Blood
Brothers
Princess Theatre, Torquay
Mon 7th June - Sat 12th June (7.30pm plus 2.30pm on Thurs and Sat)
Tickets: £9.50 - £27.50
Box Office 08702 414120
There's something about the scouse accent that makes hardship seem
brutally real.
Look at those years of bickering on Brookside, or the family squabbles
on Bread. Not to mention the mayhem of Thomas the Tank Engine.
And
in Willy Russell's Blood Brothers, the thick Merseyside monologue
from the narrator has with it a true sense of doom.
He's
omnipresent from the opening words: "Did you hear the story
of the Johnstone twins?"
Even when he's not speaking or singing - Keith Burns' tenor voice
is staggering - he's leaning up against a post observing his characters,
badgering them from behind like the devil on their shoulders, or
sidling up and handing them a crucial prop.
He hands over the Bible over which the deadly pact is sworn; so
it feels like he's controlling it all - it's all his fault.
I went
to Liverpool earlier this year. What an inspired place to have set
this tragic tale. The streets near the two football grounds, Goodison
and Anfield, are full of derelict buildings, shattered glass, boarded
up windows and graffiti, and it is here that the Johnstones live.
I saw
the same company present Blood Brothers at the Princess Theatre
last year and couldn't wait to go back again.
To a degree, it's handy to know the outcome as you witness the story
- there are plenty of references you know will be picked up on later.
Hopefully
the Nolan family ignore reviewers like me, because I'd hate to instigate
the sort of family feud found in the musical!
Sorry Denise, (last year's lead, Mrs Johnstone), but Linda wins
hands down. Linda Nolan is wonderful.
The slight husky quality to her voice is perfect for the emotionally-charged
showstopper Tell Me It's Not True; her lovely smile is just the
thing for the doting mother she plays; and you could tell she really
felt the lyrics deep down.
She joined the audience in laughing at some of the jokes, and she
was wiping away tears at the end.
I thought
Sean Jones (the working-class Mickey) was trying a bit too hard
to be childlike - it didn't quite seem authentic - but as a grown-up,
his drugged-up ex-con act was fantastic.
Alas, the adult Eddie (the more fortunate brother) is a respectable
councillor, and the part becomes the less interesting of the two,
but Drew Ashton had already won the audience's hearts as a touchingly
naïve public schoolboy.
The
supporting cast swap their mantles with ease and cleverly-crafted
speed. This is even acknowledged in the story, as Mrs Johnstone
observes that the doctor looks exactly like the milkman.
I bet
half the theatre had seen it before. I was among the first to my
feet for the customary ovation, and I swear there was a contest
between some people down the front as to who could raise their hands
the highest to make their appreciation quite clear.
It certainly is exhausting to watch. With laughs, frights and tears
galore, you can't help getting carried away.
Let
me know when it's on in Devon again, would you?
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