Synopsis A celebration of life and art. It is A Sunday Afternoon in Paris, George, a poor impressionist painter brilliantly captures, the young ladies, couples, children, tramps and their dogs enjoying a Sunday afternoon stroll in the park. As George sketches his lover Dot and the painting becomes a work of art, their relationship falls apart. A 100 years later the painting hangs in an art gallery, admired and discussed, studied and criticised, but what happened to the characters in the picture when it was completed? Immortalised forever in a single moment by the painters brush, but life and art goes on. Running time 2 hrs 30 mins including one interval
The Menier Chocolate Factory’s award-winning production of Sunday in the Park with George transferred to the West End’s Wyndham’s Theatre this week (Tuesday 23 May 2006, previews from 13 May), starring Daniel Evans as George and Jenna Russell as Dot (the role played at the Menier by Anna-Jane Casey).
Exploring the creative process of French impressionist Georges Seurat, Sondheim’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1984 musical begins in 19th-century France, where the impoverished painter battles with his art and his personal life. His engrossment in his work drives his pregnant girlfriend Dot to leave him. The action then shifts to modern America where George’s great-grandson is facing similar problems.
Sunday in the Park with George has music by and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by James Lapine. Sam Buntrock’s revival - the first major London production since the National staged the musical’s UK premiere in 1990 (See News, 21 Oct 2005) – first opened on 29 November 2005 (previews from 18 November), at the Menier in Southwark, south London, where it enjoyed an extended, sell-out season until 12 March 2006. The production features ground-breaking computer-generated set design by David Farley and Timothy Bird, who jointly won this year’s Critics’ Circle Award for Best Designer for their efforts (See News, 31 Jan 2006). The production was nominated for five Whatsonstage.com Theatregoers’ Choice Awards and won Best Off-West End Production (See News, 31 Jan 2006).
Fears that the show may lose something in the move from the intimate 150-seat Menier to the 750-seat, proscenium arch Wyndham’s were allayed. In its new home, critics still marvelled at the show’s design, which uses projections to make the paintings come to life, and admired the strong, moving performances of the cast. They were almost universally impressed with the production, although one found Stephen Sondheim’s original score a bit too much like musicals by numbers.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com - “Sam Buntrock’s production remains as taut as a drawn bow, the projection designs of Timothy Bird (a little messy at the Menier) look gorgeous in the Wyndham’s proscenium, Daniel Evans is a wonderful George, injecting the show with much needed emotional urgency, and Jason Carr’s new orchestrations for just five musicians are brilliant.” He admitted: “there are long passages that go nowhere, and the dib-dab-daub style of writing often disappears up its own coda.” However, “when the rhythmic pulse quickens under Evans ‘Finishing the Hat’, or syncopations nibble at harmonies in the ensemble ‘Putting It Together’, you share the discovery of impatient genius hitting on the right expression.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard - “It is a rare musical that leaves me ravished or enchanted, longing to hear the sound of its finest music all over again. Stephen Sondheim's Sunday in the Park with George manages the feat in a visually entrancing production by Sam Buntrock that works like magic.” De Jongh appreciated the technology showcased in the revival, in which “computerised figures remarkably animate the stage's blank back-wall... The technique brilliantly conveys the way an artist experiments… The music, beautifully played by a five-piece band, is at first jagged, terse and discordant, matching the 19th-century painter's pointillistic technique, but then it bursts out again and again into cascades of lyrical, joyful, shimmering string and piano sound.” While Lapine's book still “cannot altogether disarm the criticism that the second act, which leaps into the late 20th century, forms a disconnected coda to the first”, the overall effect is “an enchanted evening that raises the status of the musical high.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian - “Moving theatre can be disruptive, but this Stephen Sondheim-James Lapine musical transfers from the Menier Chocolate Factory to the West End with triumphant ease. If anything, the picture-frame stage adds another layer to its meditations on art… the show effortlessly combines the general with the particular; this semi-fictionalised Seurat embodies the ungovernable obsessiveness of the true artist… Sam Buntrock's revival… combines technical wizardry with an emotional charge. The eyes are constantly dazzled by David Farley's design and Timothy Bird's projections…The show also speaks to the heart.” Billington praised Daniel Evans’ “consummate style”, and was particularly taken with Jenna Russell, “who lends the show a whole new dimension”. Elsewhere, Simon Green and Gay Soper “stand out in a strong ensemble”. Taken altogether, “the joy of the show is that it buries the idea that Sondheim is a minority taste appealing only to a cultist crowd.”
