audience in with softness...); or Rapunzel's pure voice; or the Baker's heart-wrenching realisation that his wife had died (you had me in tears); or the Bakers Wife's strength and determination; or the Witch's, well, everything. I could go on and on about the various moments that I connected with in this show, but it is getting late and I should probably think about wrapping this up and heading to bed.

All in all, I would just like to offer my humble congratulations to the cast and crew of Into the Woods  - I feel you have a show that you can be truly proud of, well done :)

Darren

Thread (5 posts)

DazzaBThu, 15 Apr 2010, 11:24 pm

I had the good fortune this Saturday just gone to drive up the hill to Roleystone Theatre and see their current production of Sondheim's Into the Woods. As a blanket statement at the beginning of my review, I would like to say that before I saw this production, I would not have believed a community theatre would have been able to pull this show off so well. A pleasant (and most enjoyable) surprise!

The production was set very cleverly, with large books present on the apron that would open to create staging for that particular fairytale. For example, the book entitled Rapunzel would open up to reveal Rapunzel in her tower. Very clever and effective. My one small gripe with this was the addition of a Red Riding Hood book that never opened. I understand that this was clearly built to balance the set, however, I personally feel in this case that the set would have worked equally well with one book on one side and two on the other - but that could be part of my personal vendetta against symmetry ;) Upstage of the apron, the designers created a wood for the performers to get lost in that exhibited a beautiful fairytale book quality with its simplicity while avoiding "cardboard cut-out syndrome". And apart from the odd jolted fly in, the crew are to be commended for their manipulation of the intricate details of the set.

I would also like to offer my profound respect to Musical Director Matt Austin. The understanding of Sondheim's score and the precision with which Mr. Austin controlled both the orchestra and the performers on stage is to be commended. In my humble opinion, a Sondheim musical doesn't have room for error - the lyrics are convoluted, the melodies rarely go where one would expect them to and more often than not there are more people singing separate parts than there are orchestra members. The music in this production was sublimely crafted and controlled; a strong testament to the discipline and efforts of an extremely talented MD - well done indeed.

As for individual performances... Well, it's very difficult to pick stand outs from the cast, as the whole ensemble put in a performances that I feel they can be proud of. Pretty much every character had their own stand out moments: be it the two Prince Charmings' Agony (stunning comic timing); or Jack's Giants in the Sky (breath-taking vocal control - it would be easy to belt, but to draw the audience in with softness...); or Rapunzel's pure voice; or the Baker's heart-wrenching realisation that his wife had died (you had me in tears); or the Bakers Wife's strength and determination; or the Witch's, well, everything. I could go on and on about the various moments that I connected with in this show, but it is getting late and I should probably think about wrapping this up and heading to bed.

All in all, I would just like to offer my humble congratulations to the cast and crew of Into the Woods  - I feel you have a show that you can be truly proud of, well done :)

Darren

Walter PlingeFri, 16 Apr 2010, 09:05 am

Dazza, just a lil note,the

Dazza, just a lil note,the wolf jumps outta LRRH book in the opening number :)
DazzaBWed, 21 Apr 2010, 11:49 pm

Shows how much I know *wink*

Well there you go - I didn't notice that at all. I will eat my humble pie quietly in the corner ;) Congrats again, I loved the show :D "Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes. Art is knowing which ones to keep." Scott Adams
Christian DaltonSun, 25 Apr 2010, 01:04 pm

There was a dwarf standing guard!

Usually I frown on cursing when used inappropriately, but in this case I feel it is needed when I say that this production was F##KING AWESOME!!! This was exactly what I needed. A pretty much faultless show, that took me from my current rollercoaster, and allowed me to relax and ride another whilst taking me on a f##king mindblowing enjoyable journey through the woods. It was so nice to see a show for once that didn't have a contrast of some sheer genius moments straight down to some complete and utter crap ones. Ladies and Gentlemen, this show is most certainly crap free!! Not even a whiff of it!! A slightly wobbly follow spot perhaps. But come on, unless you're one of those who checks a dictionary for spelling mistakes, or lives in your mothers basement, who gives a flying s##t about a follow spot when the talent is banging out performances like this. And this is amateur!?!? If this is amateur, all I can say is "Munch on this pro theatre!" Darren my friend, you have hit the nail smack bang on the head when praising the cast. Hit it, smashed it, knocked that badboy to the ground. It really is far toooooooo hard to pick out the best performers as they all have their magical moments. Just when you think the Baker and his wife are cooking up a storm with their vocals...'BAM'....Cinderella is then in her own personal vocal zone. And then....'BAM'.....the Witch hits back with hers, and...'BAM'....Little Red Riding Hood has her say, and so on and so on. A wham, bam, thank-you mam, "Stick that in your pipe and smoke it!" vocal marathon. Totally polished! And that was just the singing. The acting too was spot on. Cheese, seriousness, comedy. The works. Great depth by the Witch especially. The group movement and choreography was also very good. Every character was on par, and the numbers flowed perfectly allowing the audience to see them as individuals, and as a group. At one point I thought to myself "S##t, there's actually a lot of characters cleverly weaving amongst one another during this number! I'm spoilt for choice as to who to watch!!" The funny looking guy in the pink shirt and Tiffany's necklace did well at choreographing. Much love Manny! Hats off to Matt Austin and his gang for taking on Sondheim and hitting the mark. You can definately walk around like 'King Dingaling' now lol!! Awesome work my friend. Bloody awesome! Some of my personal highlights too had to be the "Agony" number. I am actually still laughing about it, especially the 'dwarf standing guard' line. The knife-happy grandma also had me wetting myself. Perhaps that's just my sick, twisted humour. Either way, bloody hilarious. A tomboy Little Red Riding Hood, a vulnerable jack, a stereotypical prince, a dirty wolf, 2 blind sisters, a narrator with great stage presence, and more. Mix those with great performers who understand the importance of each characters existence in this tale, and you have the perfect ingredients for an a##-wooping show. Loved it, loved it....f##king loved it!! Even the slightly large chap sat next to me who stole my damn arm rest and pushed me towards the other side of my seat couldn't stop me enjoying my time at Roleystone. For any theatre go-ers who actually opted to stay home and miss out on seeing this show....you're gunna need a pregnancy test because you just got screwed!! There are giants in the sky? More like there are giants on the stage!:) Great job guys. Christian Dalton "A true actor is more himself, when he is not himself, and lost in a character."
BabarTue, 27 Apr 2010, 02:01 pm

Dwarfs are very upsetting...

Great to read such a positive response :) Thanks for coming up the hill!
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