Thursday 10 September 2015

Grand Hotel, Southwark Playhouse ****

It is 1928 and Berlin is in full swing with jazz and wealth at it's peak. We are transported here in the Southwark Playhouse to a hotel full of life. Having listened back to the original soundtrack to this musical, it isn't a brilliant score from Maury Yeston. The luxurious music often jars with the sudden and odd change of pace on the soundtrack yet Michael Bradley and his band makes the transition sound natural and clever. The jazz is delightful with wonderful choreography from Lee Proud that captures the decadence of the age. The young cast are supremely talented whilst the more experienced actors inject a sense of realism and add the context of a society out of a World War with the cynicism they supply that doesn't make this seem vacuous. This is down to the brilliant direction from Thom Sutherland  that turns this largely inconsequential musical that only vaguely touches on racism and domestic abuse with no real consequence into a deep and interesting piece on class divisions, with a final scene that acknowledges the effect of the Wall Street Crash the year after the time it is set in and the inevitable reality of Nazism. The overall experience of this show was far better than half of the big shows on the West End and you get more than just decadent style but a clever and talented interpretation into this more intimate space.

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