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Synopsis Set in 1860’s Atlanta, Georgia, Gone with the Wind follows the story of the seventeen-year-old Scarlett O’Hara, the eldest of three daughters living a life of luxury on their father’s plantation until the onset of the Civil War threatens their idyllic existence. Scarlett’s incredible journey through both the war and the peace is mirrored in her turbulent relationship with Rhett Butler, whose actions always defy prediction. Their story spans ten years and mingles romantic ecstasy with tragic grief, as the life these people once knew disappears, for better or worse: gone with the wind.
Director Trevor Nunn’s epic adaptation of Gone With the Wind had its official opening last night (22 April 2008, previews from 5 April) at the West End’s New London theatre. With a cast led by Broadway’s Jill Paice and former Pop idol contestant Darius Danesh (pictured) as Scarlett O’Hara and Rhett Butler, the show, billed as “a play with music”, is written by American newcomer Margaret Martin.
Set in Georgia in the 1860s, Margaret Mitchell’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1936 novel follows Scarlett’s journey from a life of luxury on her father’s plantation through the Civil War and the hardships it heaps on her and her family to the rocky post-war peace, with her love for Ashley Wilkes and the renegade Rhett Butler adding fuel to the fire.
Investors must have hoped to emulate at least some of the success of Victor Fleming’s seminal 1939 film version starring Clarke Gable and Vivien Leigh, which won ten Oscars and became one of the biggest box office successes in Hollywood history. However, after cancelled previews (See News, 14 Apr 2008) and rumours of audience walkouts, Aldo Scrofani and Colin Ingram, producers of the new stage version, must have picked up this morning’s papers with some trepidation.
Overnight reviews were almost unanimously hostile. While many critics were exhausted by the running time - still clocking in at three hours 40 minutes after substantial cuts during previews - poor structuring was the bigger gripe. And Margaret Martin’s score didn’t fare much better, with a “knock-out” gospel slave song in the second act being singled out by many as the only musical highlight. Performance-wise, Natasha Yvette Williams’ Mammy eclipsed stars Jill Paice and Darius Danesh for critical raves, but still couldn’t prevent Gone With the Wind being labelled “extravagantly pointless”.
Of course, don’t forget, critics famously got it wrong for another mammoth Trevor Nunn-directed musical adaptation of a literary classic: after a first night mauling, Les Miserables went on to become the West End’s longest-running musical, now in its 23rd year.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (two stars) – “There’s a bizarre suggestion in Trevor Nunn’s production that Scarlett morphs into some kind of Mother Courage of the American Civil War, pulling her baby and belongings around on a gun carriage after the burning of Atlanta before breaking into a hymn to the transforming powers of flatulence: ‘The life I used to know has gone, gone with the wind.’ No more curried eggs for her, then… Jill Paice runs a gamut of emotions from A to B, as Dorothy Parker once said of Tallulah Bankhead, but she does so with endearing charm. There is a collective intake of breath at the sight of ‘Pop Idol’ Darius Danesh as Rhett Butler; he’s about seven feet tall and blessed with an extraordinary bass baritone voice that he may find a way of using properly one day. For now, oddly stiff and smarmy at the same time, he looks like a joke entrant in a Clark Gable lookalike contest… Nunn has bolstered his company with such reliable performers as Susan Tracy, Susan Jane Tanner, Jeff Shankley and Ray Shell, but none of them has much chance to shine in the encroaching, deadly mediocrity of the material.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (two stars) – “Does no one ever learn from the past? An earlier musical of Margaret Mitchell's mammoth novel, having been seen in Tokyo and London, eventually burned out in Atlanta. Undeterred, theatrical tyro Margaret Martin has written book, music and lyrics for this new version which Trevor Nunn directs; and the result feels like a hectic, strip-cartoon account of a dated pop classic. The problem is structural: how do you cram a 1,000-page novel into three-and-a-half hours of stage time? The answer is ‘with great difficulty’… To those who see Scarlett as a feminist role model, I can only say that heartless opportunism and emotional blindness don't strike me as the most attractive qualities; but Jill Paice does an excellent job of reconciling us to one of literature's least beguiling protagonists… There is something extravagantly pointless about the whole enterprise. Why revive a novel that, for all the liberal exertions of Martin and Nunn, obstinately views history through the wrong end of a telescope?”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (one star) – “Connoisseurs of big, bad musicals must rush to catch Gone With the Wind in case it’s quickly blown away on gales of ridicule. Or is a small, well-placed tornado in the vicinity of the theatre too much to hope for?... This may sound an ungenerous response to a musical rendition of the 69-year-old movie that turned the American Civil war into a seductive weepie and ravished countless millions of women in the process. This version, though, reminds us of the dangers of trying to cram a vintage film spectacular into theatrical confines, particularly with an absolute beginner as the adaptor. Most musicals are the work of several hands and minds. Here, however, book, music and lyrics are all attributed to Margaret Martin, who has spent 30 years taking pregnancy classes for expectant parents in California, studied musical theory and now gives laborious birth to her first musical.