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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 9, 2022 19:19:33 GMT
24 May-3 July. Emma Kingston and Matt Blaker, Julie Yamannee, Tom Sterling and Madalena Alberto as Nettie Fowler. The story is set in post-WW2 Maine. www.kilworthhousetheatre.co.uk
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4,021 posts
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Post by Dawnstar on Mar 9, 2022 20:18:04 GMT
Depressing that Madalena Alberto is considered old enough to play Nettie!
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Post by theatremiss on Mar 9, 2022 20:29:18 GMT
Has to be better than the Regent’s Park production last year. I only stayed to hear Joanna Riding sing You’ll Never Walk Alone. It was one of my worst evenings at a musical
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703 posts
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Post by theatremiss on Mar 9, 2022 20:30:02 GMT
Depressing that Madalena Alberto is considered old enough to play Nettie! I agree, she’s still one of my favourite Eva Perons.
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19,676 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 9, 2022 20:49:31 GMT
Has to be better than the Regent’s Park production last year. I only stayed to hear Joanna Riding sing You’ll Never Walk Alone. It was one of my worst evenings at a musical I disagree. I really liked it!
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4,021 posts
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Post by Dawnstar on Mar 9, 2022 22:08:29 GMT
Depressing that Madalena Alberto is considered old enough to play Nettie! I agree, she’s still one of my favourite Eva Perons. I first saw her understudying Emma Williams in Zorro. That was 2008-9. It doesn't seem that long ago. How can she suddenly be in the Nettie casting age bracket?!
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Post by oxfordsimon on Mar 9, 2022 22:32:45 GMT
She is Cousin Nettie but often played as Auntie Nettie.
A younger portrayal is closer to the script than the now traditional older casting
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2,850 posts
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Post by couldileaveyou on Mar 9, 2022 22:39:42 GMT
I think Christine Johnson was only 33 when she originated the role?
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Post by sophie92 on Mar 9, 2022 23:11:46 GMT
Charlotte Jaconelli had been cast as Nettie when this production was originally supposed to happen in 2020, so they went really young initially.
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736 posts
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Post by dippy on May 30, 2022 20:05:46 GMT
Has anyone been to see this yet? I've always wanted to go to this theatre but never managed to make it there yet, maybe this will be the year to finally go. I saw the Regents Park Carousel last year so if someone has seen it and saw that I'd love to know if it's way better and worth going?
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1,471 posts
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Post by mkb on May 31, 2022 17:30:41 GMT
My advice would be to book and go regardless. It's a magical venue on a warm summer evening as it's getting dark, and I've yet to see a dud here. I'm booked for both shows this season.
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19,676 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on May 31, 2022 17:55:39 GMT
Could anyone whose been tell our members how easy/hard it is to get to the venue by public transport?
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Post by stagebyte on May 31, 2022 19:11:21 GMT
My advice would be to book and go regardless. It's a magical venue on a warm summer evening as it's getting dark, and I've yet to see a dud here. I'm booked for both shows this season. Take a blanket for evening. Even on the hot days at night it can get chilly. You can borrow a blanket but first come first served
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3,334 posts
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Post by Dr Tom on May 31, 2022 22:02:33 GMT
Could anyone whose been tell our members how easy/hard it is to get to the venue by public transport? It is near impossible. I don’t think it’s even possible to get a bus after a matinee finish (let alone an evening show). Taxis are not cheap as I found out when I visited previously.
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Post by FrontroverPaul on Jun 1, 2022 0:14:20 GMT
Could anyone whose been tell our members how easy/hard it is to get to the venue by public transport? It is near impossible. I don’t think it’s even possible to get a bus after a matinee finish (let alone an evening show). Taxis are not cheap as I found out when I visited previously. Agreed. The nearest bus stop is about a mile away on a route between Lutterworth and Market Harborough but it's a very infrequent service and the final bus does indeed leave before a matinee would finish. Lutterworth is the nearest town four miles from Kilworth House, but isn't on the rail network. Buses run to Rugby and Leicester from Lutterworth.. Market Harborough over 9 miles away is I think the closest railway station. (Leicester as in the title of this thread is actually 18 miles away) We're seeing Carousel tomorrow evening.
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Post by stagebyte on Jun 2, 2022 22:57:56 GMT
Enjoyed this! Updated to post WW2 the show has had fresh life breathed into it. Julie is a bit more feisty than usually portrayed. I liked the younger cousin Nettie and all principals were in fine voice. Dancing was great, the ballet (usually a yawn fest for me) was beautifully danced and there was a good storyline. The dilapidated fairground set was simple but stunning. Sound crystal clear and the band were brilliant. After a couple of Today Tix £20 bargains for west end over the weekend £45 across the board for this show came as a bit of a shock but with not a bad seat in the house and a great show it’s hard to complain. Go see if you can.
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1,471 posts
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Post by mkb on Jun 14, 2022 17:04:09 GMT
Perhaps it's the magical setting of the Kilworth House Theatre, but I always seem to be entirely won over by every production I see here. Perhaps they're just very good at putting on theatre? It helps that Carousel is one of my favourite musical scores, and that, as a Liverpool FC supporter, I am only too familiar with its most famous number, (although we do sing "Hold your head up high" a la Gerry Marsden, rather than "Keep your chin up high" a la Hammerstein). There is also the added curiosity of how the production will handle the problematic wife-beating material, and whether we can fully understand and empathise with the two alliterative leading characters. Personally, I find the reaction to Julie Jordan being struck, harder to fathom -- it feels like a kiss apparently, a sentiment agreed upon later by her daughter -- than the idea of having sympathy for Billy Bigelow, who knows no better than to lash out after all that life has thrown at him. A large cast acquit themselves admirably with no weak links. Some of the voices are sublime. The choreography is well done. Even the ballet interlude is entertaining. (Are you watching Young Vic?!) The men here are all rugged and straight-acting and would not look out of place in small-town New England, and neither would the women. The set suggests a derelict fairground, with the only carousel horses being two lying redundant, unwanted and unrepaired at the sides. When needed however, the ride does indeed spin into motion with the cast aboard. I rather liked the effect: it's of a time past and gone, but also echoing in the here and now. By Act 2, I was entirely enraptured. It's strange that the love emanating from a dysfunctional relationship can be so much more powerful and moving than from a staid one. I'm not quite sure what came over me, but I was sobbing uncontrollably at times. Good musical theatre (and good music) will do that. The only pity was that the Sunday night auditorium was barely half full. Five stars. Act 1: 19:33-20:50 Act 2: 21:12-22:19
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Post by distantcousin on Jun 15, 2022 21:16:13 GMT
Yes, it's very much a venue for car drivers, I'm afraid. I live relatively near and may go.
And, yes. The thread title should be "Leicestershire" as opposed to Leicester.
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