Synopsis In Tsarist Russia in 1905, poor dairyman Tevye is doing his best to preserve tradition in the face of a changing world by marrying his daughters off in the traditional Jewish way. But revolution is in the air and the young are guided by their hearts, not their elders. When his daughters refuse the matchmaker's advice and marry for love instead, Tevye must choose between their happiness and his beloved traditions.
Sheffield Crucible’s production of Fiddler on the Roof opened at the Savoy Theatre last night (29 May 2007, previews from 19 May) to a warm welcome from London critics (See Today’s 1st Night Photos).
The musical, which ran for 3,242 performances when it premiered on Broadway in 1964, was revived at the Crucible this Christmas past (See News, 23 Mar 2007) and is headed by Henry Goodman (pictured) as dairyman Tevye whose strict traditions come into conflict with his five daughters’ desires to marry for love.
The musical set in 1905 Tsarist Russia is based on the stories of Sholom Aleichem with a book by Joseph Stein and score by Jerry Block (music) and Sheldon Harnick (lyrics). This new production is directed by Lindsay Posner, designed by Peter McKintosh and features the original choreography of Jerome Robbins (recreated by Sammy Dallas Bates with additions by Kate Flatt).
The majority of overnight critics were fiddling a happy tune in today’s papers, with particular praise heaped on Goodman’s “first-rate” and perhaps star-making performance at the heart of the production. There were approving nods too for Beverley Klein and Alexandra Silber as his wife and second eldest daughter respectively. And while many welcomed a chance to see Robbins’ “breathtaking” original choreography again, others felt this licence requirement stifled the creative potential of Posner’s “well-executed” production.
Michael Coveney for Whatsonstage.com (three stars) – “The set by Peter McKintosh – the shtetl is crazily nailed together with more boring wooden planks than in ten timber yards – and the stranglehold of Jerome Robbins’ original choreography (which comes as part of the licence) obviate any sense of a ‘new look’. Admittedly, the Robbins choreography is worth seeing. The company snakes on, liltingly, hands raised and joined, knees flexed, in the rousing opener, ‘Tradition’. And certain numbers, such as the famous ‘bottle’ dance at the wedding and the violently invasive Cossack dance that prefigures the later ransacking, could hardly be improved. But the tone of the production, relentless and reverential, is defined by the necessity to recreate an interpretation. At least Henry Goodman avoids the ingratiating sentimentality of Topol, the first London Tevye, to such an extent that you could say his performance lacked charm altogether. He refuses to milk the songs the way he milks his cows. Fiddler is less of a ‘show’ than a serious musical. The first act is too long, the second too bleak. Yet it works magnificently, despite this hide-bound presentation.”
Fiona Mountford in the Evening Standard (four stars) – “Lindsay Posner’s mature, heartfelt, impeccably executed revival, receiving a deserved transfer from Sheffield, is a perfect reminder of why this tune-stuffed show has been fiddling its way to box office gold since 1964. Posner, nimbly aided by designer Peter McKintosh and choreographer Kate Flatt, constantly underlines the fact that the anchor of Bock, Harnick and Stein's creation, weightier even than the hummability of ‘If I Were a Rich Man’ and ‘Matchmaker’, is the very specificity of its setting. With every turn of the versatile wooden slats, we feel we are witnessing an existence that real people actually experienced, rather than a vague, Brigadoon-like unreality conjured up solely for the purposes of musical fiction. Henry Goodman isn't Topol but he's first-rate as Tevye, the genial dairyman and father of a brood of headstrong daughters. However, endless asides to the Almighty accompanied by a repertoire of stock gestures constantly threaten to topple Tevye over into caricature, and Goodman duly struggles with his gear change into the big emotional crunch scenes of Act II. Shout it with delight from the rooftops: the Fiddler's back in town.
