Showing posts with label Kenneth Alan Taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenneth Alan Taylor. Show all posts

Sunday, November 29

Panto in Nottingham: Dick Whittington, Nottingham Playhouse

The talented team which brought Dick Whittington to life this Christmas should be feeling very pleased with themselves today.
It’s not an easy panto to stage: there’s no handsome prince, princess in trouble – or magical transformations to help it bounce along.
But writer and director Kenneth Alan Taylor has sprinkled gold dust on an age-old tale for Nottingham audiences to enjoy for their annual festive treat.
With everyone dancing in the aisles as early as the start of the second act, he’s delivered yet again – this time in his 60th year as a professional actor.
The musical numbers are the clear hits of this year’s show. LunchMoney Lewis’s Bills is a great send-off as Dick is banished from London. There’s a wonderfully funny set-piece as the crew of HMS Hopeful swim for shore, while the dancing girls’ chorus carry their routines to perfection. Dick and Alice, meanwhile, entertain us with their version of Olly Murs’ Dance With Me Tonight.
There is a nod to our island’s great seafaring history with a brilliantly-executed sea shanty medley, and the sounds of Rio prove a real cracker with a gently perspiring Florrie leading the singing and dancing with Sarah, as the audience encourage a reprise (or two). Let’s be honest through, the cast is certainly up for it and the party atmosphere sets the tone for the whole of the helter-skelter second half.


While the scene-setting first few acts may not hit the funnybone right from the off (there was a lot of “And here’s Dick”, ”Look, here’s Alice”, “Here comes Jack” – which may have been an in-joke but was a little too regular) it’s the compelling story, amazing scenery and a host of larger-than-life characters that keep all eyes glued to the stage.
It’s surprising to learn there are three debutantes at the Playhouse this year. The leading ladies of Alice Fitzwarren, played by Natalie Taylor Gray, and Tallulah the Cat, brought to life by Jasmine White, and the lively Matthew Chase, who is a shoe-in as Dick’s best pal Jack. They all slotted seamlessly into the ensemble.
We are treated to two gorgeous dames this year. John Elkington is back as Sarah the Cook, with a knowing nod to the grown-ups with his well-worn lines – and plenty of up-to-the-minute gags for the children. We were pleased to see Anthony Hoggard in a frock or two for this year’s manic appearance, giving his all as canny Florrie Fitzwarren.



The familiar faces of kids’ favourite Tim Frater as Dick and Rebecca Little as a delightfully scatterbrained Fairy Bowbells attract superb audience participation, while Kevin McGowan’s King Rat draws boos and hisses with his deathly pallour, twinkling costume and (I hope he takes this the right way) the way he simply oozes evil. There’s also a welcome cameo for some fluffy favourites from previous years…
The complex, colourful sets are anything but backdrops and transport us to another world in a show which simply flies by.
And the best gags this year? We always love the “butter face” line, while the children fell about as Sarah explained the reason Jack needed a new bottom – while trying to give him a leg up to the bunk in their ship’s cabin in another well-executed comic set-piece.




Sunday, December 1

Jack and the Beanstalk, Nottingham Playhouse

It's so refreshing in these days of modern panto to enjoy a production with a proper principal boy and not one, but two gloriously colourful and over-the-top dames.
This proved an emotional night for veteran dame – and show writer – Kenneth Alan Taylor, back for one last season in costume. A string of thanks at the curtain call brought a tear to the old trouper's eye.
As Dame Daisy, Jack's mother, there's probably little need for a script as he effortlessly works the audience, teases the cast and brings the house down with ad-libs that must come so easily after 30 years in a string of acclaimed roles.
He is the catalyst that crafts this all-singing, all-dancing, costumed joke-fest into yet another classic. And a flamboyant new costume for every scene completes the package.
Many of the Playhouse cast are also popular regulars being welcomed back for their annual theatre beano, with the festive audience also clearly part of the show – even down to random shouts from children clearly getting carried away with the action on stage.
The tone for the evening is set by the superb dancing girls and a panto orchestra that defies its size by filling the auditorium with life. Their dual contribution to the big showpiece numbers is key: the musical set-pieces were among the highlights, from the cutesy giant dancing rabbits wowing everyone at the start to the hilarious What Does the Fox Say number near the end. And it was so good we got them to do it all over again!
The second dame treading the boards is the manic and memorable Anthony Hoggard, a familiar face in his sixth Playhouse panto. His double-acts with different cast-members has the audience in stitches as he plays his eccentric role as the Giant's wife totally for laughs.
Of course, that's what we're here for! John Elkington as the giant's lackey Slurp hams it up as the baddie and relishes the boos, hisses and soakings that come his way.
Even Giant Blunderbore manages to steal some of the fun as Daniel Hoffman-Gill makes the role his own with an interesting, unexpected twist to the tale which you'll appreciate.
Jack is played by thigh-slappingly earnest Rebecca Little in her 13th production here. She teams up with her on-stage love interest Annie (Kelly Edwards) and Tim Frater as Danny, whose six-pack gets an outing in a scene especially for the ladies!
There's a superb effort on the scenery front this year with stonking sets that transport us into a world of make-believe, as well as some backdrops that will make you forget for a moment that you're in a theatre.
The children all loved a slapstick scene (which seemed a little crow-barred in) – but it's panto and the energetic community singing and getting the awe-struck little ones up on stage in time-honoured fashion more than made up for that.
Jack and the Beanstalk runs through until Saturday January 18 and will definitely be your last chance to soak yourself in the genius and fun that comes in the shape of Kenneth Alan Taylor. Oh yes it will – so book your tickets and find out what the fox says...