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DIAMOND: Brighton Dome Studio: Theatre review

DIAMOND

DIAMOND is a story about what is possible if you believe in yourself, but more importantly like yourself.

It is a love story about a relationship between two outrageous homosexuals in the 30s and 40s when it was still illegal to be gay. The main characters are Lil who yearns for a traditional monogamous relationship and her partner Maisie who plays the field while believing that Lil will always be content so long as he returns home to her after his dallying. For years he gets away with it but finally Lil decides enough is enough and kicks him out.

Harry Young becomes Diamond Lil on his last day at school in 1924. He decides he is going to live his life honestly and comes to school after lunch dressed in high heels, make up and a frock, much to the shock of his school teacher, a closet queen.

An East End legend is born and the musical follows her life over the next 20 years as Lil holds HER community together through the war years and beyond.

Lil becomes the matriarch of HER own East End Community. Much of the narrative is centred in and around the Royal Oak Pub on the Caledonian Road where HER “community’ lives and plays. Lil becomes the unifying rock, dependable, brave and honest, giving advice and guidance to everyone around her. They all love and trust her. Bella the pub landlady and her barman son George; Lena a young prostitute who looks up to Lil as her mother, Lil’s brother and small time spiv Bill; fabulous Gladys the community gossip and the homophobic christian American GI, Arnie who quickly comes to learn that to win the heart of Lena he has to accept Lil for who she is.

Although basically a love story DIAMOND is much, much more. It is a fable about the importance of being who you are, standing up for who you are and demanding that people accept you for who you are. It is about the importance of community and the importance of being a good person within that community.

Dave Lynn is commanding in the central role of Lil. In fact that does not do his performance justice, he is quite magnificent in the role, breathing life into Lil,  a character that many 40 year old plus gay people will identify with but one that a younger age group might struggle to recognise and embrace.

Lil is indeed a Diamond, the type of person I want to be when I finally grow up. Confident, assured and a reservoir of humanity that Dave teases out through his performance which, while being subtle is very reassuring and has a wonderful feel good edge to it.  He reminded me of all those fabulous Queens I knew in Liverpool when I was growing up. I felt safe in his hands and was moved to tears by his final scene after the murder of his partner Maisie. This was not a drag queen playing a drag queen role, rather an accomplished performance by an actor who understood exactly the significance of the role of the matriarch in the community, any community no matter whether straight or gay. Dave endears Lil to the audience which makes the story telling much easier and believable. He was spot on with his character and his vocals were sympathetic to the musical score which was at times musically very demanding.

Stephen Richards plays Diamond Lil’s brother Bill, a flawed petty villain who thinks everyone and everything has a price. Stephen plays the tough guy very well but manages to leave us thinking that Bill could have a good side, somewhere buried deep inside. His stylist excelled and Stephen looked and smelt the part of an East London spiv.

Richard Pocock could steal the show if he wanted, but importantly does not. He has the ability, but more importantly has the discipline and understands that the central role of Diamond Lil is essential to the unfolding drama. Richard is lovely playing Maisie. If only all queens were this transparent! He loves cock and refuses to accept the guilt that goes with being exposed and caught out time and time again. His gin and tonic voice and elegant mannerisms create a character in reality we all already know, sort of like but are so pleased we are not like. He loves Lil for all the right reasons, his only problem is that his brain is in his trousers. His performance captures that moment when people who are led by their groins are helpless in stopping the inevitable happening. His delivery was inspiring to this weary homosexual as was his fine singing voice.

Corinna Gray plays Lena, a prostitute who becomes pregnant and goes to live with her GI lover in American after the end of the war. She does not fit in to his life in America, returns to England a broken women without her child and seeks out the only person who will not judge her, Lil. Corinna’s performance is pitched just right exposing the vulnerable side of Lena’s personality with the bare faced cheek needed to survive as a prostitute. Her vocal part is challenging but she delivers it with ease throughout.

Allan Jay plays Lena’s American GI, Arnie who is handsome, a great mover and has a fine singing voice. His American accent is convincing as is his clean cut ‘American boy next door look’. He performed his big number “That’s what the USA is all about” with conviction and was the reality check in the script and casting that confronts the issue of a “cock in a frock” head on.

Georgina Budd is a revelation playing Gladys. She bring to the surface those wonderful qualities that gossips have in abundance creating a warm and voluptuously sexy edge to her performance. She revealed bits of every gossip I know in different parts of her characterisation.

Mark Enticknap gives a solid performance playing good old dependable George. It is very difficult in a piece full of such colourful characters for an actor to even get a lookin but Mark gives a performance that is easy to warm to and he does not go unnoticed.

Holli Hoffman plays Bella the landlady of the Royal Oak Pub. She has seen it all and is one of Lil’s staunchest allies. She brings a tough exterior to the role but every now and then exposes some softer sides to her personality. She is the sort of woman you want on your side, fighting your battles with you rather than fighting against you.

The production is cleverly staged on an open set with a large screen used to keep you up to date with the storyline and to show images of old East End scenes. The set throughout was lit beautifully creating a relaxed feeling in the theatre, something that is challenging when the actors are so close to the front row of the audience. You are so close to the action you almost feel you are in the pub with them.

The music score is complex, not your conventional chorus and verse approach. The composer Robert Orledge skillfully tells the story through verse and the ensemble piece ‘Some kind of paradise’ just before the end is pure genius. The tunes are there but as with Sondheim you have to concentrate and listen carefully to appreciate the lyrical qualities of the music.