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - “Lindsay Posner's staging may not be nearly as spectacular as the recent Broadway revival directed by David Leveaux, but it has far more heart. Indeed, the piece actually benefits from being staged on the relatively small Savoy stage. As a result, Jerome Robbins' legendary and still breathtaking choreography achieves an almost explosive energy and impact. And Peter McKintosh's simple timber designs beautifully evoke the dilapidated but homely atmosphere of the Jewish shtetl in pre-Revolutionary Russia, home to characters who at the end of the show, like so many Jews before and since, are forced to set off on their travels yet again. The production's secret weapon, however, is Henry Goodman, whose performance as Tevye should at last see him achieving the star status he so richly deserves. Having already given us the greatest Shylock I ever expect to see, Goodman now turns his attention to a far warmer Jewish character, and finally nails the unfair canard that there has always been a cold calculation about his high-definition performances. Goodman is a performer who seizes the limelight as if it were a birthright, and every moment, every movement, is made to count.”
Simon Edge in the Daily Express - “To say Goodman makes the role his own is not quite right. As the sardonic, eye-rolling, shoulder-shrugging peasant philosopher and personal friend of God, he does not try or need to bring a new interpretation. But with the quivering intensity of his dancing, a vocal range that takes him from squeaks to roars, and a command of rich comedy and raw paternal emotion, you don't for a second wish to see anyone else in the part. He is ably supported by Beverley Klein as Golde, his ferocious, hand-on-hips wife, plus a quintet of daughters of whom Alexandra Silber as Hodel, betrothed to a socialist rebel, is particularly affecting. I beamed like an idiot from the opening bars played by the mysterious fiddler of the title, through Goodman's magnificent drunken dance competition with three Cossack soldiers, right up to the breath-taking wedding scene that concludes the first half. After that the mood changes as the Tsarist forces close in. But what the show gives up in comedy it gains in emotional power. Goodman's simple, reproachful glance heavenwards - minus the wise-cracking of his relationship with God in the first act - is beyond eloquent.”
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail - “You would have to be one of the hairier, more exceptionally joyless members of the Arab brotherhood – maybe Osama Bin Laden’s foreign policy speech writer – not to love this Fiddler on the Roof. This celebrated Jewish musical is funny, upsetting and tuneful. And in Henry Goodman it has a star who takes every gesture and gesticulation ever seen in Golders’ Green and exaggerates them by a hundred. One of the puzzling things about Fiddler is that, if any of us Gentiles tried to caricature a Jewish man this lazily, we’d be slayed for raging anti-Semitism. Lindsay Posner’s staging is not strongly visual. Great show – but unlikely to be aired by Al Jazeera.”
London has not seen Fiddler on the Roof in many years, and this revival by Lindsay Posner starring Henry Goodman as Tevye, the impoverished dairyman in the Russian shtetl, or small town, of Anatevka in 1905, arrives from the Sheffield Crucible as a mixed blessing.
It confirms the 1964 musical’s staying power as a lament for Russian Jewish life before the pogroms in the plangent, rhythmic and insinuating score of Jerry Bock (music) and Sheldon Harnick (lyrics). But the set by Peter McKintosh – the shtetl is crazily nailed together with more boring wooden planks than in ten timber yards – and the stranglehold of Jerome Robbins’ original choreography (which comes as part of the licence) obviate any sense of a “new look”.
Admittedly, the Robbins choreography is worth seeing. The company snakes on, liltingly, hands raised and joined, knees flexed, in the rousing opener, “Tradition”. And certain numbers, such as the famous “bottle” dance at the wedding and the violently invasive Cossack dance that prefigures the later ransacking, could hardly be improved. But the tone of the production, relentless and reverential, is defined by the necessity to recreate an interpretation.
At least Henry Goodman avoids the ingratiating sentimentality of Topol, the first London Tevye, to such an extent that you could say his performance lacked charm altogether. He refuses to milk the songs the way he milks his cows, immersing himself rather in a rapt intensity that spills over into anger and subsides into his chopped logic monologues. But, boy, is he Jewish. He never stops kvetching, gesticulating, or shooting God a dirty look over his shoulder. He mutters prayers in Hebrew, pulls at his threads, bangs his head and removes the mezuzah from the door post before pulling his cart and family away to their new life.
Beverley Klein as his wife Golde (repeating her fishwife performance at the West Yorkshire Playhouse 14 years ago in Matthew Warchus’ brilliant, more adventurous, staging), is almost low key in comparison. In the central dream sequence, the couple are swept up in visions of a flying ghost and villagers rising from their tombs as a justifying prelude to the “Sunrise, Sunset” wedding feast of Tzeitel (Frances Thorburn) and her cut-price tailor (Gareth Kennerley), and their own marriage is touchingly renewed (“Do You Love Me?”) as a result.