Sam Marlowe in The Times - “Sam Buntrock’s exquisite production transfers triumphantly to the West End… David Farley’s elegant white set and Timothy Bird’s staggeringly inventive projected animation, which uses colour and light to create famous works of art on Farley’s blank canvas, look more stunning than ever…. Nor do the performances disappoint.... Evans’ portrayal has grown… he shows how dangerously close Seurat’s passion is to obsession and even insanity…. Russell’s Dot is earthy, practical and tough; she doesn’t offer Casey’s warmth or vulnerability, but she is intelligent and enormously appealing.” According to Marlowe, “the production is close to perfection.”
Claire Allfree in Metro - Sondheim’s musical is a “magical and highly moving study of an artist whose relationships informed his art but never his personal life…. Buntrock’s radical production feels as beautifully realised as Seurat’s own vision, in which nearly every particle is held together in perfect balance.”
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail - It was left to Letts to sound a critically discordant note, though this was more to do with Sondheim than the production. While he admired the “cleverly designed” production’s “innovative lighting techniques” and the “highly-tuned performances, not least from Daniel Evans”, he confessed that, “like Seurat’s paintings, I’m afraid this brave show left me largely unmoved... Some people go wild about Sondhiem’s stop-start melodies. Myself, I am irritated by their jerky nature… it’s all wildly intellectual and schemed to within an inch of mathematical perfection, sure, but I prefer my musicals with more gusto.” Letts did find Jenna Russell “adorable as Seurat’s frustrated lover, Dot”, even if “few of the other parts are much cop, though the actors do fine.”
There are two ways of looking at Sunday in the Park with George, the 1984 musical by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine which was revived for a sell-out season at the Menier Chocolate Factory at the end of last year and is now at the Wyndham’s: it is a masterpiece, or just plain arid.
I oscillate between both assessments and still much prefer the next Sondheim/Lapine collaboration, Into the Woods. On the plus side, Sam Buntrock’s production remains as taut as a drawn bow, the projection designs of Timothy Bird (a little messy at the Menier) look gorgeous in the Wyndham’s proscenium, Daniel Evans is a wonderful George, injecting the show with much needed emotional urgency, and Jason Carr’s new orchestrations for just five musicians are brilliant.
George is a modernist artist in two halves. In the first, he's the pointillist painter Georges Seurat, bringing to life his masterpiece on the banks of the Seine, “Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte”, giving each character a back story and losing his girlfriend Dot (Jenna Russell, replacing the Menier’s Anna Jane Casey) to the baker who kneads her in bed while George dithers over his palette.
In the second, he's a head-in-air conceptual artist. The hard-won harmony of the stirringly effulgent first act finale dissolves into a contemporary New York art gallery where George (now the 32-year-old great grandson of the painter) is presenting a high-tech light show surrounded by parallel characters from the painting, mostly art world snobs, while listening to wiseacre comments from his granny (old Dot's daughter now-ancient daughter Marie) and magically revisiting the industrialised riverbank in Paris.
Like Keats in “Ode on a Grecian Urn”, Sondheim and Lapine attempt to humanise figures frozen in a frieze. “It’s Hot Up Here” they sing as the sun, and the colour, trap them in time. The idea of replication in the Seurat painting is wittily extended to the doubling of the soldier, and of George, with full-size projected images. And wittiest of all, another great Seurat painting, “Bathers at Asnieres”, invades the first.
In the Chicago Art Institute, where “La Grande Jatte” hangs, I remember being disappointed in its size. It measures, in fact, seven feet by ten (this exact size of frame hangs like furniture on the stage in David Farley’s predominantly white canvas design); the scale seemed just too small to fulfil the narrative potential, which is exactly the fault Sondheim has repaired, however painfully. For there are long passages that go nowhere, and the dib-dab-daub style of writing often disappears up its own coda.
