FeaturedMusicalReviewScotland

My Fair Lady – Edinburgh Playhouse

Reviewer: Dominic Corr

Book & Lyrics Alan Jay Larner

Music: Frederick Loewe

Director: Bartlett Sher

Twinkling in the moonlight, this festooned production of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe’s comforting and classical musical gala draws out the festive spirit with a deeply engaging night at the Edinburgh Playhouse. Traversing through a stylistic view of Edwardian London, sailing between well-loved song pieces of the genre, Bartlett Sher’s revived tour of My Fair Lady attempts to contemporise the musical and atone for its shortcomings.

This musical paradigm based around George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion finds the puppeteering hands of Professor Henry Higgins pulling the strings of a young Cockney flower girl Eliza Doolittle, attempting to teach her ‘correct’ command of the English language. As accustomed to the genre, despite their differences, something stirs amidst the cynicism and disagreements.

Charlotte Kennedy, as Eliza Doolittle, has an immediate stage presence which sets the precedence of the entire production’s class and skill. The commonplace ‘Cabbage Leaf’, as she is so affectionately known by Michael D. Xavier’s Higgins, has a voice which fills the Playhouse auditorium and is best utilised for Lerner and Loewe’s solo numbers, mainly when the set-dressings themselves take a step back and allow Kennedy the opportunity to flourish without distraction. Elbows out, strong-bodied, and yet vulnerable, Kennedy carries Eliza’s emotions and personality with as much thought and dedication as her voice.

A fop, tactless, and likely voting blue, Xavier’s Henry Higgins’ has an eccentric, almost combustive energy as the arrogant and down-right misogynistic Professor Henry Higgins – the man who ‘makes’ a lady out of ‘guttersnipe’ Eliza. Under Sher’s direction, Xavier recognises the satirical nature of which Higgin’s is now performed; Rex Harrison’s sternness and pomp survive but are no longer the defining nature of the character. By the time we come to the closing piece, I’ve Grown Accustomed, the expressive comedy hints at the realisation Xavier carries with the role and makes the conclusion of this iteration of the tale an even more deserving sting for the out-of-touch Higgins.

Surrounding the pair are a capable and enjoyable cast of ensemble roles: notably Eastenders’ Adam Woodyatt as Eliza’s father Alfred P. Doolittle, Heather Jackson’s razor-sharp Mrs Higgins, John Middleton’s sympathetic Colonel Pickering and stage-legend Lesley Garrett as Mrs Pearce. Boisterous, entertaining, and making tremendous use of Michael Yeargan’s stage design, Woodyatt whips around the chorus to full effect.

What a set to be careening around, which sometimes pushes the maximalist aesthetic: other times a distinctly surprisingly minimalist visage. And where forced perspective aids the streets of London’s dimension and depth, Higgin’s townhouse is a fully rotating set-piece to enable the cast an opportunity to fleet around, chasing one another or offering a sense of momentum for numbers where emotions run high, Why Can’t A Woman Be More Like A Man and Garrett and the Servant’s Chorus being prime examples.

Sher’s production takes the bookending of ‘Wouldn’t It Be Loverly’ and frames the show around these two distinct moments in Eliza’s life; one of who she is, the other of who she has become. And in doing so, My Fair Lady is almost a flawlessly conceived staging which retains the unblemished magic but teases out the various flaws it possessed in satirical stabs at misogyny and class – but it just falls short. A shaft of light and a blustering medley of the score awaits as the finale takes a contemporary arc, seemingly as an apology for the treatment of Eliza’s gentrification throughout the years. And whilst it’s a welcome addition – it’s a touch too late.

My Fair Lady remains an utterly captivating musical theatre, which channels a distinctly festive charm throughout. It’s shimmering, it’s splendid, and yes – it’s loverly. The ideal musical piece retains its elegance and gutsy charm, even all these years later, and while not entirely fending off its dusted attitudes, challenges them with minor revisions to flesh out its prestige and beautiful staging. So, there’s only one thing left to do to ring out 2022: get me to the Playhouse on time.

Runs until 7 January 2023, then continues touring | Image: Marc Brenner

The Reviews Hub Score

Shimmering, Splendid, Loverly

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The Reviews Hub - Scotland

The Scotland team is under the editorship of Lauren Humphreys. The Reviews Hub was set up in 2007. We aim to review all professional types of theatre, whether that be Commercial, Repertory or Fringe as well as Comedy, Music, Gigs etc.

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