Love Story (musical)

This article is about the musical. For the film, see Love Story (1970 film). For the novel, see Love Story (novel).
Love Story

West End Artwork
Music Howard Goodall
Lyrics Stephen Clark/Howard Goodall
Book Stephen Clark
Basis

1970 film Love Story

1970 novel by Erich Segal
Productions 2010 Chichester Festival Theatre
2010 West End
2013 Netherlands
2013 Russia

Love Story is a musical written by Stephen Clark with music by Howard Goodall and lyrics by Stephen Clark and Goodall. It is inspired by Erich Segal’s best-selling novel of the same name.[1] Love Story transferred to the Duchess Theatre in the West End in December 2010 following a critically acclaimed sell-out season at the Chichester Festival Theatre.

Plot

At Jenny's funeral, her family and friends flashback ("What can you say about a girl?") about her life.

Oliver is a rich young man who meets a spirited young woman, Jenny. She is poor and of Italian heritage, but has attended Radcliffe College and plays the piano. They fall in love and marry, against his family's wishes. Oliver, disinherited, attends law school, while Jenny works to support them. However, she contracts a fatal illness, leukemia, and dies.

Productions

2010 Chichester Festival Theatre

Love Story had its world premiere at the Chichester Festival Theatre, where it ran at the Minerva Theatre from 29 May 2010 until 26 June 2010. The cast featured Emma Williams as Jenny, Michael Xavier as Oliver Barratt IV and Peter Polycarpou as Phil.[2][3]

2010 West End

Love Story transferred to the Duchess Theatre in the West End, officially opening on 6 December 2010 following previews from 27 November. It played a limited 10 week engagement which ended 26 February 2011.[4] Michael Ball makes his producing debut in a co-production alongside Adam Spiegel and Stephen Waley-Cohen.[5] Directed by Rachel Kavanaugh, the set and costume designer is Peter McKintosh, lighting designer is Howard Harrison, and musical staging is by Lizzi Gee.[6][7] The musical runs without intermission, and the music is played by an on-stage pianist and a septet of strings.[8]

2012 Philadelphia

The Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia presented the first American production of Love Story, as the first show in its 204th season, in September and October 2012 starring Alexandra Silber and Will Reynolds.[9]

2013 Edinburgh Fringe

The show had a limited run at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival at the Paradise in Augustine's Theatre in August 2013, starring Eloise Hare and Will Arundell.

2013 - 2014 Netherlands Tour

A Dutch version, and first non-English production was announced in early 2013. Its opening night was on 29 November 2013, two weeks later than planned due to a back injury for its star Freek Bartels. This version is a touring musical, after it had originally been planned at the Beatrix Theater in Utrecht. Freek Bartels plays Oliver, Celinde Schoenmaker plays Jenny, her parents are played by Dick Cohen and Marleen van der Loo. This production follows its original British version by having no intermission. The story was translated by Jan Rot.

2013 Russian Tour

The first Russian tour is planned to open in November. This non-replica production will tour Russia throughout 2014. Ekaterina Novosyolova and Valeriya Lanskaya will play the role of Jenny, Pavel Lyovkin and Stanislav Belyaev will play Oliver. The Russian production is based on the original one act book.

2014 Bolton Octagon

Bolton Octagon, Greater Manchester had Love Story as their closing show for their 2013/2014 run. The production had Daniel Boys of Andrew Lloyd Webber's talent show Any Dream Will Do in the role of Oliver, and Lauren Samuels from Lloyd Webber's other talent show Over the Rainbow in the role of Jenny. The show was met by rave reviews.

Musical numbers

A cast recording is available, released by Faber Music.

Critical reception

The reviewer of the Chichester Festival Theatre production wrote in indielondon.co.uk: "Stephen Clark has adapted the story into a succession of short scenes which, under Rachel Kavanaugh’s adept direction, follow on cohesively and coherently resulting in a believable and very poignant evening. Howard Goodall’s songs are integral to the action and they are beautifully performed by the principals and [the] chorus. [T]he two principals, Oliver (Michael Xavier) and Jenny (Emma Williams)...give superb and utterly sincere performances."[10]

In its review roundup of the musical at the Chichester Festival Theatre, theatremania.com noted the reviews "praising Goodall's score, Kavanaugh's staging and the central performances from Xavier and Williams."[11]

Chichester Festival Theatre production review: "Howard Goodall and Stephen Clark have created a terrific new musical...The show finished to a chorus of heavy sniffles, superseded by hearty applause, which I take to mean a West End transfer should be given".[12]

The reviewer of the West End production at the Duchess Theatre for Whatsonstage.com wrote: "Goodall’s music...is always interesting, often beautiful.... The framing epitaph is lovely writing, too.... Rachel Kavanaugh’s austere production on an all-white design by Peter McKintosh – whose three Corinthian pillars somehow conjure Pearl and Dean as readily as pearly gates – transfers well from the Minerva in Chichester.... This is a high-calibre chamber musical, all right, with a top skill factor in both writing and onstage musicianship (piano, guitar and string quintet); then just when it’s nearly enough, it plummets into bathos and easily resistible, tear-jerking manipulation."[13]

The Dutch version was well received by Dutch critics after its opening night. Amsterdam daily Het Parool wrote: "A wonderful, subdued 'Love Story'. No superficial pathos, wonderful melodies by Howard Goodall... A little, surprisingly enchanting version of this well known story".

Awards and nominations

Original London production

Year Award Ceremony Category Nominee Result Ref
2011 Laurence Olivier Award Best New Musical Nominated [14]
Best Actor in a Musical Michael Xavier Nominated
Best Actress in a Musical Emma Williams Nominated

References

  1. Love Story site lovestoryonstage.com
  2. Bosanquet, Theo."Stewart & Everett Lead New Chichester Season", whatsonstage.com, February 18, 2010
  3. Chichester Festival Theatre
  4. Shenton, Mark. West End's Love Story to Shutter at Duchess Theatre". Playbill.com, 31 January 2011
  5. Paddock, Terri."Love Story Transfers to Duchess, Ball Produces", whatsonstage.com, July 23, 2010
  6. Jones, Kenneth."'Love Story, the Musical', Will Kiss and Cry in London's West End; Michael Ball Produces" Playbill.com, October 8, 2010
  7. Hitchings, Henry."True romance wins the day in 'Love Story'" Thisislondon.co.uk, 7 December 2010
  8. Bennett, Ray."'Love Story'-Theater Review" Hollywood Reporter, 7 December 2010
  9. Kenneth Jones (September 12, 2012). "Love Story, the Musical, Opens Sept. 12 at Walnut Street; Alexandra Silber, Will Reynolds Star". Playbill.
  10. (no author). "'Love Story' - Chichester Festival (Review)" indielondon.co.uk, retrieved December 11, 2010
  11. Probst, Andy. "Review Roundup:Howard Goodall and Stephen Clark's Musical 'Love Story' Opens" Theatermania.com, June 8, 2010
  12. Mountford, Fiona."Singing the songs of a doomed love affair in 'Love Story'" The Evening Standard (London), 8 June 2010
  13. Coveney, Michael. " Love Story ". Whatsonstage.com, 7 December 2010
  14. "Full List: Laurence Olivier Nominees Announced" whatsonstage.com, 7 February 2011

External links

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