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Reviews, News and Commentary

Six The Musical: More Than Mere Glitz

Reviewed by Malcolm Calder

Photo : James D Morgan

SIX THE MUSICAL

by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss

Directors Lucy Moss and Jamie Armitage

Choreography Carrie-Anne Ingrouille

Set Design Emma Bailey

Costume Design Gabriella Slade

Lighting Design Tim Deiling

Sound Design Paul Gatehouse

Orchestrator Tom Curran

Musical Director Beighton

Civic Theatre, Auckland (until 30 March)

Reviewed by Malcolm Calder

1 March 2025

It would be easy to pigeon-hole SIX as a high energy show with lots of froth and bubble, and aimed fairly and squarely at the tiktok generation.  But you would be wrong.  It is rather more.

All things must change and musical theatre is no different.  SIX is important enough to represent another of those significant change points in history – following in the footsteps trodden by Oklahoma or West Side Story or Cats or Hamilton.

On leaving, I overheard an audience member mutter something about SIX being really just a glossed up pub cabaret.  And, to a certain extent, it is.  Originally conceived by a couple of then relatively unknown Cambridge students in 2017, Moss and Marlow took it to the Edinburgh Fringe that year, was a huge success and soon wound up at the Arts Theatre in the West End before a Broadway opening almost immediately before Covid struck.  There was a sort of relaunch in 2021 and SIX now enjoys semi-permanent residence in both London and New York and has gone on to world-wide success with multiple productions all over the anglosphere, as well as Europe and in Asia.

So what has driven this success? A well-known Australian commentator once suggested it resembles a Spice Girls concert directed by Baz Luhrman – but one where the girls can actually sing.  Quite apt I thought at the time.  But this show is a lot more than that.  It is VERY much a significant part of the musical theatre tradition.  In fact there are so many references, acknowledgments and subtle nuances running through SIX that enumerating all of them becomes difficult.

First and foremost, this is a NOW show.  As such it reaches its target easily and then some. So, yes, to the tiktok generation.  But it is  bigger than that and, while it might help grow memberships of amateur music theatre organisations, that is rather simplistic view as it impact is considerably greater. Not to put too fine a point on it, the key fundamental of SIX is pure entertainment built around that old adage – a good story told well that enthrals its audience.  And good entertainment knows no age boundaries – the grandmother in front of me was up and out-boogying her two grandchildren at the end.  Underlying import counts too. 

The stories of the six queens are told in the language of the second decade of the 21st century – not by the archival or even slanted recollections of historians about the politics and intrigue surrounding the first Tudor king.  Most of whom were men, and of a fairly clearly-defined social class at that.  Further, it is told from a women’s perspective.  And remember, some of the queens were all exceptionally young when they married and the Royal Court revolved around power, politics and intrigue.  So we leap immediately to empowerment for women – a rallying cry for millions – and a clear audience profile for SIX.

Structurally, as the fairly comprehensive promotional campaign has pointed out, SIX is built around a history lesson and a competition.  OK.  Thank you.  Got that.  It puts the six queens up against each other each other – an Eisteddfod if you will – or is that merely a device for something bigger?

The six queens never leave the stage and their individual songs merge into six-voice choral arrangements, complimentarily and contrapuntally at times, with occasional snatches of spoken dialogue (but not very much at all).  The staging itself is outstandingly conceived by Emma Bailey and reflects a modern high-tech concert stage that integratesTim Deiling’s dynamic lighting and Paul Gastrehouses’s sound in a way that clearly works.  The stage is also peopled by an astonishingly well-rehearsed, syncopathic and complimentary all-girl band for the entire show.

This primarily Australian cast comes well credentialled.  Dancing skills are clearly in evidence with very tight routines throughout and, even if there were one or two very minor vocal wobbles, vocal strength was generally strong and led by the assurance of Loren Hunter (Jane Seymour).  But let’s face it, this show is presented more like an eisteddfod or a competition and it doesn’t really matter – one voice will always overlap another. The tenderness of Heart Of Stone and the hilarious rap of Haus of Holbein were both standouts for me.