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - “The vultures have been circling over this show for weeks. There have been cancelled previews, reports that it was so long that audiences were missing the last train home, and of people physically collapsing in the foyer through sheer exhaustion. Actually I made that last bit up. But I have to say that when I emerged from the theatre after three hours and 40 minutes, it felt as if I had spent several years watching Gone With the Wind and that I had probably missed not just the Beijing Olympics but the London games planned for 2012 as well… Trevor Nunn's production achieves the kind of paradox normally only found in the baffling field of quantum mechanics. It feels interminable, but moment by moment it also seems ridiculously rushed, so that incidents that really make a mark in the film go for almost nothing on stage… The only performer who really lights up the stage is Natasha Yvette Williams as a huge-busted, full-hearted Mammy, who rips into the show's one decent number and has all the presence, good humour and heart the rest of the show so dismally lacks.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Times (two stars) – “Frankly, my dears, I did give a damn but not as big a damn as I had hoped. To put it another way: fiddlededee to some but not all the things that are occurring in a piece I wasn’t always sure should exist. Margaret Martin’s book for her musical version of Gone With the Wind is almost too faithful to Margaret Mitchell’s novel and, at 190 minutes, certainly too long. Trevor Nunn’s cast sometimes left me hankering for Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh, who breezed and dazzled their way through the film. Sadly, I often found myself wishing the musical just wasn’t a musical… Have Martin and Nunn tried to bring political correctness to Margaret Mitchell? Just a bit, notably when they’re treating black characters, and especially Jina Burrows’ Prissy, who is no ditsy airhead but a young woman who will use her freedom to become a teacher. Indeed, a gospel-style song in which the ex-slaves celebrate their liberty was received more warmly than any other, and a solo by Natasha Yvette Williams’ excellent Mammy almost equally so, even though neither was that relevant to the plot.”
Paul Callan in the Daily Express (three stars) - "When the American Civil War ended after four years, the survivors staggered from the battlefields, exhausted and thankful it was all over. It feels like that when the cast finally take their bows in this show and, after three-and-a-half hours, you emerge with gratitude into the night… There are few songs that linger in the mind longer than a few seconds - and Ms Martin flagrantly breaks the golden rule that must be observed of all composers of hit musicals. That is, you must come out with a good tune ringing in your head…With its 36 actors playing over 90 parts, the show is often a blur of activity, some of it blundering and clumsy, while at other times it does move with a certain slick pace around the stage… You really wonder why a director as eminent as Trevor Nunn has become involved in a show that could well go down in the history of theatrical oddities. He is fond of the big canvas, as in Les Miserables. But, sadly, Gone With The Wind, despite its meaty story, just flaps limply in the breeze."
It's not a line I recall from the 1939 film of Gone With the Wind, but we're told something really startling about Scarlett O’Hara at the start of the second interminable act of Margaret Martin’s new musical play: “She walked every day for miles looking for yams.”
Frankly, my dears, I don’t give a yam, but there's a bizarre suggestion in Trevor Nunn’s production that Scarlett morphs into some kind of Mother Courage of the American Civil War, pulling her baby and belongings around on a gun carriage after the burning of Atlanta before breaking into a hymn to the transforming powers of flatulence: “The life I used to know has gone, gone with the wind.” No more curried eggs for her, then.
Jill Paice as Scarlett gives everything she’s got to this item, which I cannot label as the programme does not list musical numbers. These numbers, anyway, don't stand alone, but sidle out of the show with their footling orchestrations like guilty little secrets. If only they’d remained so. One exception is a rousing anthem to freedom by a chorus of black slaves left over from Nunn’s recent sub-standard Porgy and Bess.
The productions by Nunn and John Caird of Nicholas Nickleby and then Les Miserables were two of the greatest in our theatre of 20 years ago. They were rooted in the RSC company ideal and expressed stories of epic scale and panoramic detail in a passionate stage language that summarised other early 1980s experiments in narrative theatre and, in the case of Les Miserables, found a soaring, modern Verdian musical style to match.
Here, the distribution of the story among scattered third person parties around the huge plantation verandah design of John Napier seems like a solution to a problem, not the result of any urgency in communication. Once inside the unfriendly New London, the arena, you have to admit, is thrilling. As in his King Lear and The Seagull for the RSC last year, Nunn knows exactly how to exploit this space to the full, arranging the company hoe-downs and cakewalks with real flair, much flattered by the wonderful array of crinolines, gingham skirts and frock coats by costume designer Andreane Neofitou. The burning of Atlanta, lit by Neil Austin, is an orange glow in an ever-changing sky.
Jill Paice runs a gamut of emotions from A to B, as Dorothy Parker once said of Tallulah Bankhead, but she does so with endearing charm. There's a collective intake of breath at the sight of “Pop Idol” Darius Danesh as Rhett Butler; he’s about seven feet tall and blessed with an extraordinary bass baritone voice that he may find a way of using properly one day. For now, oddly stiff and smarmy at the same time, he looks like a joke entrant in a Clark Gable lookalike contest.