But when the rhythmic pulse quickens under Evans “Finishing the Hat”, or syncopations nibble at harmonies in the ensemble “Putting It Together”, you share the discovery of impatient genius hitting on the right expression. The musical direction is by Caroline Humphris, and there is much to savour in the performances of Gay Soper as an old crone, and Liza Sadovy and Simon Green as a pair of fancy-pants art fanciers.
- Michael Coveney
NOTE: The following FIVE-STAR review dates from November 2005 and this production's original run at the Menier Chocolate Factory.
Southwark’s Menier Chocolate Factory is on a roll: fresh from its double wins of the Peter Brook Empty Space and Evening Standard Theatre Awards for most promising newcomer, it now offers its grandest and most ambitious project to date with the first London revival of Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine’s 1984 Broadway musical Sunday in the Park with George since it received its British premiere at the National fifteen years ago.
But this is a musical that definitely benefits from being seen far more close-up and personal as it now is in this intimate studio setting. Just as there are art-house movies, so this is an art-house musical in every sense. Inspired by Georges Seurat’s pointillist masterpiece A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grand Jatte, it’s a speculative account of how the painter brought life (and his own life) to canvas, and in a still-startling coup d’theatre, the climax of the first act actually brings the painting to ecstatic three-dimensional being in front of our eyes, too.
It is much aided by an extraordinary design of a white room – the blank canvas of “so many possibilities” that Seurat begins from and so delights in – by David Farley, onto which are projected Timothy Bird’s amazing still and moving imagery taken directly from the painting, as it takes form throughout the first act and various characters from it, from dogs to soldiers, are variously introduced to us. It’s a conceptual kind of interpretive art in its own right, which is exactly the kind of thing that the sculptor/inventor of the second act -- George’s great grandson, one hundred years later – specialises in himself, with his so-called “chromolumes”.
In this way, Sam Buntrock’s dazzling new production does something that has never been achieved in any of the previous versions of this show I have seen, from the original Broadway and London stagings to regional productions in the UK (in Leicester) and the US (in Washington DC), and that’s to unite the two previously diffuse acts seamlessly into one, utterly necessary, whole.
As they become intricately linked by the technology of their showing, the stakes are accordingly driven far higher, until past and present collide with an aching beauty and the possibility of redemption for past errors that is often a theme of Sondheim’s work from Follies to A LIittle Night Music and Company, as the contemporary George meets the woman once again that the historic George once spurned.
It is also galvanised here by the stunning performances of Daniel Evans – who plays both Georges with a technical as well as emotional mastery that is overwhelming – and the ravishing Anna Jane Casey as the Seurat’s muse and mistress Dot who becomes the grandmother Marie to the later-day George. They are complemented by an extraordinary ensemble of West End principal performers, from whom I will only single out one for the honesty of his programme biography: “Mark McKerracher has recovered from starring in Behind the Iron Mask in which he played The Gaoler”.
This time around, he is in a show that imprisons you, not with dread, but with feeling, and some of Sondheim’s most insinuatingly lovely melodies that include the hymn-like beauty of ‘Sunday’ and one of the most powerful expressions of the artistic impulse – and the cost of it – ever penned in ‘Finishing the Hat’. This is an all but perfect Sondheim musical, and the Menier have done it proud.
I love that 'Julia' on the 29th of May (below) says "I've tried my level best to understand the appeal of his work, but in my opinion he's the thinking person's Lloyd Webber".
I just love that "but".
Yes, Julia, that says a lot.
For those who want a stimulating, deeply thought-provoking, emotionally charged (I didn't just weep, I wailed!) experience, then this is for you. For those who don't want to have to do anything as strenuous as 'think' then go see Phantom. - 81.77.218.8)
22 Aug 06
I saw this twice at the Menier and loved it and was worried it would not survive the transfer - well, it has actually got even better ! It is astonishing that, 9 months after my first visit, it seemed as fresh as an opening night. This faultless production shows that this show really is a musical theatre masterpiece. - 86.144.154.201)
17 Aug 06
I saw this last night having got tickets for £25.00 from tkts. I have never seen a Sondheim show so it was all new to me.
