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Thursday, 12 January 2017

Lazarus


On the 1st Anniversary of the passing of Bowie I had tickets to see Lazarus, co written by the man himself and a sequel to The Man Who Fell To Earth. It's going to get emotional!...
I did not want to spend the evening of 10th January 2017 watching a bad Bowie tribute act so the chance to see Michael C Hall perform in the London run of Lazarus was always top of my list. A year on and I still mourn the man who soundtracked decades of my life. Bowie reinvented himself throughout his career and I cannot think of a single person who has done so with more success. My interest in Lazarus is more than a desire to be with other Bowie fans as I really enjoy the cinematic version of The Man Who Fell To Earth. Bowie's twitchy and otherwordly performance as alien, Thomas Newton, really worked for me. Bowie refused to conform and it is his self aware and assured hold on his own career that led to an ability to transcend even the more left field of material. The Man Who Fell To Earth is a kind of marmite film, you either love it or hate it, it doesnt especially have much story line but its strong messages of disconnect, ill fitting and isolation resonate strongly with me. 

Lazarus picks up years after the events of the film and Thomas Newton is a broken man, unable to return home, he spends his days trapped in his sparse flat drinking gin and eating Twinkies. The staging is sparse with a brilliant and striking use of multi media and a house band that play from the balcony. This could have been a total mess which would only appeal to the most die hard of Bowie fanatics and some of the critic reviews have been less than kind. What do critics know? they spend far too much time bleating on about development and plotting to the extent that they forget sometimes theatre needs to go art house. Sometimes, theatre needs to throw the rule book out and deliver something which leaves the audience reeling. Lazarus does this in true Bowiesque style and I absolutely loved every second of it. I have no idea what was real and what was in Newton's mind. That's kind of the point, you see, Newton has been abused to such an extent that he finds only the briefest of solace in his own fractured and bleeding mind. Constantly yearning for his lost love and seeing the blue haired Mary Lou everywhere. Michael C Hall is astonishing as Newton and delivers the sort of performance that has dumb founded audiences both here and over the water. Sophie Caruso is a the sort of performer that has a voice that explodes from her with the force of a tsumani. Her acting talent easily matches Hall's and their on stage chemistry is tantalising. Strong contender to steal Hall's stage dominance goes to Michael Esper as the murderous Valentine and Amy Lennox is simply sublime as the beautiful, if damaged, Elly. 


The treatment of Bowie classics that pepper Lazarus are brilliant and the stingingly poignant title track is delivered masterfully by Hall. My favourite is the wonderfully understated and piano driven version of Heroes which reduced me to a tear stained mess at the end of the performance. Lazarus is an exploration of fractured relationships and a yearning to fit into a world that has turned its back. Bowie and Enda Walsh have produced a piece of theatre that refuses to start or end where it should do and as it refuses to let audiences in on the secret it risks being dismissed as a cynical death bed cash in. To do so would disrespect both cast and creative as well as the memory of Bowie himself. This is not messy theatre and neither is it theatre that is sold out simply because it's run coincides with Bowies anniversary and birthday. Lazarus is a brave and dangerous example of why theatre must and should take more risks. It has a sold out run because it is a work of genius and a potent nod of respect to a man who should have never been allowed to leave us.

Lazarus is a deliciously confusing and intriguing musical that holds audiences under its spell without losing them for a single moment. Bowie refused to be boxed and ignored every attempt to be controlled and tamed. Lazarus then IS Bowie and I miss him even more now! 

This review is dedicated to the memory of Rosy who was a hero like Bowie. 

"We are free now and that is a fact"






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