Over The Rainbow – The Wizard Of Oz – London Musical
More Wizard of Oz London Reviews
So The Wizard of Oz opened in London yesterday with a sort of press night and now the reviews are starting to come in thick and fast. Ignoring the preemptive reviews such as that in the Sun far too early on, what are the papers saying about Danielle Hope and The Wizard of Oz today?
Well the consensus seems to be that Andrew Lloyd Webber’s new production of The Wizard Of Oz has been met with broadly positive reviews from theatre critics.
The show, which features Danielle Hope in the role of Dorothy after she won TV talent show Somewhere Over The Rainbow, was unveiled to the media and a star-studded audience including Sir Michael Caine and Barbara Windsor at the London Palladium on Tuesday night.
Writing in the Daily Mail, Quentin Letts said the Manchester teenager was “more than efficient” in the lead role, praising her for her “clear, strong voice and a broad-shouldered confidence”.
The Independent’s Paul Taylor gave it four out of a five stars, and gave a special mention to the “endlessly endearing” terrier in the role of Toto.
A host of big-name stars attended the opening night of the Wizard of Oz.
Re-worked for the London stage by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, the newly-opened musical sees BBC talent show winner Danielle Hope take on the lead role of Dorothy, while West End veteran Michael Crawford plays the Wizard himself and Hannah Waddingham braves the wrath of the audience as the Wicked Witch.
If opening night reviews are anything to go by, then the show is likely to prove a hit with theatre-goers between now and September 17th, when its scheduled run at the Palladium Theatre is due to come to an end.
Following on from a glitzy press night, which saw the likes of Charlotte Church pick up Wizard of Oz tickets and pop into the capital to see the show, the London Evening Standard declared: “This is a family musical with a gorgeous sense of spectacle, as well as being a polished essay in escapism.”
Already, however, some critics are saying that Dorothy’s dog Toto, played by a well-trained West Highland terrier, is the real star of the new show.
Theatregoers – who also included Phillip Schofield, Rowan Atkinson, Michael Winner and Duncan James – strolled up the rainbow-coloured carpet as they arrived to see the production at the historic Palladium theatre in London.
They were joined by several of the runners-up of the television talent show and Lloyd Webber himself, who looked somewhat like the Wizard of Oz in his green velvet jacket.
Jodie Prenger, who was Lloyd Webber’s Nancy in Oliver! after winning BBC show I’d Do Anything and helped in the nationwide search for a dog to star as Toto, said she could relate to any first night nerves Danielle might be feeling.
Speaking before the cast took to the stage, she said: “She’ll be petrified right now. But when she walks out on that stage you’ll see that they made such the right decision, because she’s just going to shine. She was just fabulous. And I can’t wait to see the dog.”
The show received a standing ovation after wowing the audience with spectacular technical effects, including a revolving stage, a fantasy tornado and monkeys flying through the stalls.
Michael Billington of the Guardian writes
.. I came out feeling blitzkrieged rather than charmed.
The star of the show is undoubtedly the set and costume designer, Robert Jones. The Kansas cyclone that whisks Dorothy into a dreamworld is evoked through vorticist projections (the work of Jon Driscoll) that betoken chaos in the cosmos. The Yellow Brick Road is on a tilted revolve from inside which poppyfields and labyrinthine forest emerge. The Emerald City is full of steeply inclined walls suggesting a drunkard’s vision of the Chrysler Building lobby. And the Wicked Witch of the West inhabits a rotating dungeon that might be a Piranesi nightmare.
Not since 19th century Drury Lane melodramas can London have seen anything quite like it; one has to admire the director and co-adaptor, Jeremy Sams, for marshalling the effects. But the story and the people get swamped. Danielle Hope shows a natural, easy presence as Dorothy, but can’t hope to compete with the scenery. Even Michael Crawford, playing both Professor Marvel and The Wizard, seems slightly subdued, and misses a trick by not highlighting the latter’s resemblance to PT Barnum whom he once played. Only two of the cast transcend the spectacle. Hannah Waddingham makes the Wicked Witch a pointy-chinned ogre who at one point flies over the audience’s heads with an elan that Spider Man might envy. David Ganly notches up a first by making the Cowardly Lion explicitly gay and announcing “I’m proud to be a friend of Dorothy.”
Of course, there are the songs; it’s good to be reminded of such classics as Over The Rainbow, We’re Off To See The Wizard, and Follow The Yellow Brick Road. The additions by Lloyd Webber and Rice are also perfectly acceptable. Dorothy is given a good plaintive opening number, and Red Shoes Blues, sung by the Wicked Witch, has a pounding intensity. But, as a film scholar remarked to me, the movie was a story with songs rather than a full-blown musical. That delicate balance has been changed, and an essentially simple fable about the importance of individual worth seems overblown.
I suspect in the end the show will be critic-proof and people will go to see both the winner of the TV talent contest and to luxuriate in the sumptuous visuals. But the paradox of the evening is that it suffers the same dilemma as the Tin Man: it might have been so much more if it only had a heart.
Yet more Wizard of Oz reviews
Oh dear, they mostly seem to like the dog best!
The Daily Mail >> Dorothy’s pet pooch is a wizard of the stage
The Independent >> Dorothy delivers but a four-legged star steals Lloyd Webber’s show
The Telegraph >> Danielle Hope offers a thoroughly competent rather than an inspired performance
BBC >> it is undoubtedly the set design that is the real star of the show
Evening Standard >> a vindication of the TV casting show
Manchester Evening News >> Danielle’s sweet, crystal-clear voice, brings a tear to the eye
Herald, Scotland >> Big, brash, bouncy and boring.
Londonist >> delivers everything one might expect from such a show, and perhaps just a little bit more.
Facebook comments:
No comments yet.