Two other daughters – Alexandra Silber’s well sung Hodel is particularly impressive – exasperate Tevye by falling in love with “unsuitable” men, an educated radical and a Gentile. These developments are accepted by the matchmaker (Julie Legrand) and the rabbi (Vincent Pirillo) in dance sequences that express a secularisation of rigid orthodoxy, notably when the radical Perchik (Damian Humbley) removes the gender-dividing rope and dances with Hodel at the wedding.
Fiddler is less of a “show” than a serious musical. The first act is too long, the second too bleak. Yet it works magnificently, despite this hide-bound presentation with its lone fiddler miming to a pit musician, the limitations of the design, the unevenness of Peter Mumford’s lighting and the hideous sound system. In an evening full of shouting, the microphoned edge to the voices becomes severely irritating. Still, Goodman can take pride in his performance, and perhaps even enjoy it a little more.
- Michael Coveney
(As of Friday 1 June 2007, Sue Kelvin plays Golde for five weeks while Beverley Klein goes Into the Woods at the Royal Opera House’s Linbury Studio.)
NOTE: The following FOUR-STAR review dates from December 2006 and this production’s original run at Sheffield Crucible.
Fiddler on the Roof is firmly in the great tradition of Yiddish literature, being based on the stories of Sholem Aleichem and the stage adaptation, Tevye the Milkman, a staple of Yiddish theatre in the inter-war years. It’s also a product of Broadway musical theatre in the 1960s. This contrast is the source of its unique strength, but also of potential problems.
Joseph Stein’s book (with lyrics by Sheldon Harnick) is commendably honest, even brave. Setting the musical in 1905, the year in which Aleichem himself left Russia for New York, Stein dares to end with the Jewish villagers leaving, victims of a Czarist pogrom. However, this sits uneasily with some of the cosy stereotypes, the quaint customs presented with affectionate parody, in the entertaining, if overlong, first half.
The violent intervention of the Russian police in the wedding party finale crowns a first act where attention has been focussed on matchmaking, romance, celebration, bearable poverty and subversion of the tradition so boldly proclaimed by Tevye. The second half, in contrast, tackles much meatier subject matter briskly, occasionally perfunctorily, with fewer memorable songs.
This dislocation of tone is not really solved in Lindsay Posner’s production which contains too much over-emphatic gesture and too few rounded characters. It also places a huge load on Tevye himself; luckily, Henry Goodman rises to the challenge magnificently. Slipping into grandiloquent caricature, but always grounded in reality, undercutting his own bluster, confiding nonchalantly in God and audience alike, funny and moving in equal doses, he commands the stage.
Only Beverley Klein as his wife Golde inhabits the same plane of heightened reality and exhibits the same control of tone. For all that, a large and talented cast works energetically and produces some spectacular dance routines as well as setting Tevye up for the one-liners which Goodman delivers with panache and expert timing.
Sheffield Crucible’s Christmas musicals are always opulent and assured affairs and Fiddler on the Roof is no exception. Peter McKintosh sets the production against a medley of wooden roofs and beams (like Chagall minus the colour), leaving wide open spaces fore-stage for Kate Flatt’s choreography to cavort in. Dane Preece has an eight-piece band to put over Jerry Bock’s music, with Tamar Osborn’s clarinet and Zivorad Nikolic’s accordion doing full justice to the specifically Jewish elements.
Accomplished and enjoyable, with a towering performance at its centre, this is a production that doesn’t quite solve the conundrum at the heart of Fiddler on the Roof.
