LOVE STORY, at the Duchess Theatre, is one of the best musicals I have ever seen! It's funny, it's sad, it's beautifully performed and superbly sung with glorious music and a witty script.
Jennifer Cailleri, a Radcliffe music graduate, is quick witted, feisty and funny. She tries in vain to resist the charms of hunky Harvard ice-hockey jock Oliver Barrett IV, even giving up a prized piano scholarship in Paris so they can marry. Emma Williams as Jennifer and Michael Xavier as Oliver give outstanding performances, completely capturing the sensitivity, wit and vulnerability of the characters while never over sentimentalising them. Their voices are simply stunning and their on-stage chemisrty fairly sizzles. Peter Polycarpou, as Jenny's adoring, Italian father is a revelation and with his wonderfully bad-fitting suit and emotional outbusts he raises both warmth and laughter. He couldn't be more different from Oliver's aloof, authoritarian father, well played by Richard Cordery.
I can't wait for the CD to come out to hear again the wonderful songs such as 'What Can You Say', which opens and closes the show, the uproarious 'Pasta', during which a wonderful smelling pasta meal is cooked on stage, and the heart-breaking 'Nocturnes', when Jenny imagines playing music for their children. Howard Goodall has written some marvellous melodies while Stephen Clark's witty, moving lyrics sit perfectly on the notes landing each rhyme and emotion memorably.
If you are too cynical to care about love then this isn't the musical for you. But if you believe in the redeeming, life-affirming power of love then this musical will surely cast you under its spell and change you forever.
- Margaret
16 Dec 10
The arrival of a new British musical in the West End should be cause enough for celebration even if it is based on a well known film. It's just a shame that Love Story isn't that good. Howard Goodall's score is pretty but repetitive and doesn't have that one great outporing of emotion that this story demands. In fact, the best tune comes when Jenny plays (or mimes) the theme from the original film. Emma Williams sings beautifully but is a bit too posh to be entireley believable as an Italian American from the wrong side of the tracks. Michael Xavier also sings well but doesn't create any sympathy or empathy for the young widower. In contrast Peter Polycarpou is excellent as Jen's anguished father. Love Story will definitely find an audience from those who love the film but it was a bit too formulaic for my taste. - David Baxter
09 Dec 10
We voted Love Story as one of the best events of the year. A superbly produced musical with totally believable characters which deserves to run and run. Well Done, WoS, for organising the visit to such a good show. - David Carr
09 Dec 10
Just back from the theatre from seeing Love Story----excellent.Mots of us know the story and that it is sad and a bad ending but that is the story!! With no intermission it just sailed through and was so polished and all the words of the songs just fitted so well into the story. Excellent cast specially the leads of Emma Williams and Michael Xavier--superb voices and also love Peter Polycarpou. Hope it does well as it really deserves to. - Joe Spiteri
08 Dec 10
Brilliant in every department: production, acting, music - Trish
24 Jun 10
Poignant tale of lost love
The world premiere of a new musical “Love Story” has got off to a great start with sell-out performances. Howard Goodall was approached to write the score for Erich Segal’s iconic love affair, basing it more accurately on the novel rather than the Hollywood movie, which has proved to be a hugely successful result.
The white monochrome set provides a striking backdrop for the musicians set on stage and slick efficient manoeuvres by the cast ensure the required props are seamlessly placed. Running for just 105 minutes without a break ensures the gathering emotions are not deflected.
This is a poignant and compelling love story between Oliver, the son of a wealthy patriarch and Jenny a talented musician from the wrong side of town. She has a warm loving relationship with her widowed father, while Oliver is estranged emotionally from his. Inevitably the tragic and premature death of a young 25 year old girl is heartbreaking, but much of this story concentrates on their unfolding relationship and is in fact full of sharp wit and memorable lines. Almost a dozen songs enrich the romantic journey of the two central characters.
Peter Polycarpou (Phil Cavilleri ~ Jenny’s father) gives a great performance so too Rob Edwards as the cold inhibited Oliver Barrett III ~ Oliver’s father. Emma Williams (Jenny Cavilleri) is faultless in her portrayal of the Italian/American and excels while singing and making pasta on stage! A highly polished performance both vocally and choreographically. Michael Xavier (Oliver Barrett IV) charms from the outset, a very natural performer as he follows through the emotions of love, anger, joy and heartache. Be prepared for a tearful conclusion!
Jill Lawrie ~ Remotegoat - Remotegoat)
13 Jun 10
I must be one of the few people who never saw the film (or read the book) of Love Story but it seems to me it could have originated as a musical, so comfortable is the story framed in this new show from Howard Goodall and Stephen Clark .Goodall’s music is simply gorgeous, his best score since The Hired Man, and Clark’s book and lyrics convey the all too short love with an intensity and humour that moved me from laughter to tears but ultimately left me uplifted. Goodall’s own orchestrations for piano, acoustic guitar and string quintet are beautiful and singing is crystal clear. Rachel Kavanaugh directs with a deftness and elegance on a simple white set. With the audience on three sides, there are occasions when your sight lines and audibility are challenged, but not enough to damage your enjoyment. Emma Williams and Michel Xavier are excellent as the young couple. Williams, in particular, delivers her self-deprecating New York humour wittily and believably. The rest of the small cast of ten give very good support in a variety of roles and as a chorus. This was a glorious 100 minutes. I can’t wait to hear the music again. If there’s any justice, it won’t end its life in Chichester and wherever it goes, I’ll be following. - Gareth James
11 Jun 10
I saw it on the opening night. Wonderful experience, despite some apprehension knowing the plot. The audience applause went on for a good five minutes after the final bow. - David
09 Jun 10
Was not sure about this when I booked it but certainly was not in any way disappointed. I thought the show was brilliant and the cast deserved their standing ovation. The singing and acting were top notch and the score was excellent. Another success for Chichester. - Jon Davis
08 Jun 10
I wondered how they would do this, let alone get away with it, but fortunately my doubts were confounded by Howard Goodall and Stephen Clark's collaboration on Erich Segal's original novel and subsequent film. A sad tale that is ultimately uplifting. It could have been the ultimate cheese-fest, but instead they and the excellent cast led with a stunning performance by Emma Williams, touching and yet feisty as Jenny, and Michael Xavier's Oliver her Preppy rich-boy husband coming to terms with events beyond his control. All achieved without a hint of sentimentality. The staging, in the Minerva theatre, is austere but in a most beautiful way. A triumph for Chichester and another one West End bound and with Broadway to follow? - rds
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