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Theatre

Review: Bend It Like Beckham, The Musical

July 2, 2015 16:20
bend it like beckham

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

1 min read

You expect to leave a show that has Beckham in the title thinking about football. But this musical version of the 2002 hit movie is deeper, funnier and, yes, more important than that. It leaves you feeling good about something that we are constantly told to feel bad about: immigration.

The ethnic minority at the centre of this story by Paul Mayeda Berges and director Gurinder Chadha (who also directed the film) is an Indian Sikh. Jess (a sweet and charming Natalie Dew) has a Beckhamesque talent for the beautiful game. Spotted by fellow girl player Jules (Lauren Samuels here, Keira Knightley in the film), Jess becomes the star player in the local women's team.

This is not the future imagined by her traditionalist parents who want her to follow her older sister's example and marry a nice Indian boy. No, it is not a ground-breaking plot. But composer Howard Goodall (perhaps the best writer of melody in British musical theatre working today) and lyricist Charles Hart attach real wit to a script which, with way too much talk of "following your dream" flirts, indeed consummates, with cliché.

Chadha's attempts to stage football are ropy. There are some few keepie uppie skills and when Jess bends it, a wobbly ball on a wire flies through the air like a boomerang.