Talented cast bounce through 37 musical numbers in Little Match Girl
This is a terrific retelling of the Hans Christian Andersen story as
an extremely talented cast of just 11 sing and dance their way through
21 roles and 37 musical numbers, telling the story of a young girl thrown
into the street by her father and told not to come back until she’s sold
all her matches.
It’s Christmas Eve and the song Mistletoe & Wine
is woven through, subtly at first until it bursts through in the second
act and they all join in at the end. A surprise for anybody who thought
Cliff Richard was the first to sing it.
Hans Christian Andersen is well known for his fairy stories but, like
his chum Charles Dickens, he was also aware of society's indifference
to the plight of the poor. Hence this little story.
Emily Cochrane is perfect as the little match girl; a waif shivering in
her ragged clothes pleading with the rich people in their gorgeous clothes
on their way home with their Christmas shopping. Emily's got a remarkably
big voice for one so small as she demonstrates in her catchy opening number
about her house with no windows, no doors and no ceiling. It's nothing
like yours, she explains..
Then she settles down to sell her matches in the hope of going home and
out of the cold.
There's never a dull moment as all sorts of characters thread their way
through: a pie man, a policeman, a barman, a landlord, an urchin, tarts,
plenty of rich people and old women who act as a sort of Greek chorus
to give us a bit of background.
Our heroin is befriended by cheeky Cockney chappie Arthur (Jack Ayres) who intriduces himself singing a catchy little number called simply Arthur's Me Name. He cleans the master's boots and hopes to be a butler one day. There are a couple of touching dreamlike sequence where they imagine how things could be, but can he really help her? Slick direction by Keith Strachan, who also wrote it, keeps things bowling along.
All the music is supplied by Richie Hart tucked away above the stage. Some of the songs are sad such as An Ordinary Life sung by Josie (Aimee Barrett) , the woman living with the Match Girl's father Jebb (Rob Hadden) who sings the equally sad You Can't Come Home. And some are very funny as in the duet with the self satisfied sisters Maud (Katherine Hamilton-Hall) and Winifred (Julia Faulkner) as they warble about having better things to do than gossip with us. Thank goodness they haven't got anything better to do they're hilarious. Another witty set piece is the Kitchen Rag where Katherine pops up again as the cook in the rich man's kitchen dancing around the goose with the butler (Ian McCurrach).
But none of the jollity and humour are allowed to overshadow the heart rending wretchedness at the centre of this story. In a quiet moment when everybody's gone home and she's completely alone, the Little Match Girl lights matches to warm herself and conjure up the ghost of her beloved grandmother, as she curls up to protect herself from the snow and the relentless cold.
Take a big hankie, this one’s a weepie.
Penny Flood
December 13, 2017
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