A Concert of Musical Theatre
The cast of CO2 presented three superb concert performances on 14th-16th July at St Mary’s School, Lexden Road, Colchester.
Reviews will be published here in due course
Established in 1924
The cast of CO2 presented three superb concert performances on 14th-16th July at St Mary’s School, Lexden Road, Colchester.
Reviews will be published here in due course
Colchester’s third production of “Fiddler” was a credit to the society in every way. The set and costumes were excellent, the sound and lighting also gave very imaginative style and added to the overall professional production.
John Davies as Tevye was superb as the lead character with a wonderful singing voice, and his conversations with God were quite informal and amusing.
Barbara Scully as Golde his wife, gave a busy motherly feel to her character, and the children fitted together well as a family.
Kerry Gullen, Louise Cassidy and Lisa Bibby as the older daughters, gave energetic performances and were paired well with Sam Pilkington, Phil Young and Nathan Crame as their respective suitors. All were well sung and acted.
Barbara Pears as Yente gave a very expressive performance. John Enfield as Lazar Wolf made the most of the Butcher with a great deal of humour which was enjoyable.
The dream sequence was outstanding and brilliant. The pictures that Dani created with the company were very effective, especially-in this scene.
Neil Somerville as Fruma-Sarah was quite the best I have seen and the lighting effects also on his dramatic entry were superb.
Chorus singing and harmonies were very good, and the orchestra under Peter Snell pushed the music along at a fair pace and the balance with voices worked very well. All minor characters gave good performances and Dani once again pulled out all the stops to give the audience a delightful, interesting production.
A show of love and passion
DAVID HENSHALL, East Anglian Daily Times, 29th January, 2009
Fiddler on the Roof,book by Joseph Stein, music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick at Colchester Mercury until February 7.
To make this show work you must have a good Tevye. On his sturdy shoulders the whole thing rests and, in John Davies, Colchester Operatic have got a cracker. He not only looks right and holds the audience charismatically, he sings the role as well as any amateur I have heard.
His Tevye is a man of love and passion with wonderfully laid back moments, especially when he indulges in his frequent chiding, one-sided philosophical discussions with God. Can there be a more touching request than asking your Maker for a sewing machine for your poor tailor son-in-law?
Davies has the right sense of command and with a thrust of his arms and the stamp of his foot brings everything beautifully to life because this is no one-man band. Far from it. He is supported by a team of actors, singers and dancers who also light up the stage with their talent and the singing is particularly fine.
This is not an easy musical for an amateur company to get right because the story, although touched with good edges of humour and given small chinks of hope at the end, is basically sad and moving.
It tells of the villagers of Anatevka on the Russian-Polish border who are forced out of their homes as part of the pogroms against the Jews in the late 19th century. But it is a story with a strong heart and Colchester Operatic make it beat extremly well.
They make the most of the big production numbers like Tradition and If I Were A Rich Man and there’s an especially good wedding scene with a delightful choral Sunrise, Sunset and some neat bottle dancing.
Tevye’s loves his five daughters but they bring him one headache after another, breaking away from the custom of arranged marriages and there’s a terrific ‘dream’ scene as he supports one of them and lies to his wife Golda in bed in order to change her mind about a match she is sold on. The singing of Neil Somerville’s ghost is fabulously scary.
Barbara Scully is a strong Golda with Louis Cassidy, Kerry Cullen and Lisa Bibby singing well as the tradition-busting daughters and Phil Young, Sam Pilkington and Nathan Crame equally good as their suitors.
But this is very much a company effort with all the characters well played in a cast of nearly 40 driven along by the excellent orchestra under MD Peter Snell underlining the drama and importance of this fine score.
David Henshall.
Dear Liz
‘SWEENEY TODD’
Just a brief line to thank you for the invitation to see ‘Sweeney Todd’ at the Mercury Theatre.
It was without doubt one of the very best productions I’ve seen by a NODA society, and as I said to Norman and some of your cast and crew, it really was a great advertisement for amateur theatre.
It is so encouraging to see so many different elements coming together, from the quality of all the performances to the dexterity of the musicians, and of course the excellent direction and attention to detail of all the technical crew. You and your society should be very proud of what you achieved, and I hope that the feedback from other members of the audience has been equally positive.
I thoroughly enjoyed my visit, and again with thanks to you, your committee, and front of house team, and above all, to all the members of Colchester Operatic Society for an enthralling evening of Sondheim.
Tony Gibbs
Chief Executive
To Mike Spurgeon, Chairman Colchester Operatic Society
3rd February 2011
Dear Mike,
I saw the present production of Sweeney Todd on Tuesday evening, and I would be obliged if you would post this on a notice board where it can be seen by members of the company.
As NODA Councillor I get to see around 80 shows a year in East Anglia as I have done since 2005/6, and I can tell you without reservation that this production is the best that I have seen in that period, and I mean that in the overall sense. As far as Colchester is concerned I have no doubt that it is the best I have been in/seen since I became a member in1969.
This was a cast to wish for, with principals diction, voices and actions right in line to express the brittle mood that would not let go of the audience. Chorus too were great and with that very important
element in a Sondheim Show, that of clearly understood diction. As for set, lighting, costume and sound, it all gelled to a very high degree of competence and in effect.
Great work by Musical Director orchestra and company, very smoothly run by yourself as stage Director and top notch direction from Dani. .
On my travels I see many good shows; what I saw on Tuesday was a production of an excellence seldom reached by amateur companies.
Many congratulations to you all.
Best Wishes
John Warburton
Councillor NODA East
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