Magnificent Come From Away on Tour
“Kevin puts on this plaid – thing. He says he’s “incognito”, and that he’s “going to blend in with the natives”, but he just looks like a gay lumberjack.”
The Other Kevin
Continuing its UK tour is the ultimate feel good musical Come From Away which is so good it feels like it deserves a permanent theatre in London’s west End. The story is a true one. Its sincerity and humanity puts to shame more superficial musicals. On Day One, 7,000 Strangers arrived, on Day Three, we had 7,000 Friends. This touring production is just as good as the ones I saw in the West End. Sara Poyzer as Captain Beverley is superb and Nicholas Pound as the Mayor is a strong presence often delivering the humour. I particularly liked Bree Smith as Hannah with her own heart breaking story. But this is a show with an outstanding ensemble cast. Don’t miss it as the tour ends in January.
Here is my original review.
The excitement at the Phoenix Theatre on Thursday night for the reopening of Come From Away after 495 days was amazing. The Mayor of Gander, Newfoundland, Claude (James Doherty) could not be heard for his first few lines because the audience were standing and screaming with excitement and clapping. It was infectious!
We are straight into “Welcome to the Rock”. Gander Airport used to be one of the largest in the world because it was where planes refuelled on their way across the Atlantic. I have my father’s RAF Log Book just after the war, when he went from Heathrow to Washington on a BOAC Constellation, stopping in Prestwick, Iceland, Gander, New York and finally New York to Washington on Eastern Airways.
What happened on 11th September 2001 was that planes en route to the USA were stopped from entering American airspace and diverted to airports in Canada. Gander a small town with a population of 10,000 took 38 commercial planes with 7,000 people on board. The town pulled together to feed and clothe the passengers and crew, provide the babies with nappies and baby food, later offering hospitality and essentials like showers. Imagine the pressure on telephones as they tried to check on their friends and relatives.
The musical starts with foot tapping and stamping, exciting Gaelic rhythms with some Irish jigs as Claude introduces some of the Gander residents, teachers Beulah (Jenna Boyd) and Annette (Alice Fearn) and the policeman (Harry Morrison). It is as if we are making new friends as we learn about the residents of Gander and their contribution and also the passengers of Captain Beverley Bass (Alice Fearn)’s plane, an American Airlines flight bound for Dallas, Texas.
There is strong singing from the whole ensemble but Alice Fearn is outstanding in her solo “Me And the Sky” which illustrates her credentials as the first female Captain with American Airlines. Of course she knows some of the crew on the planes brought down.
I loved Bonnie (Mary Doherty) who worked in a local animal shelter with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and who identified that there were animals on board the planes. She and two colleagues set about finding them from the plane manifests and making arrangements to feed and care for them: cats, dogs and even two rare Bonobos, pygmy chimpanzees. One of the cats had his epilepsy medication taped to his carrier.
Come From Away has this feel of being developed organically as we learn of people’s occupations, nationality, different languages, sexuality, religion and diets and how to cater for them. It is exceptionally well crafted. Of courses many of the characters are based on real people.
The two Kevins, a gay couple Kevin T (Mark Dugdale, also in the touring cast) and Kevin J (Jonathan Andrew Hume) who disagree frequently, are apprehensive about their reception as a gay couple. There is Hannah (Gemma Knight Jones) whose son is a Brooklyn Fire fighter. She bonds with Newfoundlandite Beulah as she anxiously waits for news of him. “I Am Here” is her powerful solo. A stiffly mannered Englishman Nick (Alasdair Harvey) will strike up a romance with a divorced Texan woman Diane (Kate Graham) in many comic riffs. Another true story!
Initially the passengers have to stay on board the planes and the chairs are arranged onstage in a jet aircraft formation. It is very hot weather. Slowly rumours begin to spread about what has happed at the Twin Towers and the Pentagon. There is a jaw dropping presentation as news of 9/11 hits the passengers.
There is great choreography, exuberant dance and clever scenes, the cardiologists in white coats on their way to a conference in Texas wave their red gloved hands at us. Comedy too, the gym teacher who speaks a little Spanish but then finds he only has a dating vocabulary! Gander finds a lone Jewish resident whose Polish parents sent him there in the 1930s.
The backdrop of the magnificently named Beowulf Boritt’s set is boarded wood with Howell Binkley’s lighting shifts taking us to different places and changes of atmosphere. The slickness of the cast changing characters and rearranging chairs under Christopher Ashley’s direction is perfection and impressive.
This musical has no artificiality about it and that is so unlike some musical books which can feel contrived. This is about people behaving well and other people being grateful – the tragedy brings out the best in everybody and some of the audience are crying tears of happiness at the emotion. This story illustrates how good people can be.
I missed Come From Away in February 2019 where a frantically opening week before the Oliviers’ eligibility close led to difficult choices and too much to cover. It was a mistake. I was booked in to see it on the 12th March 2020 when I was advised to stop travelling on the tube and mixing in theatres because of Covid, so I’ve waited a long time to review this fabulous show.
If Theatrevibe gave stars this would be a magnificent five stars. Can I go again, please?
Note: I have since seen it twice more.
Musical Numbers
Welcome to the Rock
38 Planes
Blankets and Bedding
28 Hours / Wherever We Are
Darkness and Trees
Costume Party
I Am Here
Prayer
On the Edge
Screech In
Me and the Sky
The Dover Fault
Stop the World
Somewhere in the Middle of
Nowhere
Something’s Missing
Finale
Production Notes
Come From Away
Book, Music and Lyrics by Irene Sankoff and David Hein
Directed by Christopher Ashley
Musical Staging by Kelly Devine
Cast
Starring:
Oliver Jacobson
Sara Poyzer
Dale Mathurin
Bree Smith
Nicholas Pound
Jamal Zulfiqar
Daniel Crowder
Mark Dugdale
Amanda Henderson
Kirsty Hoiles
Natasha J Barnes
Rosie Glossop
Irene Sankoff
David Hein
Creatives
Director: Christopher Ashley
Musical Staging: Kelly Devine
Musical Supervision and
Arrangements: Ian Eisendrath
Musical Director: Andrew Corcoran
Scenic Design: Beowulf Boritt
Costume Design: Toni-Leslie James
Lighting Design: Howell Binkley
Sound Designer: Gareth Owen
Orchestrations: August Eric Smoen
Information
Running Time: One hour 40 minutes without an interval
Booking at Wimbledon until 12th October 2024
TOUR DATES
Theatre Royal
Norwich
Grand Theatre
Wolverhampton
Marlowe Theatre
Canterbury
Festival Theatre
Chichester
Theatre
Milton Keynes
Lowry
Salford
Address:
New Theatre Wimbledon
93 The Broadway
Wimbledon
London SW19 1QG
Tube: Wimbledon
Reviewed by Lizzie Loveridge
at the New Theatre Wimbledon on 8th October 2024