Having seen this production 3 times I have to say that I think it's a brilliant production with nothing I can fault.However,I would say that having seen it 3 times,I would argue that Matt Zimmerman gave a much greater performance than Henry Goodman in the role of Tevye.I saw both of them play the role and actually returned to see it a third time specifically on a night when I knew Matt Zimmerman would be understudying again.I agree that Henry Goodman's performance was a great one but Matt Zimmerman's performance was better still in my opinion.Rather than giving a 'star turn',he was far more real and believable and in my opinion I'd say he is quite possibly the greatest Tevye of all.Unfortunately,it's a performance that not enough people will have seen to have made an indelible impression on theatre lore,but I hope it will become the stuff of legend because it certainly deserves to be. - Steviardo
13 Feb 08
I returned to this before it closes and I am now even more convinced that Henry Goodman's performance is one of the greats in musical theatre history. Don't miss it! - Gareth James
31 Jan 08
Entertaining, engaging, emotive - a terrific night out with Henry Goodman masterful as Tevye. Goodman dominates proceedings but there are strong performances from the three eldest daughters and Motel. Only 4 stars because (like the previous reviewer) there was a lady with a Henry Hoover on stage during the interval, plus some rather unconvincing beards. Oh..and if being picky, there was a strange selection of accents from Eastern European Jewish through to New York Jewish (Beverley Klein) through to RP. - Mark
24 Oct 07
Entertaining, engaging, emotive - a terrific night out with Henry Goodman masterful as Tevye. Goodman dominates proceedings but there are strong performances from the three eldest daughters and Motel. Only 4 stars because (like the previous reviewer) there was a lady with a Henry Hoover on stage during the interval, plus some rather unconvincing beards. Oh..and if being picky, there was a strange selection of accents from Eastern European Jewish through to New York Jewish (Beverley Klein) through to RP. - Mark
24 Oct 07
I saw this show at the London Palladium zonks ago with Topol in the lead and wondered why it was considered a classic. It took the enterprising Sheffield Theatres to prove why with this terrific revival, simply but effectively staged, beautifully sung and with a central performance from Henry Goodman which I doubt could be bettered. He is light on his feet and lightens the role, introducing a playfullness which sits perfectly with the seriousness of the backdrop. This modest low-cost revival far outshines most of the heartless multi-million pound 'spectacle' currently ocupying the West End stages - on the Wicked scale, where Wicked is 1, this is 10 ! - Gareth James
26 Jul 07
Jessica Hargreaves as Bielke depicted her charatcher perfectly - Charlotte
12 Jul 07
I've never seen an actor so lit up by the character he portrays as Henry Goodman. He's amazing! My wife and I walked out of the theatre wrapped up in Tevye's world and genuinely concerned that he would not get to see his daughter again.
The charm, warmth and just plain skill of the main players did not go unnoticed and the standing ovation they received was fully justified.
Go and see this show while it's still on, it's the most fun you can have in London! - Sempai Greg
10 Jul 07
Great show, a musical where the story is at least as important as the songs. Henry Goodman is fantastic as Tevye and the staging is simple but effective. - houndtang
30 Jun 07
For many people the perception of Fiddler is dominated by one song and one performer so it is rewarding to discover such a rich and vibrant revival by Lindsay Posner transferred from Sheffield. The story of Russian Jews is seen through the eyes of Tevye as he struggles to come to terms with the marriage choices made by his daughters as they break free of the old traditions but without breaking the close bonds of a loving family. This is set against the background of approaching Tsarist pogroms although I felt this was downplayed somewhat, unlike the way the current production of The Sound of Music deals with the rise of the Nazis. Although the ending is reasonably bleak there is still a feeling of inappropriate optimism as if everything will turn out fine when it almost certainly will not.
The presentation of flowers at the curtain call to the understudy Tzeitel suggests a justifiably happy ensemble, but the show is dominated by the incredible Henry Goodman as Tevye. He perfectly captures the contrasting humour and rage which turns to bewildered frustration as his resolve melts when confronted by the pleading of his daughters. There is also immense tenderness when he sings to his fearsome wife Gilde "Do Tou Still Love Me?". Goodman's is a towering performance that this fine production deserves. - David Baxter
09 Jun 07
Truly a magnificent production a tremendous emotional journey i laughed and cried, Henry Goodman was amazing and the supporting cast didn't go unnoticed they were all fantastic the guy who played Perchik had the most incredible voice i have heard in recent years sure to have an amazing career in front of him - jonathan
The first public building in the world to have electric light. Built for Richard D'Oyly Carte, opened 10 Oct 1881. 1122 seats. No smoking policy throughout. Society of London Theatre member. Member of the Ambassdor Theatre Group (ATG).
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