logo
Putting musical together ‘full-on challenge', but fun

Putting musical together ‘full-on challenge', but fun

Tackling the beast of a show that is Chess the Musical is an exciting challenge for director Greg MacLeod and his dedicated cast and crew.
''Chess traverses such a wide range of genres, from classical, balletic and opera to Rogers & Hammerstein and ABBA-style pop, that it is a full-on challenge, but great fun,'' MacLeod said.
''It's enormous, there are 500 pages of music, and it races along like a freight train — which is a major reason it is such an entertaining show.''
The production team of MacLeod, musical director Bridget Telfer-Milne and choreographer Olivia Larkins are steering the large cast through the complex process of putting the musical together.
Created by Tim Rice and the musical geniuses behind ABBA's multitude of hit songs, Benny Anderson and Bjorn Ulvaeus, Chess has a focus on dirty politics and people's struggles to control their lives that remain just as relevant today as they were in the 1980s, when the show was written.
Set against the backdrop of the Cold War, it is a tale of love, rivalry and political intrigue, and is filled with hit songs including One Night in Bangkok , I Know Him So Well and Anthem .
The show follows two chess grandmasters in a high-stakes world championship match — brash American Freddie Trumper (Ben Thomas) and calm, strategic Soviet player Anatoly Sergievsky (Max Beal).
Caught between them is Florence Vassy (Anna Langford), who soon finds herself torn between loyalty and love.
MacLeod is full of praise for his leading lady, saying Langford is taking the role ''to an amazing place''.
''Florence is at the heart of the show and is a great character, and Anna has stacks of experience to bring to the role — it is great working with her.''
He felt equally lucky with his two male leads, as well as the rest of the performers playing principal roles, including Jack Archibald, Sophie Whibley, Joshua Larkins and Alex Gourdie.
''They are all very talented and are working incredibly hard, which makes my job easier.''
The ensemble cast was also impressive, dancing and singing and tackling complex harmonies with aplomb.
Telfer-Milne was leading a 13-piece orchestra, combining rock and classical instruments, to accompany the action.
As a first-time director tackling a non-consortium show, where the team had created its own sets and costumes, MacLeod was loving the challenge and relishing the chance to work creatively.
''Usually I see things from the perspective of a performer, from the inside out, but this is a chance to look from the outside in.
''I can see the fruits of my labours and imagine it from the audience perspective, which is very cool.''
He was also enjoying the process of communicating with cast members and working to bring out the best in their performances.
''They are all really rising to the challenge, so I'm confident we are going to put on a fantastic show.''
Chess the Musical will be staged from May 15-24, with most performances at 7.30pm and a Sunday matinee at 2.30pm. Tickets are on sale now.
BRENDA.HARWOOD@thestar.co.nz
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Choirs battle to the tune of ABBA
Choirs battle to the tune of ABBA

Otago Daily Times

time05-07-2025

  • Otago Daily Times

Choirs battle to the tune of ABBA

Waitaki Girls' High School students from Wilson House, led by conductor Neave Meikle, perform ABBA song Honey Honey. PHOTO: SUPPLIED ABBA's music rang out at Waitaki Girls' High School last week as the school's four house choirs took the stage in their annual competition. A long tradition at the school, the competition is a culmination of a busy cultural-focused second term where the talent quest, music competition and house choirs all vie for points to win the overall music trophy. ABBA songs Honey Honey, Voulez-Vous and Mamma Mia rang out in the packed auditorium as the house choirs battled it out. Wilson house cleaned up with the winning choir, best conductor and best accompanists. The Music Competition Trophy, for which points accumulated from all three events, went to Burn House. The school's international and migrant director Sherilyn Hellier said it was a "really entertaining" evening. "The staff dressed in bright pink and sang Mamma Mia and got the evening off to a great start with a dynamic performance of singing and dancing. They were really entertaining. "Wilson House won because of their song harmonies and part-singing along with skilled conducting and an excellent four-piece band," she said. Mrs Hellier said many hours of practice and hard work came to fruition in front of a "full" school hall of parents, family supporters and past students. Judges Stephen Hinds and Jacob Yates said the points were close and the standard high. Results: Wilson 1, Ferguson 2, Gibson 3, Burn 4.