The show is skillfully directed by Ed Burnside, choreographed by Damien Delaney, beautifully designed by Ryan Dawson Laight who captures the period perfectly and produced by Tim Anscombe and Stephen Holroyd.

Written by Linda Wilkinson, this type of theatre is a piece of ‘living history’ and needs cherishing. It is also a wonderful piece of musical theatre.

Make the effort, go see it and experience how it was then and how it could be in the future if we all hold onto the values that made Diamond Lil such a special person.

The show runs till Sunday with performances on:

Wednesday at 7.30pm
Thursday at 7.30pm
Friday at 5pm and 8.30pm
Saturday at 5pm and 8.30pm
Sunday at 3pm

Tickets are £17.50 conc £15

To book CLICK HERE:

Or telephone: 01273 709 709

DIAMOND

The Perfect American by Phillip Glass: ENO: Review


My-Perfect-AmericanThe Perfect American

Philip Glass

June 1st

English National Opera

Written by Philip Glass, The Perfect American imagines the final months of Walt Disney’s life, including mythical imaginings of Abraham Lincoln and Andy Warhol. This latest opera from Glass, his 24th, was commissioned by ENO and Teatro Real Madrid to mark his 75th birthday.

This portrayal of Disney by Christopher Purves, from the semi fictional book by Peter Stephen Jungk’s is one of a driven myopic racist man who is determined to make his name live on down the centuries and to sell the world an odd fantasy idea of backwoods American all sweet-as-apple-pie and creepy as hell.  Purves is lyrical and convincing but never adds any depth to the character. It feels like a Disney film in that way, all mush and no grit. In this endless presentation of packaged perfection and saccharine mass produced happiness there are only a few dissenting voices. The chorus of the ENO are in fine form in this production being as sinister as they can with a pure Stepford vibe, quite delightfully menacing too, damning any dissention with their shrill declamations of Disney being ‘innocence in motion’ it was like being mobbed by the Norman Rockwell appreciation society.

Short video clip from the ENO here: 

8936587851_6e1868378a_hThe set from Phelim McDermott’s 59 production company is consistently on the go and suggestive of an operating theatre and film set and I found it fascinating to watch, it supported the change of action on stage well, the 360 degree projections adding to the feeling of isolation and mania that seems to surround Disney at all time, constantly at the helm of hundreds and hundred of people working away, and yet constantly on his own. The huge slowly turning spider-like camera rig, which the endless projection screen descended from, gave a feel of animation to the set and the projected drawings from Dan Potra and team are delightful. The dancers, although occasionally fun with the odd flash of choreographed wit, often felt silly and added on for no discernable reason other than to distract from a simple plot change.

No great depth is given to any of the characters and we never really find out what it is that Walt was so good at, or why people loved the Disney brand quite so much, we see a series of disjoined moments in the last few months of Disney’s life which only portray him as unpleasant, selfish, egotistical, paranoid and rude; the one or two moments of supposed tenderness just don’t ring true.

Read the synopsis here: 

8937207582_f3a5b343ae_hThe music is fine, it swells, it soars, it endlessly rattles and there’s some fun brass and soft repetitive echo’s of folks tunes but it never really blows this show away, always following, never leading, seemingly to take its cue from the story, which simply isn’t strong enough to play first fiddle to the score. I’m no great fan of Glass but then I don’t loath him either, he gets an equal chance and at his best he is utterly exhilarating this felt good, but not exhilarating. The house was full and very enthusiastic in their applause and this production sure pulled in an interesting and much younger crowd to the Coliseum. I did rather enjoy the music though, it seems that Glass has developed a warmth and refection folded into and around his usually repetitive chromatic musings that I’d not heard before.

8936575085_c15c38fd09_hThe Opera only really came to life a few times for me, other than the above mentioned Chorus demanding Walt’s innocence be worshipped, the end of the second act where an animatronic Lincoln (gloriously portrayed by Zachary James) needs fixing by Disney and appears to challenge him of his capitalist white supremacist views, before getting stuck and collapsing was wonderful.  It was the only performance of conviction morality all night and is as funny as it was touching. The other great piece was walk on comedy from John Easterlin’s camp and knowing Warhol that brought the house down with his mincing pout. Great fun.

8937204300_4380774ed1_hThe rest of the singers are good and do what they must do but there’s no great outshining vocal expression written in this piece, so there’s not much for them to so other than support. The orchestra is driven on with the relentless momentum expected from Glass and Gareth Jones conducted like one of the steam trains that Disney was so fond of. I was expecting dramatic explosion and tension in this Opera like last years stunning ENO production of Satyagraha equally loosely based on the life of Ghandi but I left The Perfect American after a perfectly pleasant night out but not thrilled.

If you’re a fan of Mr Glass though or fancy seeing a modern opera very well staged this is must see and I would get along soon as it looks as if the ENO have another hit on their hands. Try one of the ‘secret seats’ the ENO are promoting at the moment.

English National Opera

London Coliseum

St Martins Lane

London

Performances

Jun 1, 6, 8, 13, 17, 20, 25, 27, 28 at 7.30pm
Pre-performance talk, Thu Jun 6, 5.15–6.00pm, £5/£2.50 concs
Signed performance, Mon Jun 17

For more information or to book see the ENO website here: 

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