Synopsis The Last Five Years is a show about a marriage. It is told from two angles: from the man s point of view it starts at their first meeting and ends in the present, when the marriage breaks up. From the woman s point of view, it starts in the present and works back in time to the first meeting. Only at the wedding, in the centre of the piece, do the stories intersect. The relationship is between a ‘nice jewish boy and an Christian girl in New York City. During a five year period, they fall in love, marry and their relationship gradually sours and they finally divorce.
Less a musical than a song cycle, The Last Five Years is a raw, not to say bleeding, account of a short-lived marriage seen in double perspective: from his and her points of view. The music and lyrics are by Jason Robert Brown, one of a small clutch of American composer/songwriters who labour in the wake, and under the heavy influence, of Stephen Sondheim.
So personal is the show that it attracted no less than three lawsuits when premiered in Chicago in 2001, one of them from Brown’s first wife, who complained that he was airing their dirty linen in public. A revised version appeared Off-Broadway in the following year, and now Matthew White’s production at the Menier, the show’s UK premiere, constitutes the “definitive” account.
The two characters are mercilessly exposed from the start. The relationship between Jamie (Damian Humbley), a Jewish writer, and Cathy (Lara Pulver), a struggling actress and “shiksa goddess,” is enacted in scenes of bitter remembrance around a revolving double bed and the strains of a plangent waltz tune. Cathy begins by singing that the marriage has ended in wounds and tears and works back in time to the first meeting.
Jamie’s opening salvo is one of smitten, buoyant high spirits and his account, laced with an increasing self-obsession, works forward to the present. In the middle of a 90-minute show, and in a blaze of light, the couple are married. An audience can just about discern all this, intellectually, as it were, but the show doesn’t really benefit from its own cleverness and finally sinks in a welter of narrative confusion.
Whereas a semi-autobiographical central character in Sondheim, such as Bobby in Company or the hero in Sunday in the Park with George (so compellingly revived at this address last year), is seen in the relief of the musical artistry of the composer, and his own sense of irony, Brown’s Jamie comes at you undiluted by any sort of editing. The effect is of being cornered by a bore. Cathy’s predominant quality is a lack of self-belief. This is best expressed in a faintly amusing audition song, but the character is really just a series of emotional squawks in a vacuum.
About the music I am even less convinced. The score is notably well played by a sextet on a raised platform behind the set, led by Tom Murray at the piano. It sounds like Sondheim with a sort of windy portentousness replacing lightness and theatricality. I felt trapped in the middle of a James Last concert, or a bunch of Barry Manilow songs with a faint aroma of Elton John.
The musical idiom seems disastrously old-fashioned as a result, and one can only really imagine the show having any sort of appeal to a minority audience of musical theatre buffs who persist in thinking – oh dear - that Sondheim is the way forward and Andrew Lloyd Webber an overrated populist.
- Michael Coveney
NOTE: Due to a temporary technical fault, the Box Office number for the Menier Chocolate Factory for The Last Five Years has had to change. Until further notice, for telephone ticket sales, please call: 0871 230 2616.
Superb performances and very clever, thoughtful design, plus an original and moving score make this another hit for the Menier. Michael Coveney's review would be embarassing in its ignorance if a 12 year old had written it. - 86.136.129.202)
13 Aug 06
Having been a fan of the CD of this show for, well, the last five years, my illusions were shattered last night at the Chocolate Factory. What exists in the mind as a beautiful radio play comes across completely differently when the narrative is put on its feet.
The lyrics, which touch the heart when heard, seem unnaturalistic and contrived when an actor actually has to say them during a scene, although I believe the director of this production has not helped matters by having both actors present on stage though only one is actually talking/singing (The Schmuel song being the obvious exception). In songs like 'I can do better than that' and 'See I'm smiling' it was clear the silent actor in the scene was dying to come in with some interjection which the script was not allowing them to.
The extra dialogue adds nothing to the story and should be cut. In some instances it just confuses matters. In the arguement scene sixty minutes in, Jamie begs Cathy for two minutes of silence before singing a four minute song during which he begs her to speak twice. It's very hard to suspend your disbelief.
I warmed to Lara Pulver as the show progressed. Both cast members sang impeccably. In a space as intimate as the Menier, a high standard of acting is required. Damien Humbley, fresh from a larger theatre (the Woman in White), couldn't tailor his performance and many of his jokes just made the audience cringe.
