11th Feb2023

Dirty Dancing (Theatre)

by timbaros
Kira Malou, Michael O'Reilly & the ensemble of Dirty Dancing (c) Mark SeniorThere’s a lot of dancing in ‘Dirty Dancing,’ and it’s a bit dirty – but will you have the time of your life? 

Returning back to the London stage (now playing at the Dominion Theatre), ‘Dirty Dancing’ will be one for the jukebox musical lovers (out of towners and tourists) but not for the die hard theatre goers.

It’s the late 1960’s and ‘Baby’ (Kira Malou) and her family are vacationing in the Catskills (upper New York State resort). They partake in all the activities the resort has to offer, including dancing, and Baby takes up a dancing with Johnny Castle (Michael O’Reilly) as she really, really fancies him. And as many of you have seen the film with Patrick Swayze and Jenifer Grey you all know how it plays out. 
But in this theatre production, Malou looks way to young to play Baby, and O’Reilly is too chiselled (and too stiff) to play Johnny (he has an obligatory underwear scene that’s actually a bit cringe worthy). They both can dance their hearts out (as do the rest of the cast – especially Charlotte Gooch as Penny – she’s the best of the lot, as are the vocals provided by the house band called Kellerman’s Band). But it’s a short run (in London until April 29th, 2023 before heading off on tour again). The music is singalong and the set and sound are adequate for the huge stage. So let the hordes think they’ve had the time of their lives, after dropping upwards of on average of about £50 per ticket.
Photo by Mark Senior
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11th Feb2023

The Fabelmans (Film)

by timbaros
This is perhaps the film Director Steven Spielberg always wanted to make, and he enlisted Tony Award Winner Tony Kushner (Angels in America) to help write this movie that is basically an ode to Spielbergs childhood.
Gabrielle LaBelle is fantastic as Sammy –  the ‘young Spielberg’ who, after taken by his parents to see a screening of Cecil B. DeMille’s ‘The Greatest Show on Earth’, gets the filmmaking bug. Using his fathers camera (Paul Dano), and with the support and love of his mother Mitzi (a very good Michelle Williams, Oscar-nominated for this role), Sammy films everything. But Sammy sometimes films too much, and sees things through the camera that should’ve always been kept in the closet with the rest of the family secrets. Meanwhile Mitzi is not the most stable mother on the block, especially after the family moves to another state. And with the death of her mom, and with rumours swirling about Mitzi and a male friend of the family, Sammy perhaps has captured too much and does not want to face the truth about his family. But we all know how Spielbergs life turned out, and we can only assume this is how Sammy’s life will turn out, especially after a chance meeting with legendary film director John Ford.
Up for 8 Oscars, deservedly so, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, ’The Fabelmans’ is an endearing film but it could’ve been so much more. It drags a bit in the middle (the film is 150 minutes – quite long for a drama), and was practically shut out of the top BAFTA nominations. It won the Golden Globe for Best Picture and Best Director, and Judd Hirsch, who plays the grandfather, was just nominated for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor, so this proved Hollywood loves this sort of film, and they love showering their own with awards. You will love this film too, if you are able to sit through the whole thing.
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