Nunn has bolstered his company with such reliable performers as Susan Tracy, Susan Jane Tanner, Jeff Shankley and Ray Shell, but none of them has much chance to shine in the encroaching, deadly mediocrity of the material. Edward Baker-Duly has a fair stab at Scarlett’s beloved Ashley Wilkes, but the stand-out performance, in every way, is that of the mighty-bosomed Natasha Yvette Williams as the black maid Mammy, surely a shoe-in for best supported actress of the year.
Gone with the Wind was PHENOMENAL. Congratulations on a fantastic show, it makes me crazy to see the critics tear something so entertaining and raw apart to jump on a popular bangwagon. Everyone in the theatre last night thoroughly enjoyed themselves and were transported and engaged constantly and if there was a person not weeping by the end they hid it very well. The ovations were extremely well deserved and it is a tragedy that this show is closing when the great word of mouth about it spreads tragically too late and it could have soared over the cynics as We Will Rock You did.
Special mentions must go to the leads Danesh and Paice, for their electric chemistry, powerhouse performances and stunning voices put to beautiful and INTERSTING arias and tunes.
SURELY THE SOUNDTRACK MUST BE RELEASED SOON! I was along with at least 50 other audience members queueing for it in the interval.
Gone With The Wind surpassed my wildest expectations. I see an average of 100 shows a year and this my have been my favourite so far - ELIZABETH WALLACE
13 Jun 08
I am devastated this show is being closed, Everyone in the audience seemed to love the show, Darius and Jill were brilliant as Rhett and Scarlett. I am squeezing in one more show before it closes, what a crying shame the media critics cruxified this show based on the unfinalised first night show, mainly for its length which has now been addressed! I feel priviliged to be seeing this show again, but feel sorry for those who will never get to see it. - Denie
31 May 08
Trevor Nunn has certainly not disappointed me with this production, it is absolutely brilliant and very cleverly adapted for the stage. I give credit to the whole cast on their outstanding performance, their passion and energy shines through in the songs. Outstanding performances from Darius Danesh (fantastic stage presence)a very credible Rhett Butler and Jill Paice (sassy and captivating) a fabulous Scarlett. To hear that this show is closing is simply devastating and I urge those who have decided not to see the show due to the bad reviews is to go now while you have the chance. I have to say I am extremely upset over the closure and to quote a lady in the audience after the performance "You know I am really angry with those critics who condemmed this show, there are a lot of people out there who will miss a truly great show" By the way, I love the music and it will be a great pity if there is not a soundtrack CD from this show. - Wendy S
31 May 08
I saw the matinee on 14th May and wasn't sure what to expect. I wasn't disappointed, it was an enjoyable show which really works well now. Jill Paice was superb as Scarlett, hardly off the stage, and Darius Danesh as Rhett was mesmorising, wonderful stage presence. Some excellent moments from Mammy too. - will hunter
21 May 08
Saw the show on Saturday. A tale of 2 halves. 1st half suffered from poor song lyrics, and the action felt like they were trying to cram too much into it. BUT, the 2nd half was superb, Great performances from the leads, especially Darius. - mj
19 May 08
I went went with high hopes. At first it had seemed to me to be too ambitious a project even for the mighty Mr Nunn, but as some reviewers on this page had been very generous in their praise I decided I would give it the benefit of the doubt and so went with a genuine open mind. How disappointing then to report it failed miserably - if only it had been Miserablé! Which I guess is what the dear man has been searching for years for. Well he aint found it yet. The set was as good as one would expect in the West End and by John Napier, but it stayed pretty much the same all through. Even the revolving house, which someone else has commented on here, revolved but still looked the same. The much flag waving was too reminiscent of les Miz. I audibly groaned at some of the lyrics. After an hour of this pageant I began to wonder if Mr Nunn has gone of the rails with no one brave enough to tell him so. This will not run not because of nasty critics saying awful things about it but because it is just plain bad! Don't waste your money or, at the last count, three hours and five minutes of your precious life on it get the DVD instead and whilst watching it appreciate Max Steiner's fabulous score too. As for this show, frankly my dear I don't give a damn! - rds
16 May 08
Cripes! bd_london's review is almost as long as the bloody book! - Scarlett
11 May 08
stunning - oliver
07 May 08
Saw the matinee on May 3rd - it was OK nothing special but I always rate a musical on how many songs I can recall at the end and the only one was gospelly Wings of a Dove - I take it this is what is called as the programme was very sparse! Even though the show ran till 6.10pm it still felt as though they were rushing most of the scenes. Maybe they should have left out all the songs and just did a play. Anyway on Sunday I treated myself to watching the film - with no songs! Unfortunately I think this is destined to be one of the WE's failures! - Steve
06 May 08
I went to see GWTW and was enthralled by the performances of Darius Danesh and Jill Paice. The scenes and production were very good. However, what really spoilt it all for me was the portrayal of Melanie by Madeleine Worrall. She stomped and shouted around the stage and even the death-bed scene was loud. Melanie was played by Olivia D'haviland in the film and the kindness and warmth of character of Melanie shone out and was one of the reasons why the betrayal by Scarlett and Ashley was so abhorent. Please, please can this part either be re-cast or played differently to how it is now!!! My opinion was also shared by other audience members whilst in discussion after the show. - Carol W
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