The primary focus of attention however is largely rivetted on Gabriella Slade’s award-winning costumes. Little wonder that her outfits have a dash of Spice Girls about them as she devised Spice World back in the 1990s.  But now she has embellished some glittering and futuristic sequinned outfits in ways that not only catch the eye, but help tell each queen’s story.  The ‘beheadeds’ have chokers for example, Jane Seymour’s black and white bodice echoes the half-timbered houses of Tudor England, the green of Anne Boleyn’s outfit references the popular myth that this evergreen was composed by the much-wedded Henry VIII himself (that’s factually incorrect, but let’s stick with the myth). It’s interesting that one interpretation of this song concerns the promiscuity in young women, something Henry’s henchman Archbishop Cranmer used in arranging divorce and subsequent beheading.

The references go on.  In fact they are never ending.  There are the pop divas found in the songs : I think I heard echoes of Beyonce, Ariana Grande and Alicia Keys and probably missed a few more.

The sense of fun and campness is constant.  SIX takes neither itself, nor musical theatre in general, seriously and whimsy is everywhere.  Phones in the theatre, for example, were quite correctly asked to be turned off pre-show and then during the encore (or more correctly the ‘finale’), encouraged the audience to light them up again.  And they certainly did. It was another moment of sheer joy and made the audience a part of the show. I think that grandma in front of me got a pretty good video take.

Any good production simply tells a story.  SIX does so with succinctness and very, very well.  It is not a long show, but is pretty demanding on both voices and the attention-span of audiences.

I always relish a well written show that is objective and contemporary rather than one that delves into the introspective meanderings of L-plate writers.  SIX is mature writing and very clever staging.  

The filmed on-stage reunion of Six’s original West End queens will be released in cinemas next month and, rather ironically, Auckland’s Civic remains one of the larger in-theatre venues it has played.  After here, it’s off to complete its second lap of Australia at the Civic’s sister in Newcastle, while Asia awaits

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Categories
Reviews, News and Commentary

Matilda the Musical: Fun to Go

Review by Malcolm Calder

Revolting children in Matilda the Musical

Roald Dahl’s Matilda the Musical

Book Dennis Kelly

Music and Lyrics Tim Minchin

North Shore Music Theatre and Amici Trust

Co-directors Grant Meese and Hamish Mouat

Musical Director Jack Barnard

Bruce Mason Theatre

Until 13 October 2024

Review by Malcolm Calder

 ‘My mummy says I’m a miracle,’ lisps a pampered early-maturer near the top of this deliciously-dark family show.  It is echoed by her diverse classmates and quickly becomes their mantra because, as they well know, even if you’re little you certainly can do a lot.

And they do.  In fact, there are sometimes so many little people doing things in this Matilda, one can readily understand why two directors are occasionally required.  Which might suggest that the principals, the subprincipals, the alternating Maggots, Worms and childrens’ choruses could easily get tangled up a bit.  Not on your life.  They flow as one.  And that is a credit Grant Meese, Hamish Mouat and those who have supported them.  The energy levels never flag and I came out feeling just a tad breathless.

Based on the splendidly grotesque Roald Dahl novel from 1988, and turned over to Tim Minchin and Dennis Kelly prior to its original West End opening in 2010, the music and the songs quickly become owned by the children, the story develops a life of its own and the whole thing becomes a fun-filled romp driven largely by Minchin’s nonsensically-wondrous lyrics as by Roald Dahl’s original.

It tells a tale of the collective power of children and how they address the perceived wrongs of the world they inhabit.  Their ringleader is one Matilda Wormwood – a young girl with the gift of telekinesis. She loves reading, has an unsupportive and cringe-worthy family and ends up at a school run by the terrible Miss Trunchbull.  But, with the help of teacher Miss Honey and town librarian Mrs Phelps, she and the other children overcome all the odds and triumph.  Of course they do.

In the process the character of Matilda’s awful parents are stripped bare; Mrs Trunchball,the butch, granite-faced principal who used to be an Olympic hammer thrower and unleashed by George Keenan-Davies is effectively neutered; the sweet natured Miss Honey – that teacher we all love to love – provides a neat balance that demonstrates not all grownups are nasty. 

As for the children themselves, they are irresistible, stomping and skipping through some marvellous choreography through both this show and through life, demonstrating that growing up is a lifelong endeavour. For kids, yes, but also for the children that we all remain at heart, this is wise, wicked, glorious fun.  Both chocolate cake and the hammer throw will never be the same again.

Of special note is the choreography of Hamish Mouat who manages to sustain multiple overlapping conversations yet never loses sight of a group statement.

Falling neatly into the school holidays, the timing of his show is impeccable.  It is pure, top-end family fare.