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Little Shop of Horrors

Keith Havercroft, School Improvement Adviser (Music and eLearning) for Shropshire was in the audience for Grove's hugely successful production, which played to full houses and brought heaps of praise for the cast and production team.  He offered this review:

"I was delighted to receive an invitation to see ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ performed this week by a very strong cast at Grove School, Market Drayton, since their version of ‘Summer Holiday’ last year had been a totally enjoyable experience.

 

I attended the first night performance on Wednesday and the score was definitely ‘Croatia 3 – Grove 10!’  A most enjoyable evening made much more so since the diction was very good enabling the audience to hear the delights of the lyrics and dialogue.

 

A strength of the production was a uniformly very capable cast – good vocal work was a strong feature and very good characterisations throughout – unlike in many performances in some schools where the dramatic character is dropped as soon as a song begins.

 

I would particularly like to draw attention to the excellent work of the three students who linked the whole plot together as the characters Ronette, Crystal and Chiffon – they were outstanding – good stage presence, excellent communication with the audience and fine vocals with good well-balance harmonies – well done, Harriet, Mel and Hope, a great strength of the production.

 

I enjoyed the work of Marcus Groom as Mr Mushnik, he had created a convincing character and supported it with very good vocals; Audrey was played with style and confidence by Daisy McKee and earned the audience sympathy with a well sustained presentation seeming to be the only element of normality in a bizarre situation; Jonnie Hardy was amazingly over the top, a necessity for the role of ‘The Dentist’, he clearly thoroughly enjoyed the part which was an amalgam (!) of a sort of cross between Elvis, The Fonz and Hannibal Lecter – delicious!  … and an inspired revisit of the chest-hair joke – brilliant!

 

Amy, Ollie and Robbie in smaller support roles made an impact – these were without the use of microphones and this caused a slight problem of balance in the vocal numbers but not a major issue.

 

Seymour played by Jo was such a considered characterisation – hesitant, exhibiting such low self-esteem and embarrassment that you were sympathetic even when he commits murder!   Jo has a good voice – in places I felt the score was pitched a little low for him but he was convincing in this black role and with an extremely strong cast the vocal ensemble set pieces worked a treat.

 

The technical difficulties of this show should not be underestimated. It seemed to me that much time had been invested in this aspect of the show and it was really effective – the work of the sound and lighting team was very good.  Some fine work had been undertaken to achieve a good sound balance in the musical numbers between the band and the voices – this was excellent – there’s nothing worse than seeing a show when the sound system is poor – not in this case.  Excellent work Gareth and Jordan.  This was well supported by the stage crew, Ben and Alex were presented with what must have been some complex set changes – these were very slick and made for a professional presentation.

 

Audrey #2 was a delight in all its forms – congratulations to Geert, Lyn and Stew for bringing the beast to life with good timing and much better ‘lip sync’ than I expect we’ll see from ‘The Spice Girls’ reformed.

 

This is truly an ensemble piece and the school is fortunate in having a talented group who magnificently held the audience’s attention and were responsible for creating much humour and fun – well done to all.

 

I’d like to say how good it is to see schools continuing to present major theatrical presentations at a time when it is so easy to focus on things that are easier to quantify and assess.  A round of applause is deserved by the senior team of the school for supporting this vital work – so much of this week’s presentation will be remembered as a key part of school-life and long after the SAT’s scores have disappeared into history.

 

 Congratulations to the cast and their directors Ken Sterling and Sharon Wright for another great show."

 

 

 

 


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Newcastle Road, Market Drayton, Shropshire. TF9 1HF.
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