Latest zombie instalment dissects the human condition
Latest zombie instalment dissects the human condition

Otago Daily Times

time27-06-2025

  • Otago Daily Times

Latest zombie instalment dissects the human condition

28 YEARS LATER Director: Danny BoyleCast: Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jack O'Connell, Alfie Williams, Ralph FiennesRating: (R16) ★★★★+ REVIEWED BY AMASIO JUTEL Twenty-eight years after the "rage virus" was liberated from an animal testing lab by eco-terrorists, the British Isles are under strict quarantine. On the mainland, the virus runs rampant, giving birth to an array of new "infecteds". Off the northeast coast of England (Lindisfarne, or "Holy Island"), Spike (Alfie Williams) and his parents, Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Isla (Jodie Comer), live in a fenced off survivor community, connected to the mainland via a causeway only accessible at low tide. Armed with bows and arrows, Jamie and Spike cross the causeway for a father-son rite of passage zombie hunt. A casual (and effective) exposition dump lays the Act One stakes bare — in 4 hours, the tide will be too high to return, and they'll be stuck on the mainland; a natural world that takes no prisoners. Despite the drastic change in iPhone megapixel resolution over 23 years, the 28 visual style remains distinct. Cinematographer of the original film, Anthony Dod Mantle, returns with guerrilla-style, over-the-shoulder shots and canted wides of the father-son duo, a visual metaphor to alienate them from a world where they don't belong — two decades free of humanity's blemish means humans come second. Colourful vistas depict crumbling buildings set in the vast greenery. Striking infrared sequences and freeze-frame bullet-time high-speed pans of explosions of infected blood and guts are staggering, and supplement this gruesome, genre-fare video game logic. The creature innovation of the film is the "alphas" — head-ripping, spinal cord flail-waving infected, whose exposure to the virus has juiced them up to 12-foot-tall beasts. Forced to hide under the cover of night, having missed their four-hour window home, Spike and Jamie are taunted by the looming silhouette of an Alpha on the horizon line, twice the size of any infected near it. The menacing threat is actualised in an electrifying foot race across the shin-deep causeway home. A slightly shocking tonal shift finally marks the main protagonist (masked by the strange billing order that likely is owed to a confirmed sequel), who sets out on a Wizard of Oz-style cross-country journey with a haphazard crew, through a colourful array of set pieces to the remarkable "Bone Temple". A document of the lives that have been, it's undeniably amazing scenery, complete with an eccentric "third act Fiennes" masterclass to go with. Garland's writing packages themes explored in his own work. His forensic diagnosis of humanity — folk horror and tribalism, the rule of nature and nationalism — marries well with Boyle's humanistic directorial lens, who has an approach to character direction much less subtle, perhaps even brittle, compared to recent Garland projects, Annihilation, Men and Civil War. The film straddles that line between cold diagnosis of the human condition and the viscerality of the horror and humanity in this film, profoundly so. This is no more resonant than in Spike's first venture across the causeway. Boyle deploys a stern sonic and visual pastiche to a renowned 1915 recording of Rudyard Kipling's Second Boer War poem, Boots . Overlayed with footage from the classic film Henry V , and non-fiction footage of wartime, Boyle harmonises with Garland's thematic endeavour to indicate the splintering society through tribalist strife, harkening back to the act three twist of 28 Days Later . Garland's interest in folk horror is particularly symbolic, characterising the arbitrary centring power of religion amid conflict. Masks and churches figure prominently; ritual practices denote the in-community and those who are cast out. The communal power of the church on "Holy Island" (literally) opposes the structural integrity of those on the mainland, where they're seen as decrepit and crumbling. The bookends of the film materialise this thematic idea very openly. 28 Years Later is post-post-apocalyptic horror with a deep emotional storyline, exhilarating action, and bombastic film-making, and a tale of the cold-hearted tribalism and polarisation that its writer too often pontificates about in less effective films.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store