 Elena Roger in Evita
|
The current revival of
Evita is planning to end its run at London’s Adelphi Theatre in the spring. The show's producers posted a closing notice for 26 May, a production spokesperson told Theatre.com. Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s classic musical, directed by Michael Grandage, will thus close its doors a little less than a year after its opening date of 21 June, 2006.
The current West End production, which garnered three Olivier Award nominations and three Evening Standard Award nominations, received warm notices when it opened last summer. In his
Theatre.com Review Matt Wolf wrote: "Opening 28 years to the day after Hal Prince's original London staging beat a global path for the British musical that has scarcely let up since, Grandage has discarded Prince's famously spare, neo-Brechtian approach in favour of something grander and far more self-consciously monumental: a song-and-dance icon fully aware of its formidable status. From our first glimpse of Christopher Oram's imposing set, lit to an elegantly heightened fare-thee-well by Paule Constable, the design hints at what the production goes on to bear out: this
Evita pays full obeisance to the operatic aspirations of Lloyd Webber and Rice's rock opera, and if the result bypasses much of the wit—and bitter humour—that first time round sold the sizzle, at least on Broadway, Grandage and co. ensure that on their own terms attention must be paid... Make no doubt about it: Argentine performer Elena Roger
is a star, and her Eva Peron brought the crowd to its feet with an enthusiasm extending well beyond opening night protocol."
Evita is based on the life and times of Eva Peron, the second wife of Argentine dictator Juan Peron. It chronicles her life as Argentina's most complex and powerful figure, against a backdrop of political unrest, until her death from cancer in 1952.
Evita features many classic songs including "Don't Cry for Me Argentina," "Buenos Aires" and "Another Suitcase in Another Hall." This new staging features the Oscar-winning "You Must Love Me," written for the 1996 film adaptation starring Madonna and Antonio Banderas.