Synopsis Based on the DuBose Heyward novel Porgy and Bess tells the moving story of the cripple Porgy and the residents of Charleston's famed Catfish Row. Recognized as an American masterpiece, the story entwines pride, prejudice, pathos and passion through a jazz and blues influenced score. Porgy and Bess introduced classic Gershwin songs like Summertime, I Got Plenty of Nuttin' and It Ain't Necessarily So, as well as magnificent and enthralling choruses that stunned music and drama critics alike at its premiere in 1935.
Trevor Nunn’s musical adaptation of George and Ira Gershwin’s classic jazz opera Porgy and Bess opened last night (9 November 2006, previews from 25 October) at the West End’s Savoy Theatre (See Today’s 1st Night Photos). Originally a novel by DuBose Heyward, Porgy and Bess is set in 1912 South Carolina, around Charleston's Catfish Row, and centres on cripple Porgy who offers shelter to Bess, recently broken free from her brutish lover.
Nunn, who directed the opera at Glyndebourne with Willard White and Cynthia Haymon in 1986, now directs Clarke Peters and Nicola Hughes in the title roles, leading a 40-strong cast that also features Cornell S John (as Crown), Dawn Hope (Serena) and OT Fagbenle (Sportin’ Life). The new £3 million musical production has a score specially adapted by Gareth Valentine.
Overnight critics were almost entirely won over by the opera’s transformation into a more accessible musical, and they admired the performances of the ensemble cast who, most felt, captured the tight-knit community. There was particularly high praise for Clarke Peters as Porgy. While most enjoyed seeing the story given a musical kick, some were less enamoured with the “plastered on” detail and “unconvincing” editing of the Gershwins’ original opera.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (2 stars) – “Porgy and Bess is the most glorious score and Trevor Nunn’s Glyndebourne production 20 years ago was simply magnificent. Yet the new ‘musical’ version… is a disappointment. Decently sung but unconvincingly edited… It’s a lowbrow hybrid, or highbrow lowbred…. Nunn is a master of bringing a community alive on the stage, but the detail seems plastered on to both the major performances and John Gunter’s design. Organic is not a word I like all that much as a critical term, but organic is what the show does not feel like. The other big problem is the sound system. I never felt I was hearing the voices raw and true…. There’s a microphoning conduit that gets in the way all the time Peters is an anguished, tortured Porgy… and sings a beautiful light baritone counterpoint to Cornell S John’s tremendously threatening bass Crown. On the other apex of the romantic triangle, Nicola Hughes is a technically powerful but curiously unengaging Bess…. Certain performers, apart from Mr Peters, stand out: Dawn Hope as a serene Serena, Lorraine Velez as Clara, Ruby King as the strawberry woman.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Times (4 stars) – “By transforming the opera into a West End musical, reducing its four hours to three in the process, isn’t the director dumbing down a masterpiece? There are good answers to that, mainly that Porgy and Bess is now more accessible to far more people… and last night Nunn and his cast proved most of those answers better than good. True, we don’t always get the rich orchestral texture of the original. True, there’s occasional recitative that’s diminished by being spoken rather than sung… It’s true, too, that George Gershwin’s wonderful opening song, ‘Summertime’, suffers slightly from being delivered in a lower register than the opera demands. But Nunn’s company brings enormous energy and plenty of class to Ira Gershwin’s libretto…. Clarke Peters can’t quite match the singing power of Willard White…. but he’s a fine actor and much more than adequate when he shares a forlorn love-song with Nicola Hughes’ Bess…. And from the moment he stumbles in, as raggedy and rough-looking as the part-time beggar he is, he refuses to sentimentalise a role that half-invites him to do so. Meanwhile, Hughes finds dignity as well as a touching vulnerability.”
Paul Taylor in the Independent – “Electrifying is an overworked word in the critical lexicon, but if ever a show deserved it, it is Trevor Nunn's magnificent revival of the Gershwins' Porgy and Bess…. What is beyond doubt is that this is a masterpiece of the first order…. Gone is the recitative and in comes good, robust (and often witty) dialogue. There is vibrant dancing that pulses with sassiness and sex…. there is also such a thing as hyperactivity… Nunn occasionally piles on the atmosphere (in the storm scene, say) and sometimes overdoes the cultural texture (the black folks in Catfish Row always a-basket-weaving, or a-net-mending etc etc) to the point of faint absurdity. Less might be more and the adrenaline levels could do with coming down a notch. But, oh, the sheer bliss of experiencing a work that is a sublime succession of some of the greatest songs ever written…. The chorus work in this production is out of this world… Non-operatic voices might not be to everyone's taste, but Clarke Peters is wonderfully moving as Porgy even when under some vocal strain, and Nicola Hughes is fabulous as Bess.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (3 stars) – “Having directed it as an opera in 1986, Nunn now treats it as a musical; which means that book-dialogue replaces recitatives, and you have a 20-strong orchestra rather than one of more than 50. The decision seems to me entirely correct. A work which sounded thin-textured at Covent Garden now emerges in an intimate theatre, under Gareth Valentine's musical supervision, as melodically ebullient; and it's a pleasure to listen once again to such standards as ‘Summertime’, ‘It Ain't Necessarily So’, and ‘Bess, You Is My Woman’. But a great masterpiece? I don't think so…. The book… teems with more characters than it can handle. Dramatic action is also sometimes poorly motivated…. If the show now seems a museum-piece, Nunn's production invests it with social detail. The cast is also top-notch. Clarke Peters lends Porgy a dignity and strength, and Nicola Hughes’ Bess moves from whiskey-sozzler to child-rearer with ease. There is magnificent support from OT Fagbenle as a venomous Sporting Life, Dawn Hope as a grief-stricken widow, and Cornell S John as the rapacious Crown. Everything about the staging is fine.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph - “Although almost everyone acknowledges that Nunn is a great director, brevity is not normally regarded as one of his virtues. Here however he has finally discovered that less can mean more, and though some may accuse him of dumbing down, I think they would be wrong…. Watching this vibrant show one doesn’t feel one is watching a reduced opera, but rather discovering a lost classic musical. The show reveals Nunn at his best…. He creates a seething sense of community, love and loss that is visually virtuosic and overpoweringly moving…. The music sounds terrific… and the ensemble singing is I think the finest I have heard in the West End…. The production also reveals the strength in depth of black performers in this country… there’s some terrific choreography from Jason Pennycooke. Clarke Peters is superb…. And there is astonishing warmth and fervour in his relationship with Nicola Hughes’ moving Bess.”
Porgy and Bess is the most glorious score and Trevor Nunn’s Glyndebourne production 20 years ago was simply magnificent. Yet the new “musical” version of the collaboration between George and Ira Gershwin and librettists DuBose and Dorothy Heyward at the Savoy is a disappointment. Decently sung but unconvincingly edited, the show falls between several stools, not quite opera, not exactly operatic musical. It’s a lowbrow hybrid, or highbrow lowbred.
Not until the first half-hour of the second act – the piece has been cut from three acts to two – is there any sense of musical continuity or texture, as at last we travel from the picnic on Kittiwah Island – where the coke dealer Sportin’ Life (an underpowered O-T Fagbenle) sings “It Ain’t Necessarily So” - back to Catfish Row in South Carolina, where Porgy exacts his murderous revenge on Crown for loving his woman, Bess.
The show doesn’t carry the overwhelming impact of Nunn’s Glyndebourne version, which was received with rapture and standing ovations. The impulse to make a coherent musical theatre evening is obviously a good one, but the show now seems too skimpy a version of the opera. And the effort of jazzing it up with dance sequences, right from the start, trumping “Summertime” with a hectic ensemble number, is a stunning move in the wrong direction. Nunn claims that Gershwin always intended to write a jazz prologue. Musical supervisor Gareth Valentine has done it for him, but it feels slightly forced.
Nunn is a master of bringing a community alive on the stage, but the detail seems plastered on to both the major performances and John Gunter’s design. Organic is not a word I like all that much as a critical term, but organic is what the show does not feel like.
The other big problem is the sound system. I never felt I was hearing the voices raw and true. (When is the musical theatre audience going to finally stand up and be counted on this subject?) There’s a microphoning conduit that gets in the way all the time, and the Gershwin blues are deflected through an electrical membrane that is off-putting, though not as bad as in Nunn’s otherwise joyous Anything Goes.
Clarke Peters is an anguished, tortured Porgy who relaxes at last into “I Got Plenty o’ Nuttin’” and sings a beautiful light baritone counterpoint to Cornell S John’s tremendously threatening bass Crown. On the other apex of the romantic triangle, Nicola Hughes is a technically powerful but curiously unengaging Bess. The continuity of the score is so broken up in Valentine’s musical adaptation that you lose that crucial sense of an overall musical journey that the full operatic production can supply. The storm scene seems arbitrary rather than inevitable; Clara and her baby come and go without making any real narrative impact.
