What I did on Spring Break: Riverdance
Mar. 11th, 2012 03:35 pmIt wasn't the original company. They didn't have that edge of astonishing precision, and the musicians weren't legendary talent any more. I mean, the original company had Eileen Ivers on fiddle and Brian O'Brien on the uilleann pipes; it doesn't get much more legendary than that. The musicians with the current US company were good! They just weren't that good. The flamenco dancer was wonderful, though. Marita Martinez-Rey. I think I might like her even better than Maria Pages. And the "Trading Taps" number was expanded a little further, which is good because that's one of the best numbers in the show. One of the tap dancers was the singer for "Freedom", too, and it was very different from Ivan Thomas but in a really effective way--very expressive. I thought the female lead was a little too airy-fairy, though, not nearly as solid as Butler. Just not as tight in her steps and gestures. The male lead... well, he was good, he was always on the mark, but I didn't think he had the experience to really own the part. I watched our dvd the next day, just to make sure I wasn't thinking of the cast I saw first with rose colored glasses, and I don't think I was. Jean Butler and Colin Dunne really were amazing, and they worked together really, really well. They just had chemistry, on stage; their presentations meshed in a way that made them a very smooth lead pair, and they had the confidence to carry their parts. (And didn't have to fight for elbow room against Michael Flatley's ego, either.)
I do kind of wish we'd waited and gone to the Fox Theater show after all. Kuss is a great venue, and happily local, but it's a small one. Too small to really tell whether the bobbles in large-group numbers were the dancers being a little sloppy or just the stage being too small. I could totally understand if it really was the size of the stage, goodness knows; I wouldn't want to do tightly choreographed numbers with twenty dancers on there. In any case, they didn't show that absolute, blow you back in your seat, precision of the original company. (Also, whoever was on the sound board should have been smacked. The music was mixed way too high, and there was an unforgivable bobble at the start of "Freedom" where the mic wasn't switched on. One singer! One channel! Honestly.) It was a great show, and totally worth the money, even so.
But the original company... they were really something special, and I'm really glad that I happened to see them during the first US tour. I don't think there will ever be anything quite like that show.
Not until the 20 year revival, at any rate!