‘Tell Me On A Sunday’ might be
pared down compared to a typical West End musical but it is certainly not a
small scale show. For this production, the band were on-stage but largely
masked by an impressive array of 6’-7’ high very detailed models of iconic New York buildings such as the Empire State and Chrysler Buildings, the Statue of
Liberty and the Brooklyn Bridge. The overall effect was to create a realistic skyline
providing the perfect backdrop for the protagonist Emma’s flat. The inside
lights of the buildings regularly changed, creating some very pleasing effects
as well as helping to indicate the passage of time both over a typical New York
day and over several weeks.
A one-person show is demanding
enough but to be the sole focus in a theatre as large as the Lyric requires a
special confidence. Jodie Prenger met this challenge admirably singing with
gusto whilst never losing the feel of acting, as much through movement as
expression. On stage for almost the entire time, Prenger moved around the set
with ease, regularly changing costumes with quick off-stage interludes. The
audience was enraptured as a story was being told.
The essence of the show was
Emma repeatedly finding herself believing that this time she had ‘met the one’
only to have her hopes dashed. Almost as a refrain, the music dropped in
intensity every time she read out a letter to her mother with a commentary of
her recent experiences. The tempos of the songs perfectly matched Emma’s
emotional highs and lows and as with his previous collaborator Tim Rice,
Lloyd-Webber had found in Don Black a lyricist who could write conversational
lyrics with personality. Ultimately, Emma’s is determined not to be ground down
by bad experiences but the title of the show refers to asking to be let down
slowly every time a relationship ends; that is not on a Saturday when emotions
would be at their highest expectancy.
The show is only an hour long and ran non-stop with a question and
answer session after the interval. This was handled very well starting with a
song from ‘Oliver’ and the questions (presented during the interval) all asked
by the pianist. Jodie Prenger was very much herself, relishing her Blackpool
roots and bonding with the audience, who had clearly loved the show. Finally, a
nice touch was to end with the understudy Jodie Beth Meyer coming to sing a
Lloyd-Webber song herself and then join Prender in the duet ‘Another Suitcase In Another Hall’ from ‘Evita’.
Reviewer - John Waterhouse
on - 19.10.21
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