I can see why he is a love or hate composer as this to me isnt the standard style of musical. There were a few people who left in the interval. It was intriguing and im glad I saw it as I my view its always good to expand your tastes. People often comment that ALWs music is repetetive, well I found the music in this to be the same, not that its a bad thing. Musically it was an odd piece, no song really sticks in your head, yet at the end of the first act I felt moved and involved in the story - I cared about the people on stage. Jenna Russell I thought was EXCELLENT, funny, touching and beautiful voice nd great acting. Never got to see her in Guys and Dolls so was my first time seeign her on stage. The show was funnier than I expected as well. Daniel Evans was very good also, as was the entire company, all great voices. But for me the star of the show is the set - breathtakingly brilliant and affective. It suits the Wyndhams perfectly and worked well within the context fo the show.
The second act however I spent much of the time wondering what was the point as nothing really happened. I did clock watch a couple of times, but the last 15-20 mins did bring it all together. Its a unique piece and im stll not 100% sure my overall opinion of it but im still thinking about it now so it definately had an effect on me. It hasnt made me a sondheim fan but i do want to see more of his work.
Overall I really enjoyed it, I found it a thought provoking and moving piece. Very different to anything that is out there at the moment and deserves its place in the West End. Id like to see Company in the West End as that is the only bit of sondheim ive heard music from! - 86.139.166.6)
30 Jul 06
A strong revival that takes delightful advantage of technology while treating Sondheim's exquisite score with appropriate respect. Evans and Russell are fine, though they lack the quirky charisma of role originators Mandy Patinkin and Bernadette Peters. - 71.130.57.216)
21 Jul 06
This show has to rank as one of the 3 worst things I have ever seen on stage. Whilst the production is good, although a little cramped on the small stage, the so called singing is diabolical. The piece is reliant on the performance of the two leads-the rest get little to do but unfortunately the two leads shout their way through the piece rather than sing and even worse mikes are on throughout even during speech-surely our actors can project speech into a theatre without being amplified?
- 158.143.197.168)
20 Jul 06
I was lucky enough to see this production at the Menier Chocolate Factory. I loved the intimacy it had there and was worried that its transfer to the much larger proscenium style of Wyndhams would swallow it up. I needn't have worried. It looks and sounds fabulous and it felt like watching the show through the frame of one of Seurat's paintings.
This is a masterpiece of modern musical theatre and probably Sondheim's best. This production has it all, great orchestrations, sumptuous costumes, amazing visual effects, a fantastic ensemble and stunning leading performances.
Daniel Evans is the heart beat of the piece. He commands the stage and delivers an outstanding performance. Anna Jane Casey was a hard act to follow but Jenna Russell injects Dot with more fun and an even bigger heart.
There is not a weak link in this production. Gay Soper and Lisa Sadovy shine amongst a wonderful cast of ensemble players.
There is a risk that this show can lose energy and run out of steam in the second act. None of that in this production. Putting it Together is a real joy. Jenna's rendition of Move On is the musical highlight of the whole evening - emotionally packed, brilliant
I cannot recommend this highly enough. One of the great musical productions!! - 86.134.163.89)
16 Jul 06
I suppose you are either a Sondheim fanatic or he leaves you cold. Unfortunately, for me this show is an empty intellectual exercise with no heart. The first half is impressive but it is not a good sign that the main 'star' is the design by David Farley and Timothy Bird. The second half is a complete waste of time. There are some good performances, particularly from Jenna Russell and Gay Soper, but this is really for Sondheim devotees only. - 62.6.139.13)
05 Jul 06
a fantastic production-moving witty and everything most musicals aren,t. see it - 81.86.106.82)
28 Jun 06
Brilliant! A work of art about a work of art which shows how art works... and it works, artfully. Worth seeing several times for the sake of grasping all dimensions. - 87.112.89.103)
28 Jun 06
Stunning. The classiest evening I have spent at a musical in a very long time. Daniel Evans is truly magnificent. Loved Jenna Russell as Dot but was not so keen on her as Marie. Wonderful supporting cast and terrific design. Wholeheartedly recommend. - 195.93.21.73)
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