Wednesday, 29 August 2018

Calamity Jane Belvoir St August 2018




CALAMITY JANE
BELVOIR AUGUST/SEPTEMBER  2018

Welcome to Deadwood !.

This wonderful return season of CALAMITY JANE has riotously ,joyously taken over the Upstairs theatre at Belvior. Originally at the Hayes it has won 2 Sydney Theatre Awards including the Judith Johnson Award for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical for Virginia Gay with sold out seasons and is touring nationally to much acclaim.

The show is based on the 1953 classic film starring Doris Day .A rather light musical comedy , similar in some ways to  Annie get Your Gun , Calamity Jane  tells the somewhat  fictionalised , somewhat cleaned up  ,family friendly version of a real-life, boldly adventurous yet fragile and tough woman who ignored the expectations placed upon women to survive in the Wild West .The central story is a triple romance , but with a couple of twists . 

The splendid cast of eight are terrifically directed by Richard Carroll .The ‘fourth wall’ is broken down , involving the audience and making them laugh with slapstick ,meta-theatrical gags, ad-libbed Sydney in-jokes , a couple of moments of ‘ corpsing ‘ and somewhat fizzled special effects , allusions to vaudeville and burlesque ,all creating an atmosphere of enormous fun .

The staging has very slightly been adjusted for the Belvoir theatre .Some of the audience is invited to sit on stage, crowding the Golden Garter, the Wild West saloon where the show opens, and there is audience participation to a degree throughout . Strings of fairy lights,with a couple of almost chandelier effects , decorate the auditorium ceiling.

Several of the small but dazzling cast double/triple roles and some are ‘ quadruple threat ‘ ( sing , act dance AND play a musical instrument! ).The show is presented in a deceptively  ‘rough and ready ‘ style that reveals the scintillating finely nuanced talent of the entire cast .The comedy is presented with razor sharp timing .Cameron Mitchel’s snazzy choreography is witty ,tight and snappy . Trent Suidgeest’s lighting a perfect foil for the production , Nigel Ubrihien’s musical direction, with the buoyant score performed on a single upright piano. Musically it ranges from vaudeville ( Fryer’s ‘ Ev’ryone Complains About The Weather ) to barbershop quartet ( Adelaide ), soft ballads and also big show stopping numbers ( eg Windy City ) . Are we meant to pick up on possible allusions to the musical Gypsy ?  The Black Hills of Dakota is at some points most moving and poignant .
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In some ways the show could be regarded as politically incorrect, with the way it referrers to First Peoples and it could also perhaps be regarded as sexist  - but Calamity and Katie give as good as it gets with “Men’ and the  witty , ironic ‘ A Woman’s Touch “ that turn the tables ( and also possibly reveal Calamity’s somewhat confused feelings for Katie) . Carroll reveals that Calamity Jane is all about misjudged preconceptions - and not just regarding Calamity herself  ( eg Francis with an ‘I’ not an ‘E’  ,and Katie pretending to be Adelaide Adams , at least at first ... are just two examples) .Gender stereotyping is examined and the social mores of the times explored .The show  feels as fresh and bold as if was written yesterday.

Virginia Gay as Calamity is simply magnificent and sets the theatre alight .In a hugely warm hearted performance on the outside she is a seemingly superefficient , no nonsense frontierswoman able to handle any emergency with a deceptively gruff ‘manly’ appearance , who has great fun telling boastful  stories  - but underneath she is an insecure , shy , tender hearted woman who has a makeover and is revealed to be statuesquely beautiful and ultrafeminine and who realises eventually that she has fallen for the man she has previously regarded as an annoying rival .Her comic timing is impeccable .

Wild Bill Hickock , seemingly sinister, dark and dangerous but with a hidden deep and tender heart was wonderfully played by Anthony Gooley .His pensive “ Higher Than A Hawk ‘, acknowledging his hidden feelings for Calamity brings the house down . We can infer that the marriage between Bill and Calamity will in fact be a marriage of equals .There is verbal sparring like that of Beatrice and Benedict in Much Ado About Nothing , and  the grumpy , annoyed  I Can Do Without You has similarities to ‘ Anything You Can Do I Can Do Better’ from Annie Get Your Gun.  
Ultra glamourous Chicago theatre star , superficial , strutting  Adelaide Adams , who has men falling at her feet , ( a la Phantom of the Opera’s  Prima Donna ) and blonde bombshell like Susan , the saloon’s ‘entertainer’  were enchantingly played by Sheridan Harbridge with great aplomb and comic timing ( her bad magic show! ).

Fiery Katie Brown was deliciously played by dark , petite Laura Bunting who wins us over with her  Keep It Under Your Hat  as we see her develop from wannabe stage struck dresser to become the star of Deadwood .

Rob Johnson as Francis Fryer enchantingly works his socks off as a marvellous song and dance man , hinting of hidden bigger opportunities , who enthusiastically reminds us that Everyone Complains About The Weather and is forced to strut his stuff awkwardly in drag in Hive Full Of Honey .He also plays the tuba!


Virginia Gay as Calamity Jane photo by  John McRae.




Tony Taylor , Virginia Gay and  Anthony Gooley  photo by  John McRae.
     
Tony Taylor as Henry Miller , the agitated ,frustrated proprietor of the Golden Garter has a wickedly delightful time too. Lt .Danny Gilmartin was thrillingly played and sung by extremely handsome Matthew Pearce .

Go on treat yourself ! Jump on the Deadwood stagecoach , head for the Golden Garter and book now for this exhilarating , joyous show. 

Running time 2 @ & ½ hours including interval
Calamity Jane runs at Belvoir St 25 August -30 September 2018 .book NOW!

https://belvoir.com.au/productions/calamity-jane/




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