The Wizard of Oz gets Four Nominations
December 3, 2011 - 9:59 am
Tags: Awards, cafe de paris, Danielle, Danielle Hope, Hannah Waddingham, london, london palladium, london theatre, Robert Jones, The WIzard of Oz, vote, whatsonstage, Wizard, Wizard of Oz
Posted in The Wizard of Oz |
The Wizard of Oz received four nominations in the 2012 Whatsonstage.com Awards. During the past month, more than 10,000 London theatre goers have been busy nominating their favourite productions. The shortlist was announced on Friday 2nd December today at the Cafe de Paris in London, and voting is now open for theatre fans to choose [...]
Wizard of Oz Prequel – Oz The Great And Powerful
July 28, 2011 - 1:58 pm
Tags: david lindsay, disney studios, Glinda, glinda the good witch, james franco, Kansas, L. FRANK BAUM, land of oz, michelle williams, mila kunis, prequel, rachel weisz, sam raimi, walt disney, walt disney pictures, Wizard, Wizard of Oz, wonderful wizard of oz
Posted in Wizard of Oz |
James Franco will play the young wizard in Oz The Great and Powerful, a feature film from Walt Disney Pictures that began production on July 25th 2011, directed by Sam Raimi. Oz The Great and Powerful is a prequel to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) by L. Frank Baum, with a script co-written by [...]
Wizard of Oz London Cast Recording
April 5, 2011 - 9:09 am
Tags: Album, andrew lloyd webber, Blues, cast, Cast CD, cast recording, CD, cowardly lion, Danielle Hope, Edward Baker, Emily Tierney, Hannah Waddingham, london, london palladium, Lyricist, merry old land of oz, Michael Crawford, movie, munchkinland, Over The Rainbow, Overture, Paul Keating, Performance, polydor records, The WIzard of Oz, Tim Rice, tin man, track, wicked witch of the west, Wizard, Wizard of Oz, wizard of oz cast, yellow brick road
Posted in Wizard of Oz London |
The New Wizard of Oz London Cast Recording The full London cast album recording of The Wizard Of Oz is to be released on 2nd May 2011 on Polydor Records in association with Really Useful Group. The 24 track set includes all the much-loved songs from the Oscar-winning movie score by Harold Arlen and E [...]
The Wizard of Oz London Palladium
March 6, 2011 - 9:58 am
Tags: Dave Bond, Fizikal, london, london palladium, Palladium, photo, The WIzard of Oz, Wizard, Wizard of Oz
Posted in The London Palladium, The Wizard of Oz London |
A great photo of the Wizard of Oz sign outside the London Palladium taken by Fizikal Rex / Dave Bond used here with permission.
Red Shoes Blues – Hannah Waddingham
March 3, 2011 - 9:44 am
Tags: andrew lloyd webber, Blues, Hannah Waddingham, Shoes, Tim Rice, Wizard of Oz, youTube
Posted in Hannah Waddingham, Wizard of Oz |
Hannah Waddingham sings Red Shoes Blues One of the new songs written by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber for the new musical Wizard of Oz in London. I want her shoeless.
The Wizard of Oz Crashes his Balloon
February 10, 2011 - 9:33 am
Tags: Chris Evans, Danielle Hope, Michael Crawford, Palladium, The WIzard of Oz, Wizard, Wizard of Oz
Posted in Michael Crawford, The Wizard of Oz |
Michael Crawford, The Wizard of Oz himself was the mystery guest on Chris Evans’ radio 1 show this morning. If you’re one of the few lucky people to have seen him earlier this week at the Palladium, he is truly marvellous in the Waizard role. Chris Evans asked Michael Crawford if anything has gone wrong [...]
Wizard of Oz Reviews
February 9, 2011 - 10:51 am
Tags: cast, Danielle Hope, judy garland, Michael Crawford, Over The Rainbow, Palladium, The WIzard of Oz, Wizard of Oz
Posted in Danielle Hope, Wizard of Oz |
Of course it’s wrong to review a new show like The Wizard of Oz while it’s still in previews, because the performance you see in previews is not the same as the final Wizard of Oz musical after the press night or opening. Nevertheless, hundreds of people have been to see the show already and [...]
It’s Tonight! Wizard of Oz 1st Preview
February 7, 2011 - 3:26 pm
Tags: Hannah Waddingham, Paul Keating, The WIzard of Oz, Wizard of Oz
Posted in The Wizard of Oz, Wizard of Oz |
Tonight, Monday February 7th 2011 is the night of the first preview for The Wizard of Oz at the London Palladium. Everybody is so excited! Paul Keating: Thank you for all the good wishes. 1st preview tonight. It’s a full house at The Palladium, so we’re in for a treat. Of course there was a [...]
Wizard of Oz cast and crew on Radio 2
February 4, 2011 - 11:07 am
Tags: bbc, Claudia Winkleman, Programmes, Radio, Show, The WIzard of Oz, Wizard of Oz
Posted in Wizard of Oz |
With the curtain about to rise on Andrew Lloyd Webber’s new production of The Wizard of Oz, we accompany some of of the cast and crew along the yellow brick road to discover more about the latest stage adaptation of one of the world’s best loved movies. Claudia Winkelman’s Arts Show on BBC Radio2 will [...]
Andrew talks The Wizard of Oz
January 31, 2011 - 4:01 am
Tags: andrew lloyd webber, Danielle Hope, The WIzard of Oz, Webber, Wizard, Wizard of Oz, youTube
Posted in Andrew Lloyd Webber, Danielle Hope, The Wizard of Oz |
Well there wasn’t that much to see of Danielle Hope on the One Show it turned out in the end, but Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber told a few interesting anecdotes about the preparations for the first previews of The Wizard of Oz coming up in just about a week.