This should have been the great restorative event of the musical theatre winter, but it isn’t. Certain performers, apart from Mr Peters, stand out: Dawn Hope as a serene Serena, Lorraine Velez as Clara, Ruby King as the strawberry woman. But Catfish Row never buzzes with the animation of Nunn’s Tennessee Williams or Chekhov productions, and the defiant exit of poor old crippled Porgy in pursuit of his lost Bess is an act of manufactured hysteria rather than deep, solemn dedication.
I thoroughly enjoyed last nights performance. Fantastic production with excellent performances - BLH
27 Apr 07
I don't think I bliked during last Tuesday night's performance - I simply sat enthralled adn moved by this wonderful mesmerising production. Trevor Nunn simply has given us a very accessible Porgy and Bess and the two leads were quite wonderful. Nicola Hughes I just hope her Bess elevates her to the starring roles which have to a degree eluded her. Clarke Peters I simply have never seen him so powerful. Together they create a chemistry which you believe. A glorious production which deserved a longer run. - Eoghan
06 Apr 07
It's well staged and well acted / sung. In fact, I can't really fault the production.....so why does it leave me completely cold? A mysteriously mediocre evening. Gareth - Gareth James
28 Feb 07
Porgy and Bess is amazing! I think the passion and dedication from the cast and creative team is evident in Trevor Nunn's fantastic production. The story is a great one that deserved to be seen by the widest possible audience, and hats off to all involved for a memorable and hugely enjoyable show. - Caroline
27 Feb 07
Undoubtedly impressive, particularly when making full use of a huge ensemble and orchestra. However the story of Porgy and Bess is too slight to fully engage for the running time of nearly three hours. Perversely the contraction from the full operatic version has also possibly created a major gap in the plot (spoiler alert): how does Bess escape from Crown after the picnic on the island? The two central performances are also slightly disappointing; Clarke Peters is too sympathetic as Porgy and Nicola Hughes is the exact opposite as Bess whils doing nothing to suggest a woman battling against her drink and drugs demons. David Baxter (13.2.07) - David Baxter
22 Feb 07
I went last night really looking forward to seeing and hearing one of the great scores but in a half empty theatre witnessed one of my most dissappointing evenings in the theatre. The first half was tedious and uninvolving and whilst things perked up a little in the second half the whole evening had the feel of a show on its last legs.This must be the lowpoint in Trevor Nuinn's distinguished career and Michael Coveney's review is, I am afraid, spot on. What a pity 30/1/07 - 213.246.187.140)
30 Jan 07
I have not seen the origninal production ans i have heard people comparing it to this one.
I really like this version! The music is fantastic. The set is good. The singing is superb!
I was blown away! I was sat in the dress circle and i got a good view of the stage. I have heard the orignal productions song and to be honest i didnt like them. In this production they sing the songs with a gosple feel and it really works. Clark Peters is fantastic. I used to work in Chicago and i saw him play billy flinn. This role suits him alot better. His voice is wicked. The person playning bess, WOW! What a stage presence!
All in all this production is fantastic. Go and see it. I am again - 86.132.115.212)
21 Dec 06
Having originally seen this show during its first week I was disturbed to return again to see the production so changed. Firstly the theatre was half full which affected the sound of the piece greatly. Echoing and remote sounding in the stalls which made it very difficult to engage with a piece that requires a lot of concentration.The orhestra had no sense of being in the building at all while the cast seemed particularly isolated in their own world.
Added to this was the fact that there were 7 understudies performing and one of them in a title role. Some of them excellent some of them going though the motions.
With an excellent cast and a production that looks so honest with beautiful sets and realistic costuming it was a shame to have your attention diverted by strange sound mixing and performances that were lacklustre. It was interesting to see a less detached performance from Bess by the understudy but sad to see that in a few short weeks this show has the feeling that it is already about to close. I hope that is not the case because it is one of the more demanding and involving shows on offer in a West End littered with mediocre Christmas fare. - 80.41.180.254)
16 Dec 06
Trevor Nunn's production of Porgy and Bess is a spectacular work of musical theatre. The music and the signing are beautiful, the set looks great, and the choreography is elegant. Those familiar with the opera might be disappointed. But since the opera is so long and is not often produced, many theatre-goers will be experiencing Porgy and Bess for the first time. They will not be disappointed with Trevor Nunn's production -- it is truly first rate. - 206.15.98.56)
13 Nov 06
I think Michael Coveney was quite fair. It didn't cook for me. Wonderful orchestra, some lovely performances (Serena, Maria and the street sellers in particular), great dancing; but the central relationship never moved me. - 82.43.177.254)
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).
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.