The Little Mermaid.
Music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard Ashman and Glenn Slater, book by
Doug Wright, based on the Hans Christian Andersen story and the Disney
film produced by Howard Ashman and John Musker and written by John
Musker and Ron Clements.
Ickle Pickle Productions, produced by Justin Watson. Belconnen Community Theatre, January 10-25, 2020.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
January 10
Director – Jordan Best; Musical Director – Adam Bluhm; Choreographer – Jodi Hammond.
Costume Designer – Fiona Leach; Makeup Design – Eryn Marshall; Set Designer – Ian Croker; Lighting – Sidestage Productions; Music Sequencing – Smilin’ James Aspland
When you go to see The Little Mermaid,
make sure you pack your sense of humour. Jordan Best and her team’s
design and direction have set the tone exactly right. Everyone on stage
– and I think there were 40! – understood and thoroughly enjoyed the
fun side of such an unlikely seaside story. Don’t miss, for example,
the array of complex characters among the wonderfully sweet-singing but
terribly bitchy Mersisters.
Turning a cartoon, essentially made
for very young children – almost at Sesame Street age level – into a
stage show suited for 10-year-olds and up, is a risky venture. As a
movie, the close-ups of the character’s faces – especially, say, of the
way Ariel’s eyes can take over the whole screen – or the way the moving
image of life under the sea can be fascinating to watch just for its
colour and variety, Disney’s The Little Mermaid is an attractive fairy-story fantasy. We get the point of the story, but it presents a ‘lite’ version.
Ickle
Pickle give us the grown-up version in which the Ariel’s teenage need
to escape her royal father’s assumption – that he must control her life
to protect his daughter – becomes a serious theme, even if it means she
must accept the risks of becoming her own woman. Emily Pogson
successfully makes Ariel’s constricted life as a princess believable.
The risk for Jordan Best here is that the movie’s light quality (which
is what makes it such a longstanding favourite) could become too dark
and heavy. (I almost began to think, when Samuel Dietz’s character
Grimsby announces at the end “After all, I do believe in royalty”, of
Prince Harry and his love for Meghan.)
The great success of
Best’s directing is to find the right spot, where the characters are
played with a clear sense of not taking themselves too seriously – in
fact the whole production in its stage design, lighting effects,
humorous choreography, costuming and makeup, and often arch singing,
play with the truth that theatre is just an illusion.
And to
bring this all together on such a small stage with such a large group of
so many young performers (but not forgetting the adults, Michael Jordan playing King Triton and especially Janie Lawson
playing Ursula as almost a spoof of Shakespeare's Oberon and Titania)
is a logistical and artistic achievement in its own right.
Enjoy!
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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