Synopsis Based on the book Edith Head's Hollywood by Edith Head and Paddy Calistro. Behind-the-scenes feast of great movie legends and delicious stories that provide an insight into Hollywood's legendary costume designer. In her six decades of costume design, she worked on 1,131 motion pictures, dressed the greatest stars of Hollywood, received 35 Academy Award nominations and won an unprecedented eight Oscars. Studio Space
If you want to relish the stylish, acerbic, frighteningly successful Edith Head, designer of every fab frock of Hollywood’s golden age from Bette Davis’ “bumpy night” dress to Audrey’s Cinderella gown in Roman Holiday, I strongly suggest you hie yourself down to Wikipedia.
In Head’s signature sharp suit, dark glasses and severe black fringe Susan Classen as actor and co-writer captures some of Head’s wise-cracking iron will but the script of repetitive facts, figures and the odd starry story gave her no-where to go but in circles around her infatuation with her subject.
The ill-conceived An Audience With…format puts us in 1981 (we know it’s ages ago because Elizabeth Taylor is reportedly growing old gracefully). Head duly responds to questions apparently submitted by the audience and courts our responses. Dutifully we chorused our lines as if in some camp pub quiz at the Coconut Grove “Debbie Reynolds gave birth to?” “Carrie Fisher !” etc. She has some killer comedy quotes but this is not stand-up and when faced with an unscheduled question or neat comeback Classen was thrown. With her own plant already asking scripted leading questions, why drag us into it anyhow?
This is a shame because Head provides a provocative figure. Her very self-styled image deflected attention making her elusivity all the more intriguing. Jewish by birth, Catholic by conversion, schoolteacher by profession, Head butted into the male ranks of studio design - 1,131 films, 8 Oscars, 2 husbands and 6 decades of costume design - but the play is as theatrical as its blurb. Where was she on WWII, McCarthy, women’s rights, religion, marriage, The New Look, on polyester for heavenssake? Co-writer Paddy Calisto doesn’t ask. How did she approach translating text and character into costume? What motivated her? Five minutes before the end it is too late to slip in “I was always in a mirror behind someone famous.” Surrounded by photos and dressed mannequins in a detailed and evocative design by James Blair ( and Classen of course) she remains defined by her work and her more famous friends.
Even this theme is not emotionally explored. What was in the gulf between the severe, mannish designer and the decadent, sensuous expressions of female glamour and sexuality she created? That gulf needs exploring but Classen and Calisto lacked a director to tell them they were not the girls for the trip.
I was at the show last night along with the cast from 'Calendar Girls', and the small house was full. I loved the show and plan to go back. - Mack
13 Aug 08
I saw the show last week and loved it. I found many insights into this very private woman. Thought the performance was topnotch. - P. Chops
13 Aug 08
I too wanted some true insights into this fascinating woman and was greatly disappointed by the superficial skimming of the surface. The sets and costumes were beautiful. I only wish the performance had been of equal caliber. - Marie Campbell
09 Aug 08
I was apalled by this embarassingly bad play.
- Frank 232
09 Aug 08
A polished, slick performance. I disagree with your reviewer who obviously went with very specific expectations. This was an amazing piece, and I found it very moving and entertaining. It was just the right balance and I thought the script was tremendous. Everything important was covered, without getting bored.. and anything else I wanted to know I asked Edith afterwards! Superb! - David Evans
03 Aug 08
Well I loved it! OK, it wasn't all handed to us on a plate as your reviewer would have liked. You had to work with the few clues handed out and the very subtle gestures that I thought revealed a very great deal about this private and fascinating woman. - Ian Macnicol
02 Aug 08
I just wanted to say - I saw this at the Ed Fringe last year - and if you love everything old Hollywood, you'll really enjoy this! - P S B
Sept 2008 - After a £600,000, three-month renovation, the new multi-purpose complex now houses houses a 395-seat main stage and a permanent 90-seat studio, called The Basement, in addition to a digital screening facility, new seating, bars (including two, with 2am late licenses, in the main auditorium) and air-conditioning and expanded dressing rooms and backstage areas.
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.