Use the form below to search for tickets on your desired date. Dates from
Synopsis The story of Eva Peron of Argentina - the poor girl made good, champion of the people, wife of the President and charismatic speaker who died young. Made into a film starring Madonna in 1996 where it won an Oscar for Best Song (a new song not in the original stage show).
Michael Grandage’s much-anticipated revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s hit 1978 musical Evita at the West End’s Adelphi Theatre, with Argentine actress Elena Roger taking the title role alongside Philip Quast as Juan Peron and Matt Rawle as narrator Che Guevara, opened last night (21 June 2006, previews from 2 June) to a standing ovation from a star-studded audience (See Today’s Other News for 1st Night Photos and WOS TV).
Evita is based on the life and times of Eva Peron, the second wife of Argentine dictator Juan Peron. It chronicles her life as one of Argentina’s most complex and powerful public figures, against a backdrop of political unrest, until her death of cancer aged 33 in 1952. Roger is joined in the cast of Grandage’s staging by Philip Quast as Juan Peron and Matt Rawle as narrator Che Guevara (See News, 30 Jan 2006).
The musical premiered, with Elaine Paige playing Eva, at the West End’s Prince Edward Theatre in 1978 where it ran for seven years. In 1996, Alan Parker’s film version starred Madonna, Jonathan Pryce and Antonio Banderas. In addition to the original score – which includes classics such as “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina” and “Another Suitcase in Another Hall” - Grandage’s new production features, for the first time on stage, the Oscar-winning “You Must Love Me”, which was written especially for Parker’s film and became a Top Ten single.
Overnight critics agreed Elena Roger was “high flying, adored” in the title role, and were also impressed with Christopher Oram’s set and Rob Ashford’s dynamic choreography. While some were not quite bowled over by the Rice and Lloyd Webber’s musical, most enjoyed being lost in Grandage’s “New Argentina”.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com - “With an Argentinian, Ms Roger, playing the lead, Lloyd Webber and his co-orchestrator, David Cullen, using a much more string-based and guitar-led rhythm section, have gone back to tango basics. So, for that matter, has the brilliant choreographer Rob Ashford, whose funeral chorus at the announcement of Eva’s death… segues silkily in flashback into her relationship with a lounge singer… Roger hits the heights in all the right places, exuding a firm interior charm as well as a knowing, calculated aura that’s new to the role. Tiny as a bird, she soars to the challenge. And she dances magnificently, buoyed along by a superbly drilled chorus and some genuinely breathtaking moments of ensemble staging. There’s no more exciting performance in London: a truly great musical has been famously restored.”
Sheridan Morley in the Daily Express - Morley loved Elena Roger’s “dazzling British debut.” As for the show itself, “Rice rightly takes the first credit. The musical was his idea, and it’s brilliantly cynical, witty lyrics set the tone for what has become in the new staging a darker show… Philip Quast is impressive… but the evening belongs to Roger, who is mesmerising from the beginning…. All in all this is a brilliant rediscovery of a show we thought we knew, but whose dark heart we had overlooked.”
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail - “Tiny though she be, with the bone structure of this fragile gamebird, Argentine Senorita Roger is big, big news…. What she has… is a sparky charge of talent… This is a first-rate Evita.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - Spencer hugely enjoyed the “outstanding revival from Michael Grandage, and a shocking great star performance from the diminutive, authentically Argentinian Elena Roger…. Again and again we are shown what a manipulative, self-serving amoral little minx she was… Again and again, though, we find ourselves falling for her dangerous allure…. Rice’s wit seems to have helped Lloyd Webber to combine his familiar lush and yearning romanticism with a welcome astringency… I have a strong suspicion that Evita is going to be a huge and durable hit all over again.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian - Less impressed, Billington found that while “watching Michael Grandage’s perfectly decent revival, one becomes aware of the dramatic insubstantiality of the show… to do justice to Eva’s story would require a first-rate dramatist. But Rice’s lyrics, even though verbally nimble, never give us enough information and seem torn between contradictory attitudes: admiration for Eva’s starry glamour and dismay at the demagoguery and crypto-fascism of which she was a part.” According to Billington, while the songs are “some of Lloyd Webber’s best… a musical is more than a score.” As for Roger, the Argentine “has expressive eyes and teeth and dances with real verve” but she’s not the star of the show – “the best feature of the evening is Christopher Oram’s design, which sumptuously recreates the wrought-iron balconies and architectural grandeur of Buenos Aries.”
