Shrek the Musical (currently previewing) – Theatre Royal Drury Lane

Shrek transfers well to the stage, retaining the charming humour of the film and managing to combine it with a sense of pantomime (don’t worry, the best bits – perfect for the summer). There’s still a month of previews to go, but there is huge potential here.

The highlight of the night was without doubt Nigel Harman as Lord Farquaad. Hugely camp and hilariously funny, he made every line and opportunity for satire pay. Playing the tiny Lord entirely from his knees, he somehow even managed to do a lot with the dancing. Along with a great team of effeminate accompanying guards/dancers, even at this early stage I’d put my neck on the line and say that his performance was nigh on perfection. Wonderful stuff.

The rest of the show is (understandably) more patchy at the moment. Richard Blackwood looks uncomfortable as Donkey, and doesn’t have the advantage that Harman does of his character not having stood out in the cartoon. Inevitably this performance is always going to be compared to Eddie Murphy’s, which means that he will have to make it his own in order to make an impact. Currently, he appears to be playing Eddie Murphy at about 70% capacity, which just leaves the viewer disappointed not to be seeing the original. Another difficulty that he has is a comparative lack of costume. Shrek is inevitably green, Farquaad has his tininess and the dragon (more on her later…) is a massively impressive puppet with come-to-bed eyes. Blackwood has no mask as donkey, which means that he can’t possibly achieve the iconic massive eyes and constantly nudging nose so much loved in the film. It’s difficult to know how he can get around this one, but I’m sure that there’s still more planned. It will be interesting to see what changes by the time press night comes around on June 14th.

The set is great – the slight budget-quality being used for fantastic humorous effect – and the huge dragon puppet is mesmerising. It has all of the expressiveness of the cartoon dragon, and the puppet operators do an amazing job of manouvering the massive wooden structure. Fantastic vocals from Landi Oshinowo made the dragon’s song ‘Forever‘ the showstopper of the evening. (Link is to a youtube video of a Broadway performance)

The company of fairytale characters has also been greatly realised. The rainbow of costumes house a hotbed of acting talent, and the cheeky references that the film makes to fairytales are extended to cover musicals here, referencing Les Mis, The Lion King & Wicked to name but a few for the musically minded…

The other big stars are Nigel Lindsay, who does a great Shrek – cuddly and suitably grumpy. If you’re not easily offended, check him out in Four Lions, I saw it last week and was blown away (distasteful pun not originally intended…). Amanda Holden also made a charming Fiona. After a slow start, she seemed to get into her stride in the second half with a great opening performance of ‘Morning Person’, and excelled throughout at the cheeky toilet humour of Fiona.

So, a great show with fantastic potential. The score is currently uneven in quality, but songs are bound to be chopped and changed in the next month. Harman completely steals the show. If any of his material gets cut by the time it comes to the ‘final edit’ I will be having words…

Shrek the Musical opens officially at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane on June 14th. I went in a group of 6 and booked £30 dress circle preview tickets via lastminute.com. We ended up in a box at the back of the stalls, with a view was straight on to the stage. I had recently heard good things about seat allocations from Lastminute, and will definitely be booking through them again after this.

Tagged , , , ,

6 thoughts on “Shrek the Musical (currently previewing) – Theatre Royal Drury Lane

  1. Amanda says:

    I went into it with very few expectations, so I was really impressed. Harman was definitely the highlight, and I tend to agree with you- Donkey was always going to be a hard role to play, and Amanda Holden fell flat through the first half.

    I *loved* the fairytale ensemble, and the costumes. Oh, the costumes. Made me think a full scale, non-panto musical of Alice in Wonderland would be AMAZING (I may be biased though, I adore Alice).

    On lastminute- I almost always book through lastminute, unless See have tix much cheaper. I’ve generally had a good experience- our seats for Lion King last week were amazing (2nd row dress circle).

  2. Sara says:

    Great review! Almost my thoughts exactly. Re lastminute, I often book through them & have never had a bad seat-in fact almost every time I have been bumped up to seats in a higher price band than the section I paid for. This all depends on how well the show is doing of course, the season, & there is a certain art to picking the price band that is most likely to get you the possibility of an upgrade should the box office be slow, but it’s usually a winner!

  3. […] Sweet Charity her own in the recent Mernier production, and Nigel Harman is the best things about Shrek the Musical. However, whilst the transition from screen to stage has a relatively good hit rate for the […]

  4. […] a great morning of entertainment – organised by the actors Stuart Matthew Price (currently in Shrek the Musical) and James Yeoburn, they persuaded a host of talent from the West End to perform at the Covent […]

  5. […] the individual performers, Landi Oshinowo (currently ‘Dragon’ in Shrek the Musical) triumphed with her ‘And I’m Telling You I’m Not Going’, which continued a […]

  6. […] first saw Shrek during previews, almost exactly a year ago. It needed a lot cutting and some tightening up at that […]

Leave a reply to Amanda Cancel reply