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Gypsy

Curve, Leicester
From: Saturday, 10th March 2012
To: Sunday, 15 April 2012

Our Review: starstarstarstar Your Reviews: starstarstarstar

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Synopsis

This colourful show tells the story of Gypsy Rose Lee, one of America's most famous Burlesque strip artistes from the 1920s. Everything's Coming Up Roses one of the hit songs, could not be further from the truth as Rose takes us on the tortuous journey from childhood ambition to final stardom for her much loved daughter and the enormous sacrifices on the way.

Our Review: starstarstarstar

19 March 2012

In many ways, the story of real-life burlesque star Gypsy Rose Lee is a bizarre one to turn into a musical. There’s no love interest to speak of, the biographical narrative is necessarily episodic and most of the journey isn’t actually about her at all.

In the hands of composer Jule Styne and lyricist Stephen Sondheim however, many of these obstacles are overcome. Their 1959 Broadway hit, with a compelling book by Arthur Laurents, includes showstoppers such as "Together Wherever We Go" and "Everything’s Coming Up Roses", and was a career landmark for its original star Ethel Merman.

Stepping into her shoes in this Curve revival – and with more than a hint of that grande dame about her – is Caroline O'Connor, a performer gifted equally with acting and singing talent, and with enough emotional punch to carry the biggest, most ambitious of roles as the pushy mother Rose. It’s a virtuoso performa...

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Latest User Review

Martin Barber - 4 April 2012: starstar

Such a disappointment. The lead could sing and the kids and dogs performed admirably in the opening half hour, but there were few other positives to take away. The characters had no depth or subtlety, some of the accents were embarrassingly bad, and I had to keep pinching myself that I hadn't stumbled into a local Am Dram production. The set design was evocative of some mythical Norman Rockwell era rather than the grubby backstages of Vaudeville and Burlesque. There was so much to explore in the complex relationships between Momma Rose and her potential fiancé and her two daughters, but it largely remained uncharted territory. By the end, I had come no closer to understanding what was driving this particular Momma Rose, or indeed feeling any emotion towards her, be it pity, sympathy or animosity. As one who is easily tear-jerked, why was I left unmoved by Rose's Turn? When two semi-naked male dancers popped up, the feeling that we had now alighted at G.A.Y. rather than the Burlesque was reinforced by the shocking transmogrification of Louise into a Cheryl Cole lookalike. It's rare to get a decent sound mix at a musical outside of the West End (and not always there), but the music here was nicely loud -- could be louder in fact -- yet the vocals were still crystal clear, so there, I've managed to find another positive. All in however, this was a great opportunity missed....

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