Paul Taylor in the Independent - “The piece not only survives but thrives on the violent eruption of reality that comes in the diminutive shape of Elena Roger. As she charts the anti-heroine's progress from trashy opportunist to second wife (and First Lady) of the fascist Juan Peron and then to folk saint, Roger is simply sensational… Michael Grandage, one of our best directors, must have had to pinch himself to believe that Roger actually had dropped into his lap. His powerful production is full of acid humour, alert to the recklessness of a show that leaves itself open to the charge of glamourising fascism and of treating the well-heeled audience with a cynicism similar to that with which Eva and Juan Peron manipulated the shirtless masses.” Oppostite Roger, “Philip Quast, who is in excellent voice, makes a wonderfully uneasy President.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard - “I am a touch ashamed to admit I have fallen head over heels for Evita again, with Michael Grandage's dynamic production offering a charismatic title role performance, ripe for superlatives, by unknown Argentinian Elena Roger… Her performance, which conveys in song and dance the exuberance of a sexual adventuress and the ardour of the presidential saviour she wished to become, brought first nighters to their feet. For me, though, it only takes those famous songs to bowl me over.”
A sure test of a great show is that its second major production can compete with the impact of the first. That was the case at the Adelphi Theatre when Elaine Paige, the originating star of Evita, the 1978 musical by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber, was on hand on this revival’s opening night to acclaim her successor, the equally diminutive Elena Roger.
Hal Prince’s original staging was a Brechtian chronicle of political intrigue and social climbing. Michael Grandage, artistic director of the Donmar Warehouse, with his regular designer Christopher Oram, has realised the fuller operatic potential of the score, placing the action within the huge, crumbling colonial grandeur of the Casa Rosada in Buenos Aires, where Eva sings her signature number, “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina,” an ambivalent hymn to her own celebrity.
With an Argentinian, Ms Roger, playing the lead, Lloyd Webber and his co-orchestrator, David Cullen, using a much more string-based and guitar-led rhythm section, have gone back to tango basics. So, for that matter, has the brilliant choreographer Rob Ashford, whose funeral chorus at the announcement of Eva’s death (she died, aged 33, of cancer, in 1952) segues silkily in flashback into her relationship with a lounge singer (“On This Night of a Thousand Stars”).
At this point we seem to be in Lorca territory, with black-veiled choric women supporting and bemoaning Eva’s death and adventures. The narrator Che, whom David Essex originally made a self-contained Guevara poster pin-up in beret and battle fatigues, is re-imagined by Matt Rawle, in a pained, casual yet sexually-charged performance (taking his cue from Antonio Banderas in the 1996 Alan Parker movie) as a critical, distant lover. He’s not an observer but a fully engaged coeval.
This allows Roger’s bird-like, steely Evita to shuttle dispassionately between the rival advances of Rawle’s cynical Che and the mountainous Juan Peron of Philip Quast (so much expressively better than the inert Joss Ackland in the original), while cementing her public persona with the peasants, the “descamidos”, or “shirtless”, and the audience. The girl from the sticks ends up on the balcony.
No one listening to this score with open ears can doubt its integrated mastery of rhythm, the quilt-like cross-quotation between big numbers, the cleverness of the underscoring, the melodic surge of the big numbers, the vitality of the Big Apple/Buenos Aires item that documents Eva’s metropolitan destiny; or, indeed, the unselfconscious brilliance with which Rice and Lloyd Webber use the Evita legend to raise perennial modern issues of charitable foundations, social climbing, sexual attraction and political manoeuvring.
The political rise of Peron was first done as a game of musical chairs; now it’s an elegant wrestling bout, with each sinister participant vividly characterised. And Eva’s arrival as Peron’s new woman is poignantly registered by the evicted mistress (Lorna Want) in one of the show’s best songs, “”Another Suitcase in Another Hall,” pointlessly commandeered by Madonna in the movie. Eva’s famous “rainbow tour” – “They need to adore me, so Christian Dior me” – to win friends in Europe, is another gloriously detailed sequence, with pointed, witty lyrics and real dramatic momentum, and the beautiful waltz for Che and Eva is now followed by the haunting song Rice and Lloyd Webber wrote for the movie (it won an Oscar), “You Must Love Me”.
Roger hits the heights in all the right places, exuding a firm interior charm as well as a knowing, calculated aura that’s new to the role. Tiny as a bird, she soars to the challenge. And she dances magnificently, buoyed along by a superbly drilled chorus and some genuinely breathtaking moments of ensemble staging. There’s no more exciting performance in London: a truly great musical has been famously restored.
One of the best musicals I've seen. I loved the music and the actors.
Look forward to see this on Broadway in 2012 - Morten Aagaard
11 May 11
amzing girl solo was brilliant i really wish i could see it agian its on my favourites and im not the best for that!i am part of a group myself and we do amazing shows but not as mezmorizing as this!
- sophie gallager
06 Jul 08
Leila Ben Harris in Phantom of the opera is dreadful she may be able to hit some very good high notes but she over acts like mad.I went to see phantom on 23 january.08 and she spoilt the song think of me with the way she started it, by trying to act frightend she mad it just sound stupid then she continues to over act all through the rest of the show until she got to wishing you were somehow here again when she spends most of the song throwing her arms up into the air and had her back to the phantom while he is singing to her but.But the worst part was when she was singing past the point of no return,she throws herself about all over the stage and then while the phantom stands behind her while she is sitting down,she throws herself about so much we thought she was going to fall of the seat.when she sings the soft notes she sounds like Bonny Langford whos swollowed some sort of vibrator.Her part in the phantom spoilt the whole evening for my family and i and we felt let down because i have always thought the phantom the best show in the westend. She made it look like an amature production on its first night.She should listen to sarah brightman or the girl in the film because that is how the role is ment to be played.I have seen five others play the part of christine incudeing sarah brightman and Leila Ben Haris just kills the role.I cant see the phantom lasting another 21 years if it casts such bad actors in the roles.This girl would be better off in pantos. - R Etherington
28 Jan 08
Leila Ben Harris- Phanthom. I went on Thursday 3rd January '08 in order to give my children an introdudtion to the theatre. Having seen production, (with different leads) on two previous occasions, my expectations were high. Miss HARRISs' performance exceeded those, whilst sitting in row B i witnessed her focused performance which was delivered with passion and total committment to the character. She has left me in some difficulty as my children, and indeed i will consider that a bench mark for every one else to live up to. Her vocals were controlled yet intoxicating and convicing i'm considering paying a return visit in a weeks time. - Nigel
06 Jan 08
leila ben harris is my cousin abd I tkink she is wonderful - A.B.
14 Dec 07
Mixed feelings. Awful set, it doesn't work. Eva's is portrayed more ruthless than in the Prince version. Good cast bad badly directed, there is not latin feel apart from Elena Roger's great performance. - Fosco
26 May 07
Very Good production - Fred
25 May 07
My Evita review should be 4 stars - Kevin
25 May 07
I've never seen the original production, but I liked this. Very good choreography, some new arrangements giving the show a more latin feel and strong actors leading the show. Elena needs to refine the high notes however. I also think the sets could have been a bit better.
Best thing about the show: Lorna Want singing "another suitcase" - she's young, talented, very attractive and stole the show. Even if the rest of the show had been rubbish, it would have been made up for 10-fold by her wonderful moment in the spotlight. - Kevin
25 May 07
I couldn't compare to Hal Prince's production cause I didn't see it but this revival is quite uninspiring. I have to agree that Elena Roger is amazing in the role and vocally superb but that's unfortunately not enough to save this dull and boring production. I can totally understand why it's closing in less than a year. - Albert R
Originally the Sans Pareil built by a merchant called Scott to display the talents of his daughter. Opened on 27 Nov 1806 with Miss Scott's Entertainment. Became the Adelphi in 1819. The original theatre was demolished in 1858 and replaced with a bigger one which, with many alterations, remains. Restored to its 1930s form. 1500 seats. Society of London Theatre member.
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 Ticket Discounts.