新闻滚动条
Critics Choice: 10 Best West End Musicals 29 May
发布日期
2015年5月29日
由
stephencollins
What Musical should you see first in London?
We have compiled this list to save you the trouble of working it out! It's just our view - and everyone has one - based on our Reviewers' thoughts. We will update the list regularly so new productions get on your radar and when original casts change that is factored in.
Musicals which have been running for more than three years are not included - this is a list for new or relatively new productions running in London.
So go see them!
Lara Pulver and Imelda Staunton in Gypsy. Photo: Johan Persson 1. Gypsy - awarded BritishTheatre.com's only 6 Star Rating
Everyone in this company is superb in their part, everyone can really sing, really dance and really deliver the goods in terms of dramatic and comic acting. This is that rare beast: an exquisitely cast musical where the requirements of the parts have more importance in the casting process than potential box office draw or Twitter popularity. It is difficult to believe that there has ever been a better Rose than Staunton creates here.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
2. Jerry's Girls
This is a genuinely terrific night in the musical theatre. Gypsy aside, there is nothing to touch it currently playing in London in terms of value for money and sheer, unrelenting happiness. Emma Barton has heart in spades and performs with a lustrous, warm allure which is both seductive and motherly. Ria Jones is a gifted performer, a delicious singer, and she brings a wealth of experience, and a warm, luscious tone to her carefully delivered renditions of Herman’s standards. Sarah-Louise Young’s comic work in Take It All Off and La Cage Aux Folles is gloriously amusing.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
Katie Brayben and Carole King in Beautiful. Photo: Brinkoff Mogenberg 3. Beautiful: The Carole King Musical
The throbbing, majestic and luminous heart of this production comes from Katie Brayben’s faultless, radiant and absolutely triumphant turn as Carole King. Brayben recreates the feel, the sound, the look of Carole King in a completely authentic and resonant way – she feels like the natural woman.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
4. Carrie
What is most admirable about Gary Lloyd’s directorial vision here is that no attempt is made to recreate the film, the book or even the way this musical has been produced before. He does not seek to make a musical horror story – rather, he makes a dramatic musical which has horrific elements. Kim Criswell is magnificent as Carrie’s mother. Her voice is in remarkable form and she sings the difficult score with bravura ease. Of course, the show has no hope without a tremendous Carrie and in Evelyn Hoskins, Lloyd has a true star. Hoskins is perfect.
READ OUR REVIEW | SOLD OUT
5. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Sam Mendes’ production of the musical adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is in excellent shape. Nothing indicates that more clearly than the show not missing a beat despite the fact that three understudies were called upon to perform. The company didn’t hiccup. Routines are polished and well-drilled; Mark Thompson’s wonderfully colourful, and sometimes colourless, costumes and sets are in pristine shape and conjure up the requisite sense of magic effortlessly. The tunefulness and sprightly fun of Marc Shaiman’s music remains infectious and sweet.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
6. Miss Saigon
It’s a palpable hit, a wonderful, searing and soaring revival of Miss Saigon borne aloft by three remarkable performances from Noblezada, Hong and Carroll.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
Killian Donnelly and Beverley Knight in Memphis. Photo: Johan Persson 7. Memphis
More than anything else, Memphis is about change and acceptance, and the important way culture and art (music, in this case) can be transformative in important and tangible ways. But it is not worthy or earnest in any way; rather, it relies upon humour, heart and hockadoo, creating mini-tornadoes of singing and dancing joy to propel your spirit into the stratosphere.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
8. Book of Mormon
For my part, it is as plain as a pike staff that the performers at hard work in this Parker, Lopez and Stone piece are, uniformly, at the top of their game and give more than 100% constantly. This production is far, far better than that original Broadway production.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
9. Sunny Afternoon
There is a lot to like in Sunny Afternoon and overall the experience is more than satisfactory. It is great fun. Well worth seeing and hard not to enjoy.
READ OUR REVIEW | BOOK TICKETS
10. High Society
The first fifteen minutes or so of Act Two are as good as, if not the equal of, any fifteen minutes of any musical currently playing on the West End (the final fifteen minutes of both of Gypsy’s acts excluded). In the main, this is down to three things: superb orchestrations (Chris Walker), fantastic musicianship (Theo Jamieson, Joe Stilgoe and a red hot band) and inspired, creative choreography (Nathan M Wright). Together, these three magical elements work musical theatre alchemy, and the cast go along with it infectiously, without restraint.
© BritishTheatre.com 1999-2024 版权所有。
BritishTheatre.com 网站的创建旨在庆祝英国丰富多样的戏剧文化。我们的使命是提供最新的英国剧院新闻、伦敦西区评论,以及地方剧院和伦敦戏剧票的见解,确保戏剧爱好者可以及时了解从最盛大的伦敦西区音乐剧到前沿的边缘戏剧的一切。我们热衷于鼓励和培养各种形式的表演艺术。
戏剧的精神生生不息,而BritishTheatre.com位于前沿地带,向戏剧爱好者提供及时、权威的新闻和信息。我们敬业的剧院记者和评论家团队不懈努力,报道每一场制作和活动,使您能够轻松获取最新评论并预订必看的伦敦戏剧票。