REVIEW: Elf – The Musical, Dominion Theatre (2015)
Most of the pre-publicity about Elf was to do with its record breaking seat prices. So is it worth it? "I'm the worst toy maker in the world. I'm a…
Most of the pre-publicity about Elf was to do with its record breaking seat prices. So is it worth it? "I'm the worst toy maker in the world. I'm a…
Emotion will bring tears to your eyes at the bravery of Celie, and women like her, in the face of adversity. The context, of course, is that these women whose grandparents were born into slavery are still living an oppressed existence dictated by their gender and their lack of economic power.
Zoë Wannamaker, steely and determinedly in denial, contrasting with her unruly hair which escapes from the pinned back style, opens the play with the symbolic device Howard Davies used ten years ago. During the thunderstorm, Kate wakes and comes into the garden and sees the trunk of the apple tree, which was planted for Larry, crack in two. If anyone believed in omens this would be it. As Kate recalls her dream we hear the roaring noise of aircraft engines behind the wind and storm. Her low groans when she reads the letter strike to the depths of a bottomless emotional chasm, a mother's love for her son.