CurtainUp
CurtainUp

The Internet Theater Magazine of Reviews, Features, Annotated Listings
www.curtainup.com


A CurtainUp London London Review
Hello Dolly


Marriage is a bribe to make a housekeeper think she's a householder!— Dolly Gallagher Levi
Hello Dolly
Samantha Spiro as Dolly with some of the dancing waiters
(Photo: Nigel Norrington)
Hello Dolly! is a wonderfully effervescent production for the Open Air Theatre in Regents Park. The only thing that could spoil this evening is the English weather. On opening night it threatened light rain and a few minutes of light rain we had but this didn't dampen the enjoyment to be had from the company dancing the night away. The setting is one of the loveliest in London. You start the evening in daylight and as dusk falls, myriad twinkling lights turn the theatre into a fairy grotto. The director Timothy Sheader has involved the audience more than usual by making the cast in their sumptuous Edwardian silks and parasols enter along the audience aisles saying "Hello" to everyone as they do.

It is Samantha Spiro's evening as the eponymous Dolly. She is full of warmth, she has an over the top personality and is as outstandingly bossy as the bustle on her skirt. Rather cruelly a passing helicopter tried to drown her opening lines in the big parade number but she recovered full voice quickly. Jerry Herman's musical isn't for realists, it's frankly escapism. The curved wooden set is like a wedding cake of tiers of wooden arched balconies, the top one housing the live orchestra. For the final number in the first act there are red white and blue rosettes strung on the balcony and tri-coloured flag banners unfurl the length and width of the stage for the march number "Before The Parade Passes By".

Now I must have seen the movie, if only in snatches on television, but there were directorial touches, which may or may not be original that I really enjoyed. The men dance with canes which become hat stands in Irene Molloy's (Josefina Gabrielle) milliners and the women dancers remove their hats so as to provide the merchandise. There is a wonderful train formed out of a trolley, two round hat suitcases and a tall man in stove pipe hat which really smokes forming the chimney of the train. It's witty and great fun!

There are some fine performances. Akiya Henry's comic little doll of a shop girl is full of energy and cuteness while Josefina Gabrielle wins hearts as the milliner who falls for Mr Vandergelder's chief clerk Cornelius Hackl (Daniel Crossley). As he asks to put his arms around her, she says, "I might as well warn you, a corset is a corset!" Not a Liberty bodice then! (British undergarment of the 1890s with rubber buttons designed to liberate women from the tightly laced corset) We loved the scene when Cornelius and Barnaby Tucker (Oliver Brenin) are hiding from Mr Vandergelder in the hat shop and have to keep moving under different counters and behind curtains so as to escape detection. At the end of Act Two, formerly grumpy Mr Vandergelder's (Allan Cordunner) love song to Dolly is sentimental but very affecting, as he shows how bowled over he is by her charm.

The troupe of dancing waiters at the Harmonia Gardens Restaurant are the choreographic virtuoso highlight with a tap dance, spinning silver trays, high kicks and napkin waving brilliance. Dressed in red costumes with black spot buttons they look like six spot ladybirds and dance wonderfully. This production of Hello Dolly! is a real treat.

Hello Dolly!
Book by Michael Stewart
Music and Lyrics by Jerry Herman
Based on the play the Matchmaker by Thornton Wilder
Directed by Timothy Sheader
Starring: Samantha Spiro, Allan Corduner, Josefina Gabrielle, Akiya Henry, Daniel Crossley
With: Mark Anderson, Claire Louise Connolly, Oliver Brenin, Annalisa Rossi, Andy Hockley, John Stacey
Ensemble: Marc Antolin, Rachael Archer, Kevin Brewis, Joanna Goodwin, Francis Haugen, Paul Iveson, Richard Jones, Stuart King, Jo Morris, Brenda Jane Newhouse, Sherrie Pennington, Carl Sanderson, Emily Shaw, Craig Turner
Choreographer:Stephen Mear
Design: Peter McKintosh
Lighting: Simon Mills
Musical Director: Phil Bateman
Orchestrator: David Shrubsole
Sound Designer: Mike Walker
Running time: Two hours 20 minutes with one interval
Box Office: 0844 826 4242
Booking to 12th September 2009
Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge based on 10th August 2009 performance at the Open Air Theatre, Regents Park, London NW1(Tube: Baker Street)
London Theatre Walks


Peter Ackroyd's  History of London: The Biography



London Sketchbook



tales from shakespeare
Retold by Tina Packer of Shakespeare & Co.
Click image to buy.
Our Review


©Copyright 2009, Elyse Sommer.
Information from this site may not be reproduced in print or online without specific permission from esommer@curtainup.com