Gone With the Wind
New London Theatre
How did they get it so wrong? Turning chicklit’s greatest story into a hit musical should have been a doddle. Just put the characters on stage and let the warm romantic breeze of the narrative carry you safely home. And that’s exactly what Trevor Nunn has done and yet the critics have misinterpreted Gone with the Wind and denounced it as a flop. I’m baffled. At last week’s Saturday matinée I joined a sell-out crowd and saw a handsome gutsy version of a completely captivating novel. Never mind the timeless magic of the storyline, look at the performances. Jill Paice is a brittle, beautiful cracker of a Scarlett and Darius Danesh’s Rhett has all that’s required, devilish eyes, a sonorous voice, a lot of slicked black hair and something extra too, the god-like swagger of a young Sean Connery. And Natasha Yvette Williams, playing Mammy, has a voice with a kick as powerful as Aretha’s. But not everything’s perfect. The opening song is a sluggish ensemble number so the show hits the ground dawdling. And there are too many melodies crammed into the 215-minute running time. Some should go, but which ones? Songs between the stars? No. The audience wants the stars. Songs by lesser characters? No. That’ll upset the dressing-room. Best solution is to keep it as it is and make that a selling point. Yes, it’s sprawling, it’s kitsch and it’s cumbersome but that’s the idea.
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Katharine Moffitt
May 5th, 2008 8:56pmWhy does not one of the (all) unfavorable reviews I have read of this musical mention the previous effort. I don't remember whether it was 1972 or 1974 - I visited London both times from America with my late mother. I was in my 20's and do not remember much about the production except that it was performed at the Drury Lane Theatre and was also universally panned by the critics - it lasted a very brief time! I must disagree with the author; I think turning 'Gone With the Wind' into a musical is a dreadful idea - that was my and my mother's reaction in the early '70's. Perhaps someday someone will manage it - after all, I was certainly wrong about 'Les Miserables'!!