258 posts
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Post by notmymuse on Jul 4, 2016 13:26:07 GMT
WOS: "The new season will also see the UK premiere of Jason Loewith and Joshua Schmidt's musical Adding Machine. Based on a play by Elmer Rice, the 'anti-musical' has a score inspired by gospel, opera, jazz and rock and roll, and tells of Mr Zero who finds himself out of a job when he is replaced by a machine. Adding Machine runs at the Finborough from 28 September to 22 October."
Anyone seen this before? From the clips I just watched on YouTube reminds me of Bed and Sofa, also at the Finborough a few years ago, e.g.
Have to confess to never even having heard of this before, but it sounds interesting.
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1,103 posts
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Post by mallardo on Jul 4, 2016 13:46:57 GMT
It's an expressionist musical with a dense and, I would say, difficult score. It falls into the same category as O'Neil's Hairy Ape as it's about the soul-less drudgery of labour and working class life in America in the 20s - in this case the life of an accountant - but it offers some relief in that there's a beautiful little love story at the heart of it. I saw a production in LA a few years ago and liked it a lot. There's an OCR to listen to if you're interested.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 4, 2016 13:58:49 GMT
Very soon, we'll all have to learn to say the 1920s.
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1,103 posts
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Post by mallardo on Oct 8, 2016 9:31:02 GMT
I saw this last night, a great production of a fascinating piece of music theatre that falls into the category of Expressionist Musical, a category pretty much unoccupied unless you call The Threepenny Opera expressionist.
Elmer Rice's play, famous in its day, was written in 1923, one year after O'Neill's The Hairy Ape, and it's not dissimilar in its heavy symbolism and its concentration on the oppression of the working class. But whereas O'Neill's work remains solidly earthbound and grim, Rice's play takes off into metaphysics and fantasy, its plot making the prodigious leap, via a short series of scenes, from a New York tenement to the Elysian Fields, literally. The highly original conclusion it comes to is an explanation for the persistence of the class system, of the haves and have-nots in this world (Rice was an ardent Leftist) that is, at the same time, crazily fanciful and strangely plausible.
But this is not the play, it's the musical, faithfully based on it, written by Joshua Schmidt. It had a successful off-Broadway run in 2008 and produced a cast recording which is well work hearing. Because it's so true to the material it's not easy listening. The protagonist, Mr. Zero, is an accountant and (as his name implies) it's a show about numbers. In the workplace, roboticized clerks recite sums and figures in a rhythmic frenzy reminiscent of the music of Philip Glass and John Adams, the numbers both oppressing and sustaining them. But for Mr. Zero it all comes crashing down when, instead of an expected promotion for his 25 years of loyal service, he finds he's to be replaced by an adding machine. The story goes from there.
The real adding machine is not the little box with levers and keys, it's Zero himself. Stuck fast in a miserable life - bad job, bad marriage - he is without imagination. He and his friends are narrow minded bigots, mouthing platitudes, entirely closed to anything beyond the daily grind. He cannot even respond to love when it is offered by a fellow office worker, Daisy. He doesn't see it because he's not looking for it. But his opportunity for escape comes in the most bizarre of plot twists and the question the show asks is can he rise to salvation even then?
As noted, this is a first class production - as usual for the Finborough. The seven person cast is uniformly excellent, some great voices among them. Joseph Alessi, as Zero, does not have a great voice but he's a powerful actor and, with his intense mixture or rage and befuddlement, he anchors the show. Joanna Kirkland is a lovely Daisy and delivers the show's big love song, "I'd Rather Watch You", beautifully.
Josh Seymour's staging is highly inventive and right and the 3 piece band - piano, synth and percussion - plays this difficult, complex score with apparent ease.
So this is not going to be for everyone but for those with a bit of adventure in their soul, I'd recommend it. It's doing well at the box office, I was told, and a couple of more shows have been added. It runs for 95 minutes straight through, no interval.
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213 posts
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Post by peelee on Oct 9, 2016 13:03:48 GMT
An unusual, interesting piece of music theatre that is well produced and well performed by a talented group of players. I'd not normally attend this kind of thing but was glad that I indulged my curiosity this time and was rewarded with good storytelling and lyrics that ranged from sharp to something rather softer where appropriate. Until recently Elmer Rice was no more to me than a name I saw in books and articles every now and again for no reason I could remember, yet I now feel more clued-up about who he was and what he contributed.
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3,575 posts
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Post by showgirl on Oct 12, 2016 22:23:04 GMT
"Horrible, most horrible." Or I am a Philistine. Or both, but it was not for me, though fortunately I managed to doze off briefly despite the discordant score.
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