Member Login | FREE TICKETS GALORE - JOIN THE THEATRE CLUB JUST £30
QUICK LINKS
NEWS  |  GOSSIP  |  REVIEWS  |  REVIEW ROUND-UPS  |  INTERVIEWS  |  FEATURES  |  PHOTOS  |  REGIONS

Glee Club (tour)
Glee Club (tour)
Venue:
Where:
Date Reviewed: 14 September 2004
WOS Rating: starstarstarstar
Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews

The Glee Club is a stealth play: it creeps up on you a bit unbeknownst. One minute it's all early 60s nostalgia, with sherbert dabs and Horace Batchelor of K-E-Y-N-S-H-A-M's infallible pools system on Radio Luxembourg 208; and the next, a tight-knit village community is ripped to shreds by sexual peccadilloes.

It's 1962 and it's a Yorkshire mining village of the sort that, thanks to Mrs Thatcher, no longer exists in 2004. The community gels on a number of levels, mainly because the men all work down the pit and entrust their lives literally to one another on a daily basis. They work in constant physical danger, have no hiding place as they face one another naked in the shower at the end of the shift and they drink heavily together in comradeship, the language ripe and the jokes mucky.

And, like nearly all mining communities, they make music: some go for brass bands, some for male voice choirs, but here in the village it's a glee club - five blokes and the church organist in close harmony. Not cutting edge stuff, of course, even for 1962: a smattering of your Neopolitan tenors' songs, “Que sera, sera”, “You always hurt the one you love” - hardly the makings of a West End catalogue show.

It all begins to feel a bit like Godber territory, but writer Richard Cameron and director Mike Bradwell, who developed the piece together, have something more hard-edged in view. The fault-lines begin to appear as the organist (Stefan Bednarczyk very finely playing a man who loses neither pride nor dignity even when vilified) approaches The Glee Club treasurer for emergency cash and reveals that he is under suspension from the church on suspicion of interfering with the choirboys. Nobody believes the accusation, but in the over-reaction of support for him he has to reveal that he did once, in his past, have a homosexual affair - and, this being 1962, even that is too much for Scobie (Steve Garti), a man whose wife is forever presenting him with daughters he can no longer cope with.

Throw in Colin (Oliver Jackson), a wannabe pop singer who gets his girlfriend pregnant and is devastated when she aborts the child, Bant (Colin Tarrant) whose wife has run off with the Rington's tea man (a particularly northern anachronism which bizarrely continues to this day), Walt (Mike Burns) who lost his wife and had to send his children into care and is now wracked with guilt when he sleeps with his neighbour, and Jack (James Hornsby), who prefers a bit of posh totty when he should be doing his union duty and defending Bant against a trumped-up charge by the pit bosses - against such odds, it would be a miracle if the village survived, let alone The Glee Club.

Baldly stated, it's something of an over-egged pudding. But the writing and construction are masterful, the direction very sure-footed and every single performance to die for. In his programme note, Mike Bradwell says he thinks the play will become a classic; and I'm not about to disagree with him.

- Ian Watson (reviewed at West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds)





Write a Review
Give us your opinion on this production, give it a score (1 is low) and a comment
Score:
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
Q Why join yet another mailing list?
A Because, if you visit the theatre more than once or twice a year, we could save you hundreds of pounds.






Tickets For Tonight


Special Offers

Theatre and Meal Deals

Click here for all meal deals


Friends Email: Your Email: Comment:
© Whatsonstage 1996-2009
SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

Tickets
Buy London Theatre Tickets
Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

Content
Theatre News
Theatre Reviews
Interviews & Features
Theatre Videos
Opera News & Reviews
Off-West End News & Reviews
Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
Whatsonstage.com Awards

Meet the Editorial Team

Community
Discussion board
Community calendar
Theatre jobs
Theatre blogs

Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Join the Club
Log in
Current Club benefits
How to get free theatre tickets

Group Outings
What's On Stage Magazine

Mailing Lists
Newsletter - weekly theatre news
Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

Information Services
What's On - national theatre listings database

A-Z of London Theatres
A-Z of London Theatre Shows

London Theatre Show openings & closings
FAQ
Work for us - current vacancies

Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Tickets Discounts.

Products
Whatsonstage.com
What's On Stage Magazine
Theatregoers' Choice Awards
Theatre Club

Marketing Services:
Website design
Email marketing & CRM services

Content feeds

Testimonials
Contact us
Advertise with us

Book by Phone:
London Theatre Tickets: 0845 372 1950
For Outings or Club queries: 020 7317 9100