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Theatre review: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice

This new musical is fun, but needs work, says John Nathan

February 26, 2021 13:04
THE_SORCERER'S_APPRENTICE_7606
The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Southwalk Playhouse. CREDIT Geraint Lewis
1 min read

 

If you were a writer of musicals looking for a new subject, would you choose source material that had already inspired a popular symphony? It takes a while for the sweet score in this new British musical by book and lyric writer Richard Hough and composer Ben Morales Frost to suppress this nagging question.

And then it takes a little longer for their song Rise of the Brooms to demonstrate that homage is being paid where it is due — to the Dukas symphony to which, in Disney’s version of Goethe’s poem, Mickey Mouse created havoc.

Here the rumpus is actually caused by Eva, who is both the sorcerer’s daughter and apprentice, played by the very promising Mary Moore in her debut. Set in a mythical realm of Midgard — actually a small town here — Eva is the only child of a single-parent sorcerer, played by musical theatre heavyweight and former Phantom David Thaxton.

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