BritishTheatre

搜索

自 1999年

值得信赖的新闻与评论

二十五

英国戏剧精选

官方
门票

选择
您的座位

自 1999年

25年

官方戏票

选择座位

REVIEW: Annie, New Wimbledon Theatre (On Tour) ✭✭✭✭

发布日期

2015年11月11日

emilyhardy

Annie

New Wimbledon Theatre (On Tour)

10 November 2015

4 Stars

Book Tickets

It’s hard to believe, looking the faces of the children either side of me, that we’re watching Annie - a musical dating back to the 1970s; a musical that was until recently reserved for school productions, synonymous with groans, unequivocally banished to the hall of ‘uncool’ and ‘old hat’.

Let’s be honest; it’s not the show’s enduring relevance that’s gripping these children. So what is it? Entranced, exhilarated, giving credence to each cheesy line, the reactions of these 21st century kids stand testament, simply, to the superb execution of this fresh re-imagining - this new production directed by Nikolai Foster and currently touring the UK. That’s right, folks. Annie has made a come back, and it’s delighting audiences at a venue near you.

Now, no one is pretending that Annie is high-art; it was never intended to be. It is what it is: a populist, rags-to-riches story about a sickeningly optimistic, red-headed orphan who happens to be taken in by a millionaire… sorry, billionaire. But today’s audiences are lapping it up, mesmerised by the colourful, contemporary set and costume design by Colin Richmond - not too dissimilar from that in Tim Minchin and Dennis Kelly’s Matilda currently at the Cambridge Theatre, London.

Punchy orphanage scenes and musical numbers feature inscrutable performances from ‘little girls’ with big voices. It’s The Hard-Knock Life - thanks to choreographer Nick Winston and musical director George Dyer - is far from irritating; it’s exciting and succeeds in disarming any previously cynical audience members in the first few minutes.

However, these confident performances are not matched in their veracity by the supposedly terrifying Miss Hannigan - played in Wimbledon by Craig Revel Horwood. Revel Horwood has all the right moves and hits all the right notes, but is too busy playing the stumbling drunk to convincingly chill these vivacious orphans into submission.

Upping the anti however are Jonny Fines and Djalenga Scott as outright villains Rooster and Lily. In each slick step and and shrill cock-a-doodle-doo, Fines exudes malice and unwavering greed. On the opposite side of the spectrum Grace Farrell, played by a pitch perfect Holly Dale Spencer, is Grace by name, grace by nature. Warbucks’ personal assistant is sassy and fiercely efficient, until Annie disrupts the peace that is, injecting new meaning into the businessman’s household.

And you can’t fail to admire the girls who, on rotation, play Annie. It’s far from an easy task, aged 11, to carry such a huge role, to deliver with clout and conviction the writers’ dewy message of optimism. There’s something altogether un-British about the mere suggestion of the sun coming out tomorrow (perhaps because it rarely does) but the extremely talented girls, and of course their dog Sandy, tricked even me into perking up a little.

Thanks to this energetic reimagining, Annie can finally escape the chorus of groans that once accompanied its name. It’s once again acceptable to hum Charles Strouse’s Tomorrow (boy oh boy!) and soak up Thomas Meehan’s saccharine rags to riches story – just as I did when I was seven. Foster’s fast-paced and punchy production – touring the UK until June 2016 – has given one very old dog a fresh lease of life, bringing Annie back for a new, let’s face it, more discerning generation. And they’ve done so with gusto.

FIND OUT MORE ABOUT THE ANNIE UK TOUR

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

剧院新闻

票务

剧院新闻

票务