This review gets three stars because the excellent score was played and sung superbly, and (no disrespect to the intelligent design) if I had shut my eyes, the story would have flowed much better. It's a tough show this one, does a better staging exist than the simplest, of Mr Robert Brown singing it himself at the piano with one of his leading ladies? He is very much the voice of both characters in this piece, but to endeer us to him he needs to show us less of his intellect and more of his heart. - 89.240.213.186)
06 Aug 06
As the WOS reviewer says, it's more of a song-cycle than a musical. The idea of chronology reversed for each character is a good one, but doesn't work because of a lack of clarity. However, it is a very good score, it is played and sung extremely well, and the staging makes great use of the small Menier stage. If only there was air-conditioning rather than amplification (too much for a small space). Worth a visit though, but sit at the back on the far side to get the benefit of the open door and portable aircon ! - 81.158.158.233)
30 Jul 06
This must be the greatest musical I didn't enjoy very much. Jason Robert Brown is undeniably a great composer-lyricist. Some of the material here is breathtaking: literate, ingenious, tuneful, memorable and rousing, if ultimately deeply cynical. On top of that, the band are wonderful, and Matthew White's staging is spare, inventive and elegant. The reason why it left me cold is that the two characters are completely unsympathetic: he's off-puttingly self-obsessed while she is annoyingly needy. Additionally, the clever structure (her starting at the end of the relationship, him at the beginning) proves more confusing than illuminating in practise. While Damian Humbley's magnificently sung performance is just about perfect, Lara Pulver (bearing an unhelpfully striking resemblance to TV's Michelle Gomez who seems to specialise in playing nutters) strikes me as basically miscast. Lacking the kookiness and warmth that might make Cathy's insecurity bearable to watch, she delivers a technically faultless performance that failed to move me, even as I marvelled at her genuinely enthralling, wide ranging voice. In fact, I think Ms Pulver should be at the top of the list of replacements for when Elena Roger takes Evita to B'way. All in all, I wanted to like this show more than I did, but I still think it's essential viewing for musical theatre afficionados. - 195.82.110.189)
28 Jul 06
Having previously heard the soundtrack, which I am very fond of,I was unsure what to expect from the performers as the characterisation is left so much up to them. I found the portrayals of both Jamie and Cathy convincing and humourous, (while definitely not always likeable)and the quality of their vocals was impressive. Lara Pulver should be especially commended for her belting. In the uncomfortable sweltering heat of the theatre, neither performer let up, and continued with far more gusto and energy than the audience could imagine being able to muster. Despite the heat, most of the audience in the performance I saw were moved by the humour in the lyrics and the touching moments - I noticed a significant quickening of the pace of audience fanning (with programmes) during 'The Next Ten Minutes' wedding scene. However by the end of the production, the audience were flagging from the heat and the ending seemed a bit of a let-down. Perfectly suited to a small venue - nice, intimate performances from the two leads, but for maximum enjoyment perhaps best avoided until it cools down! - 212.47.74.162)
28 Jul 06
Left me completely cold. Totally uninspired direction, and only competant performances. Sorry, a TOTAL miss. - 86.134.162.163)
28 Jul 06
I too saw the show for the first time after having known the songs well for a few years. How did I like the show? - I love the songs so I am biased. However the songs were to be staged/performed I was going to enjoy them. Perhaps I could be angry in their defence if I felt that they didn't get justice but I was still going to enjoy having have to do anything with the songs. Anyway, here are my thoughts:
Jamie - lovely voice. Pity when he goes too a bit too classical but doesn't happen too often. Great acting with lots of charm. Some embarrasing moments when trying to be funny doesn't fully work but I think a lot of them were coming from nerves so hopefully they'll soon be gone after a few more shows. Really lovely.
Cathy - great, powerful voice especially in belting - all makes sense she was in Miss Saigon. A great actress, her skills really show in the audition song. I did not like the interpretation of the character unfortunately. Not sure if this is hers or the director's, but Cathy in this production is all bitter, angry, upset, ambitious, jealous, accusing.... even when things are positive she's more triumphant like she won the lottery rather than happy about being in love. It almost seems like she trapped him into marriage...
Reviews I've read so far - I think are fair. True that the songs and the performers are great in each part but it probably does lack revelation or the gripping feeling watching their relationship fall apart for the people who are there to watch the 'show' - a piece of drama (and not to admire Jason Robert Brown's songs that they know). Having said that, Jason Robert Brown's songs are, gorgeous and they deserve a great stage, and I feel that people should learn to enjoy them as they would be truly missing out if otherwise. ... so while I think the reviews have so far been fair, I feel sad for the people who may have gone if the reviewers gave the production one or more stars.
But then, I'm rather posessive and jealous so I'm also maliciouisly happy that it's not turning too huge.
...it's a great show! Meet the wonderful works of Jason Robert Brown performed by seasoned artists and be happy.... - 62.253.92.62)
27 Jul 06
Fantastic - 80.43.72.198)
27 Jul 06
I thoroughly enjoyed this show. I already knew the music very well so had high expectations, and it didn't dissapoint. My friend who didn't know the show at all, also enjoyed it very much, but thought the story was slightly confusing at times. I was very impressed with the way actors and the way they handled the heat in the theatre, while the audience were wilting in their seats! I would definitely recommend it. - 62.173.202.20)
26 Jul 06
Four stars for the performances which were terrific. Even in the sauna level of heat the night I attended the cast never let up. Whilst we swooned and practically fainted into the aisles they, like true troupers, carried on regardless. There should be a special Olivier awarded to actors who suffer for the cause of their art - Damian Humbley and Lara Pulver would certainly be the receipients of it for this year. I cannot say too much about the piece as a whole as I was so distracted by the discomfort. However, the word repetitive springs to mind. It is certainly a NY show - whether it sits comfortably with it's very obvious references here - I am not so sure. Do try it though but wait for a change in the weather. - 195.93.21.129)
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