Queen's loyal subjects: London loves We Will Rock You, a ditsy musical based on songs by Queen. But will it play in the States?We Will Rock You * Written by Ben Elton Benjamin Charles Elton (born 3 May1959) is an English comedian, writer and director. Born in Catford, London, he is the son of the physicist and educational researcher Lewis Elton and the nephew of the historian Sir G R Elton. * Directed by Christopher Renshaw * Starring Tony Vincent Tony Vincent, original name Anthony Peter Strascina is a singer and actor and was born in New Mexico, United States on July 25, 1973. He took the stage name Tony Vincent (after his grandfather Vincent) when he was preparing to release his first EP in 1994. , Hannah Jane Fox Hannah Jane Fox (born January 13, 1976) is a British stage actress most famously known as the originator of the character Scaramouche in the original West End production of the Queen jukebox musical We Will Rock You. , and Sharon D. Clarke Sharon D. Clarke is a British actress and singer popularly known for her role in the UK medical drama Holby City, in which she plays the role of Lola Griffin, a doctor with ancestors from Ghana. * Music supervised by Brian May, Roger Taylor Not to be confused with Roger Tayler. Roger Taylor is a personal name that may refer to: Musicians:
I once sat next to Brian May, guitarist for Queen, during a West End performance of the all-male Swan Lake. He turned to me at intermission and said, "Freddie would have loved this." Would Freddie have loved We Will Rock You, the new U.K. stage musical that showcases Queen's music? Well, why not? In this silly, sci-fi variation on Mamma Mia! Queen is, after all, key to saving the world, and Freddie himself is sweetly eulogized along with a string of other rock stars gone too soon. Brian May is a supervisor of We Will Rock You, along with bandmate Roger Taylor. It's set 300 years hence, on a thoroughly globalized Earth now known as Planet Mall. Musical instruments are banned, music is restricted to computer-generated pap, and all citizens are apparently forced to wear unflattering aerobic-workout clothing. Our hero--Galileo Figaro, a young lad plagued by dreams filled with rock lyrics--refuses to conform. He escapes with his goth girlfriend into the wilderness, where the rebellious Bohemians have been awaiting a hero to pull out the ax from the "place of living rock," thus freeing the music-deprived populace. (No points for guessing that ax here means guitar, and rock means--oh, you get it.) The show is, of course, complete bollocks bollocks or ballocks Taboo slang Noun, pl the testicles Noun nonsense; rubbish interj an exclamation of annoyance, disbelief, etc. [Old English beallucas] Verb 1. , and London reviewers have savaged the production, reported to have cost 7.5 million [pounds sterling] (nearly $11 million). Freddie might have expected at least a little more queerness--or indeed, sexiness of any kind: Even after making love, our hero keeps his shirt on. The desperately savvy book by Ben Elton tries to acknowledge the absurdity of it all. But the fact is, We Will Rock You is just the latest in a long line of British musicals that use the merest slip of a story to stage miniconcerts of beloved hits. From Beatlemania to Buddy (as in Holly) to Mamma Mia! these shows have delighted British audiences, who love a clap-along and will sing out choruses at the drop of a hat. The U.K. audience I sat with ate this show up, with its note-for-note renditions of "Fat Bottomed Girls," "We Are the Champions," and so on. The medley of hits at the finale had the crowd roaring until a question flashed on the stage: DO YOU WANT "BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY"? Then the crowd got really loud. Most of these shows don't work in the United States--something partial backer Robert De Niro Noun 1. Robert De Niro - United States film actor who frequently plays tough characters (born 1943) De Niro is probably keenly aware of. While We Will Rock You's script can be adapted for America, there's no substituting the passion U.K. audiences feel for one of the most wonderfully melodramatic bands in rock and roll. Giltz writes for various publications, including the New York Post The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and the oldest to have been published continually as a daily.[3] Since 1976, it has been owned by Australian-born billionaire Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation and is one of the 10 . |
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