oreowalker.blogg.se

Andrew webber construction mammoth
Andrew webber construction mammoth










Maree Johnson and Kelsi Boyden contrast as the ballet mistress, Madame Giry and her ballerina daughter Meg – the former strict but kind, the latter impulsive and sympathetic. Both bring a wealth of stage experience and vocal prowess to the production. Together they make the ‘operatic couple’ a continuing feature of the production – as do Michael Cormick and Martin Crewes as Messieurs Firmin and André.

andrew webber construction mammoth

He too has a fine voice and excellent comic timing. Paul Tabone is Ubaldo Piangi, her Hannibal. She moves with ease from operatic soprano in a rehearsal of Hannibal, to temperamental prima donna, to an object of ridicule by the Phantom – and she does so with fine voice and equally fine comedic timing. The diva, Carlotta Giudicelli, is played by Naomi Johns who obviously delights in the various vocal and emotional demands of this role. Francis steps into this role with confident poise, giving his character the self-assuredness that counterpoints the heaviness of his rival in both action and voice, especially when all three sing together. Her sweet innocence rings out as clearly as her fear – and eventually her understanding empathy of the Phantom’s plight.Ĭallum Francis is her loving protector, Raoul. There is no such vacillation in the power of her voice or the emotions that fill her words. Georgina Hopson plays Christine with a naivety that allows her character to vacillate between the fear instilled by the Phantom and her love for Raoul. His Phantom embodies the inner turmoil and loneliness of the man – and his need for acceptance and the compassion he finally gets from Christine. Robson wears this finery with a panache as potent as his powerful voice and the controlling fear it infuses under the hovering night sky. Joshua Robson as the Phantom sparkles too, in long, velvety coats braided in gold and silver, with buttons that glitter and glossy masks, one in vivid red, and another, more sinister, that shimmers as if burnished in mercury. For the Masquerade, she lets “the spectacle surround” the stage with a kaleidoscope of colourful, sparkling characters, none more fun than the Monsieur Firmin and Monsieur André as shiny, hairy bears. Fastidiously based on the fashions of the 1880s, yet in breath-takingly beautiful contemporary colours and fabrics, they glimmer under the myriad lighting effects designed by Nick Schlieper. Tylesova’s costumes, too, are spectacular. The ingenuity of how this is achieved is typical Phillips and Tylesova working in clever collaboration. So too is the gondola – or gondolas – in which Christine is ferried into the Parisian sewers beneath the Opera House. The legendary chandelier, that is a replica of the original chandelier at Paris Opera Garnier, is strung with 80 light bulbs and is, of course, a feature of the production. A gold balutsraded staircase sweeps up across the wide stage (2.5 metres larger than any indoor stage in Australia) to the towering pillar of the Paris Opera theatre and the Phantom’s special box. Gabriela Tylesova’s imaginative set involved 150 builders and painters in its construction. The stage is lifted by two cranes onto pylons to make it appear to be ‘floating’. “Spectacular” is often used to describe these productions and rightly so. Was it because composer Andrew Lloyd Webber himself was to be in the audience? Or was it the Phantom himself who cast a spell on the weather? And did his power last only for those few hours? Because ten minutes after the finale, the rain came! In big, heavy drops! The cast, the crew, director Simon Phillips, designer Gabriela Tylesova, the technicians – and the crane operators – must have breathed a collective sigh of relief as “slowly, gently night unfurled its splendour” on this spectacular production. Yet from 5.30 until 10.30pm not a drop of rain fell on Sydney Harbour for the opening night of this, the very first open-air performance of The Phantom of the Opera in 35 years. Heavy rain had pelted down in intermittent bursts. March 25 – April 24, 2022Īll afternoon weather warnings had interrupted every ‘Drive Time’ radio program.

andrew webber construction mammoth

Book: Richard Stilgoe & Andrew Lloyd Webber.












Andrew webber construction mammoth