by Jim Cartwright
Soul Music
Several years ago TLT and her tuneful little engine
might have started this review with the "death of vinyl" and called
The Rise and Fall Of Little Voice an "elegaic piece" along with a few
other clichés. But now, with new turntables for sale on twenty first century shopping websites, she, or rather we, would have to eat their words along with their interval ice
cream.
Jim Cartwright's compelling 1992 riff on the relationship between divas and the
recording industry is nevertheless a strange play. Part a showcase for the vocal talents of the actress
(in this case Carly Thoms impressively belting out songs) playing the
eponymous character Little Voice and part a kind of showbiz Carrie horrorfest.
By 1992, it also strikes us, the female female
impersonator (there is a reason for the double female) was the domain of male impersonators and drag
queens. Therefore this is a nag of a play which
keeps on running because we don't think that's all it's about.
If, like me, you've don't know the play before seeing it, here's a
quick crib.
Little Voice, also known as LV, (we never learn her full
name in this inside out world) lives with her slatternly alcoholic Mum Mari (Charlotte Gorton turning
caricature eventually into something infinitely more touching) in a Lancashire town.
A fragile slip of a thing, LV spends her days
listening to the long playing records she inherited from her late father Frank.
At the same time, as if by osmosis, bursts of the songs in the divas' voices, come periodically from her thin
frame.
Her hidden talent is usually confined to her shabby bedroom with one of those, at that time, superseded turntables, with her Mum an
unwilling listener along with a more neutral good natured neighbour Sadie (Mandy Dassa whose
few monosyllables and huge saucer eyes almost make her a silent film stooge).
However, when her Mum brings home her latest boyfriend small-time variety agent Ray Say (Ken Christiansen in a nicely understated performance) and LV's uncanny imitations of showstoppers stop their shagging, Ray believes he's discovered a star.
However, when her Mum brings home her latest boyfriend small-time variety agent Ray Say (Ken Christiansen in a nicely understated performance) and LV's uncanny imitations of showstoppers stop their shagging, Ray believes he's discovered a star.
Cartwright wrote the show as a tailor made showcase for the talents of Jane Horrocks star of the original production and the movie. Maybe that's what also gives the play its skinny stitched-together vinyl Frankenstein feel.
Yet, while Little
Voice channels all her frustrations into power ballads sung by a series of alter egos
from Judy Garland through Edith Piaf, Billie Holiday, Shirley Bassey Maria
Callas to Cilla and Lulu, her pronounced lack of ego is what makes her especially distinctive .
For all its gritty Northern setting, we are also
faced, surely deliberately, with well-worn stereotypes, at least when the
characters first appear. Yet these become something more human and humane
when LV is on the cusp of stage success and others live through her.
So, maybe it also becomes a reflection of the power struggles, bluster and debt-fuelled rise to fame that can make showbiz monsters and meglomaniacs of anyone?
So, maybe it also becomes a reflection of the power struggles, bluster and debt-fuelled rise to fame that can make showbiz monsters and meglomaniacs of anyone?
The play, well-paced by director Alistair Knights
with the grungy living room set design and interesting costumes, particularly for
Mari, by Libby Todd, posed more questions than answers for your intrepid
theatregoing duo.
It begins with the installation of a first telephone in the
home, something which we would think belonged more to the 1970s than the 1990s..
Mum's name, Mari also has music hall connotations
while the name Sadie sounds like a character out of American vaudeville.
Meanwhile, the obsession of Billy (Glenn Adamson showing
touching grace in a slighter role), the young telephone engineer, has a zeal
for lighting and Blackpool illuminations more akin to an idealistic pre-revolutionary
communist than a child of the late twentieth century.
Even the initials LV had a different
connotation in 1992, especially after the breaking of salacious news stories about "Madame Cyn", brothel keeper Cynthia Payne
Events seem to have come full circle for this
time-travelling play. James Peake's portrayal of a club impressario can channel
Peter Kay's retro working men's club shtick. Apart from the return of vinyl,
we've also had the rise again of the talent show and, far more tragically, the
demise of the outwardly brash but insecure Amy Winehouse through drink and
drugs.
It's almost as if
recording, of sound and on film, is also circular, encouraging the talented to
live up, or down, to tropes about previous goddesses of song.
In accurately trying to record
the impetus behind the diva, Cartwright's play has shown it still has something to say about transatlantic
showbusiness's cruelty towards, and conquest of, the human soul. An amber/green light for a sensitive and humorous production
of a difficult but rewarding piece.
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