Quantcast

Mandy Patinkin as the eunuch
Mandy Patinkin as the eunuch

Review Round-up: Menier Finds & Loses Paradise

Date: 27 May 2010

The Menier Chocolate Factory, riding high from its recent 15 Tony nominations, presented its latest musical offering this week, Paradise Found, brought to the stage by dream-team Hal Prince and Susan Stroman with a book by Olivier Award-winning dramatist Richard Nelson.

Paradise Found
is a brand new operetta adapted from the 1939 novel by Joseph Roth, The Tale of the 1002nd Night, about the 19th-century Persian shah who visited Vienna to ask to his eunuch to seduce the Austro-Hungarian empress.

Set to the music of Johann Strauss and orchestrated by Jonathan Tunick, Paradise Found is led by an all-American cast that includes Mandy Patinkin, John McMartin, Judy Kaye, Kate Baldwin, Shuler Hensley and George Lee Andrews. The musical plays at the Menier Chocolate Factory until 26 June.


  • Michael Coveney in Whatsonstage.com - (one star) – “Paradise Found  is a bizarrely dreadful musical … And it’s all the more peculiar because it has been produced to such a notably high level. The entire show has been shipped in, as if from Broadway … The music is finely textured throughout, but is curiously bereft of tunes you might recognize… For a show that supposedly celebrates the restoration of sexual potency, the proceedings are inappropriately limp and joyless … Everything else in the presentation is top notch: wigs, costumes, the invisible band under Charles Prince’s musical direction, and the severely expressive lighting design by Howell Binkley. But I’m at a loss to understand why anyone thought the musical worth doing in the first place, and I doubt if it will add much lustre to the Menier legend.”
  • Michael Billington in the Guradian (two stars) – “Some of Broadway's best have descended on this Southwark playhouse bearing a brand-new musical … Yet, I fear, all they have brought us is a prize turkey: a pastiche Arabian Nights fable of unbelievable coarseness and vulgarity … The attempt to marry the earthy robustness of the Arabian Nights with the lilting melodies of Johann Strauss also reminds you of the worst excesses … Prince and Stroman, who's responsible for the choreography, are practised hands who know how to stage even this kind of tosh. The American cast also acquit themselves decently. But the show fails in its attempt to combine rogueish naughtiness with Viennese sophistication, and, in its desecration of Strauss's melodies, proves you can't pour 'alt Wien' into new bottles.”

  • Paul Taylor in the Independent (one star) – “Poor old Mandy Patinkin. America's highest-pitched tenor picked a stinker for his British musical debut … The creative team on Paradise Found are showbiz royalty … But they seem to have taken leave of their collective senses … You could call it a glorified juke-box musical, if it weren't for the original and largely woeful lyrics by Ellen Fitzhugh …  Patinkin bleats and whinnies at the top of his vertiginous register and beyond … Between them, Prince and Stroman boast so many awards that their shelves must be severely congested. The one consolation they can take from the failure of this flagrant Broadway-tryout here in cheaper Britain is that it won't leave them with any storage problems in their display cabinets.”

  • Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph (two stars) – “Paradise Found often feels strained when it ought to be funny, mawkish when it ought to be moving, and Strauss’s waltzes and polkas, played by a small band, begin to seem repetitive … The jocose, nudge-nudge, wink-wink tone of the production, with its gaudy costumes and often dire jokes, quickly becomes wearisome … Patinkin, perspiring freely as he struggles to keep the show afloat, could find far more pathos in the role of the eunuch … The best performance comes from Kate Baldwin, who is both affecting and a succulent feast for the eye, as Mizzi … this is a rare botched shot from both the Menier and the dream-team of Prince and Stroman. Theatrical paradise it certainly ain’t.”
  • Dominic Maxwell in The Times (two stars) – “No denying the polish of this new musical comedy … But, blimey, what are they polishing? … Its first act twinkles so hard that you worry the cast’s eyes are going to fall out … Paradise Found is a misfire, a handsome mess that shouldn’t make it out of SE1 … Granted, the action can look cramped on the stage of this 150-seater. But the story is the problem … The cast look as if they are under orders to have fun …The shame is, you don’t often see the sort of dazzling professionalism you get from this 14-strong cast … the tone is wrong. Or should that be, the tones are wrong? This is lavish whimsy: quite an achievement, but who needs it?”
  • Henry Hitchings in the Evening Standard (two stars) - "The Menier’s stock is at a high ... But with Paradise Found, its handsome run of form comes to an end. This is a dizzyingly unfashionable operetta, set in Vienna in the heyday of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Wags might dub it a Viennetta. It’s certainly a sickly confection ... The chief problem, apparent early on, is Richard Nelson’s book, which refashions a story by Joseph Roth into a lubricious farce. The opening scenes drag, unleavened by humour. Nods to The King And I, as well as a more-than-passing resemblance to Measure For Measure, only emphasise the poverty of the material and its structural mess. When the mood darkens, it’s thoroughly incongruous, a bit like splicing The White Ribbon into an episode of Glee ... There’s a lot of expensive, imported talent squeezed on to the small stage, and it is largely wasted."

    - Tom Williams & Theo Bosanquet

  • Related Content

    Booking Tickets & Show Listings
    Paradise Found Listing Page
    Internal Links
    Paradise Found star - 27th May 2010 reviews



    Write a Comment
    Give us your opinion on this entry
    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.

    Free Newsletter

    Subscribe to our free newsletter


    Featured Video

    Twitter

    Featured Editor's Picks

    Infographic: The economic impact of Arts & Culture in the UK
    When Culture Secretary Maria Miller called for the arts to make their "economic case" for subsidy, t...

    Bonnie WrightPlays Cast: Harry Potter star in Southwark Moment, more for Branagh's Macbeth
    Bonnie Wright, best known for playing Ginny Weasley in the Harry Potter films, will make her stage d...

    Ben Turner as Amir & Farshid Rokey as Hassan in <i>The Kite Runner</i>. Photo by Robert DayBrief Encounter with ... The Kite Runner's Ben Turner
    Ben Turner stars in the stage version of the bestselling book The Kite Runner, which runs at Liverpo...

    Stephen Boxer as Titus AndronicusTitus Andronicus (RSC)
    starstarstar
    This latest production of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus, to borrow from football punditry, is a p...

    Regent's Park Open Air TheatreTake Five: Britain's outdoor theatres
    With half-term approaching, the weather (hopefully) set to improve for the bank holiday weekend and ...

    West End Live in actionWest End Live returns to Trafalgar Square next month
    West End Live, a weekend of free entertainment from top London shows, will return to Trafalgar Squar...

    Robert Sean Leonard as Atticus FinchRobert Sean Leonard: 'I carry the ghost of Gregory Peck on my shoulders'
    Actor Robert Sean Leonard is currently playing Atticus Finch in Timothy Sheader's production of To K...

    Robert Sean Leonard & Eleanor Worthing-CoxTo Kill A Mockingbird
    starstarstarstar
    Twenty years ago, a young Robert Sean Leonard appeared on the London stage with Alan Alda in...

    X Factor musical titled I Can't Sing!, opens Palladium March 2014
    The forthcoming X Factor musical will be called I Can't Sing! The Musical and will premiere at the L...

    Tom Hiddleston. Photo: Dan WoollerDonmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus
    The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...
    >> More Editor's Picks
    >> Most Recent Stories
    >> Most Popular Stories

    Follow Us

    Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube