by Izaak
Lim, Amalie O’Hara and Kathleen Douglas
Music by Harold Arlen
Directed by Michael Loney
Performed by Anne-Marie Biagioni, Cassandra Charlick and William Groucutt
Downstairs at the Maj
29 - 31 October, 2015
Music by Harold Arlen
Directed by Michael Loney
Performed by Anne-Marie Biagioni, Cassandra Charlick and William Groucutt
Downstairs at the Maj
29 - 31 October, 2015
Fancy Meeting
You is the third outing for the team of writer Izaak Lim and director Michael
Loney in the Downstairs at the Maj cabaret seasons, and, while it’s something
of a departure from their previous shows, it’s every bit as successful.
Their
formula is as simple as it effective; take a great American songwriter –
composer or lyricist – and build a narrative around their songs. You’ve Got
That Thing and Exactly Like You were biographical pastiches of Cole Porter and
Dorothy Fields respectively, but Fancy Meeting You breaks the mould, using the
songs of Harold Arlen to tell a neat story of love faithless and faithful set
in a joint something like the Cotton Club.
That story
takes in themes of race and homosexual love that give it a contemporary
relevance without weighing down the evening’s entertainment.
Because
it’s the tunes that count, and what tunes they are! Of all the towering figures
of the American songbook, perhaps only George Gershwin was as deep in the blues
as Arlen, and that keeps his repertoire fresh and edgy many decades later.
Of course
there’s Somewhere Over the Rainbow, considered by many the greatest of all
American tunes, and certainly the one that best captures its wistful optimism.
Here it’s performed in gorgeous harmony as the finale by the club’s queen, Miss
Lucille (Cassandra Charlick), her confidante and clarinetist Abe (William
Groucutt) and the ball-of-fire ingénue Maggie May (Anne-Marie Biagioni).
While it’s
the melody you’ll leave whistling, it’s far from the only highlight. Two of
them belong to Groucutt, who lands both a gender-flipped Stormy Weather and the
ultimate Sinatra late-night standard One For My Baby in his luckiest day as a
performer.
The
statuesque, elegant Charlick contributes great talent and the
experience of years on the international cabaret circuit, to some of Arlen's most challenging numbers, and, not for the first time, Biagioni reveals her star quality in a red-hot performance. Her
beautifully controlled Never Has Seen Snow, an unfairly obscure
Arlen classic, is a show-stopper in a show that never does.
Set 'em up, Joe
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