My Fair Lady - It Was Loverly
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Dallas Murray Richards, 97, Lauren Elizabeth Stewart, 12, April 11, 2015 |
With the conversion of the Vancouver Ford Theatre into a church the idea of going to a well performed, large cast, full orchestra musical is just about non-existent. The Arts Club Theatre Company does its best to accommodate with plays like Mary Poppins or It’s a Wonderful Life within the limitations of the Stanley Theatre (now the Stanley Industrial Alliance Theatre) which was never built for that sort of thing.
Last year I found out there was a pleasant option that
involved going to the Royal City of New Westminster and its splendid Massey
Theatre. My granddaughter Lauren (then 11) witnessed a Royal City Musical Theatre
production of Annie.
This year, my granddaughter Lauren and I attended the opening on Saturday. Nothing has changed in Vancouver but the Royal
City Musical Theater mounted a full blown My Fair Lady, book and lyrics by Alan
Jay Lerner and music by Frederick Loewe, with Artistic Director Valery Easton
ably assisted by director Max Reimer. Before I go on I must point out the
lesser know fact that Reimer began his days in theatre as a dancer. Easton was
a jazz dancer in the CBC variety shows of the 70s and 80s. That adds up to very
good dancing in this adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s play Pygmalion.
Can you imagine my delight when Dallas Murray Richards
and his wife Muriel sat right next to us?
At the interval Richards told me that the large orchestra
was made up of amateurs who were all very good. They were. For me the real star of the
show besides the splendid actors, singers and musicians was Set Designer Brian Bell.
His sets were ample proof that much is lost in movies and
their special effects. The transformation of the different scenes, a grimy
London, Henry Higgins’s interior drawing room, the outside scene from The
Street Where You Live and the Ascot Horse Races all happened with complex
revolving of sets that were then pushed or pulled. It was a tour de force.It was magic.
Both Lauren and I were familiar to see Warren Kimmel as
Henry Higgins. We have seen him twice in the last two year as the father in the
Arts Club Theatre production of Mary Poppins.
The whole house was impressed by the tenor singing of
Thomas Lamont who plays the nerdish Freddy Eynsford-Hill. Few might know that
George Bernard Shaw stuck to his guns and for years had Freddy marry Eliza
Doolittle and they set up their flower shop.
Tracy Neff as Eliza Doolittle was just right
although in my books she looked much too clean in the beginning. I guess I had
the grimy Wendy Hiller in my mind who played Eliza in the 1938 adaptation of
Shaw’s play into a film, Pygmalion. I saw that film many times as a young boy
as my mother adored Leslie Howard who was Henry Higgins.
John Payne as Alfred Doolittle rendered With A Little Bit
Of Luck most entertaining with lots of dancing and backed up by good singers.
Going to a theatre with a red curtain and red walls and
seats is always an experience when one compares it with that of attending a
film (you are shouted “Enjoy the show,” many times) at the Scotia Bank Cinema
on Burrard. That I shared my experience
with my delighted Lauren made it all that much more special.
I have never associated Audrey Hepburn with Eliza Doolittle because of the many times I saw Wendy Hiller on film. If anything the later adaptation of the Broadway play into the 1964 film was special for both my mother and I as we were fans of Rex Harrison whom we loved in The Ghost of Mrs. Muir with Gene Tierney.
For me Audrey Hepburn was the young princess in the 1953 film Roman Holiday. I was lucky enough to photograph her in 1984 under circumstances that I regret to this day (read the link). Having seen My Fair Lady on Sunday I wish I could have been Pygmalion and Hepburn my Galatea. Perhaps had I summoned Aphrodite, Hepburn would have been transformed to the princess in Roman Holiday.
My Fair Lady runs until the 26th of April.
For me Audrey Hepburn was the young princess in the 1953 film Roman Holiday. I was lucky enough to photograph her in 1984 under circumstances that I regret to this day (read the link). Having seen My Fair Lady on Sunday I wish I could have been Pygmalion and Hepburn my Galatea. Perhaps had I summoned Aphrodite, Hepburn would have been transformed to the princess in Roman Holiday.
My Fair Lady runs until the 26th of April.