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The Essgee Mikado (1995)
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After Simon Gallaher's Essgee Entertainment put on a highly successful Papp-like production of The Pirates of Penzance in Australia and New Zealand in 1994, the same team launched a production of The Mikado in much the same spirit, in 1995. Like Pirates, Essgee's Mikado proved to be a smash hit, leading to a third (and, for now, final) G&S production: H.M.S. Pinafore, also a hit. I am a big fan of the Essgee Pirates and Pinafore productions, but Mikado falls flat, at least on video. It clearly satisfied the live audience, but three years [as I write this] and half-a-world away, it just lumbers along, encumbered by overwrought jokes and a lack of dramatic focus. The Essgee cast pride themselves on the freedom to rewrite and improvise on an almost nightly basis. But by the time this video was made apparently, late in the show's New Zealand run the cast were dragging out every little comic bit to a point of tediousness. A tasteless gag about nose mucous that seems to go on forever is indicative of what's wrong with the performance.
Elsewhere, a rope drops down from the ceiling. Jon English seizes it and swings Tarzan-like over the orchestra and first few rows of the audience. He did this in Pirates too, and there it made sense: the Pirate King is supposed to be a swashbuckler. Transplanted to another opera, it's not Pooh-Bah swinging on that rope, but just Jon English horsing around.
Throughout the trilogy, there is an ongoing "war" between Jon English and
the orchestra pit. But here, the war takes over the production and keeps
pulling the action away from the plot. At a certain point, it's not The
Mikado any more, just an extended improvisation sketch.
Jon English is listed in the program as Pooh-Bah, but he actually has most of Pish-Tush's part too, and he is inserted into several scenes where Gilbert didn't have either character on-stage (such as "Here's a how-de-do"). Meanwhile, to keep the show within manageable length (it is too long as it is), several numbers are cut. The Act II madrigal is perhaps the most sorely missed. In lieu of Simon Gallaher and Helen Donaldson, who created Nanki-Poo and Yum-Yum at the premiere, we have Derek Metzger and Terri Crouch. Metzger doesn't do too badly, but he struggles on the high notes. Crouch's Kiwi accent sticks out like a sore thumb. Drew Forsythe has all the histrionic tools to make a great Ko-Ko, but he is perhaps the most guilty of dragging out his comic bits far beyond reason. I assume that the performance started out a lot tighter and just got flabby as the run went on.
David Gould's Mikado is just plain strange. He has a profoundly resonant
deep bass voice, but he fails to use it to great advantage, delivering a
monotonous reading that's dull as dishwater. Gould's costume is designed
to show off his impressive physique, including pectoral muscles that
dance on queue, but four large flags that he carries on his back are
a distraction.
Bev Shean's Katisha is probably the best of the bunch. Her straightforward interpretation would be at home in any production.
As in all the Essgee productions, the women's chorus is replaced by
three ladies dubbed "The Fabulous Singlettes". Between them, they share
all the material the original libretto allots to either Pitti-Sing or
Peep-Bo, but they travel as a team, so the "painful preparations" at
the end of the opera are for five victims, not three. Any music involving
them is rewritten in close harmony. Yum-Yum is left out of "Three little
maids," so that the Singlettes can remain intact.
I might have enjoyed another performance of this Mikado, but the video version is simply too overwrought with improvised gags. As it stands, I rank this lowest of the three Essgee productions. It has been issued commercially in both PAL and NTSC formats. There is also a CD that features just the mega-mix (extended curtain-call music) from Pirates and Mikado. The latter includes the Australian cast (Simon Gallaher as Nanki-Poo, Helen Donaldson as Yum-Yum, and Geraldine Turner as Katisha). However, it is only five or six minutes of music. This CD was on the market only briefly before being withdrawn due to a union squabble. After I posted this review, Mel Moratti wrote with a more favorable impression:
The Essgee products are available from http://ezwidget.com/essgee. For information, write to info@essgee.com.
Marc Shepherd, oakapple@cris.com Copyright ©1995-2005. All Rights Reserved. Last Modified: 29-Oct-01 URL: http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/mikessgee.htm |