Just came back from the National Theatre of Scotland's musical production of Neil Gaiman's children's book Wolves in the Walls conceived of (partly) and designed by Julian Crouch, who created the amazing Shock-Headed Peter. Rick Bowes and I went and who should we meet outside? Alisa Kwitney, Claudia Gonson (they didn't know each other until I introduced them), and then Neil, his film agent, Merrilee Heifetz (his and my agent) and her family...The musical doesn't open officially till the 14th and runs for a week but these are my impressions.

The production looks gorgeous, the wolves are wonderfully wrought. The mother, an actress named Anita Vettesse was brilliant--great voice, charismatic and perfect in the role. The brother played by Paul James Corrigan was also terrific. They each had excellent showstoppers to perform. The father played by George Drennan was good, but he didn't have enough to do and no great showstopper. Unfortunately, the girl Lucy, played by Helen Mallon, was unintelligible. Her Scot accent was so strong that we could only understand about one of every ten words. And she tried too hard to play a kid. I'm afraid that I don't see how her performance can be improved in the short time remaining --but she was absolutely the wrong person to have play for an American audience. The sound all around was not great--very muddy-- and difficult to understand any of the lyrics when all four of the main characters sang together.

The kids in the audience were entranced, even though there were some very scary bits. Ysabeau Wilce's "pig" (or a "pig" impersonator) played a crucial role.

So recommended with the above caveats.

From: (Anonymous)


The wolves deserve their own show. Or at least a video that could go up on YouTube.

Rick Bowes

From: [identity profile] ellen-datlow.livejournal.com


I agree. The BEST part of the whole show was when the wolves took over the household and "acted" out the inhabitants' roles --this is not much of a spoiler.
.

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