Stunning Production of CATS: Not To Be Missed!

Cats The Musical

Cats The Musical Rating

★★★★★

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Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “CATS” is a stunningly colourful and athletic musical that audiences, young and old, thoroughly enjoyed on Sunday evening’s performance.

Upon walking into the theatre, we were greeted by the backdrop of an alley, scattered with fantastical depictions of trash or lost items. Festoon lights were hung around the stage and across one of the bannisters above the audience. Many platforms and footholds were around the stage, which gave the cats many places to enter scenes, hide, and leap from.

While a good portion of the show included basic white wash lighting, flashing lights/strobe, pyrotechnics, and different coloured lighting created the desired effects and were appropriately timed. Costumes and Makeup were stunning and thoughtfully crafted, and I could hardly take my eyes away from the intricate details and grungy aesthetics.

As someone who had not seen CATS in person before, I was unaware of the more interactive aspects of the show. Occasionally, some of the cats would enter the audience via the front two rows. They would play with the strap of someone’s purse, bump paws with audience members or serenade them. It was an interesting way to break the fourth wall and keep people engaged. Those who book their seats close to the stage should be made aware of this ahead of time.

 

 

All dance routines were highly polished and were done to seem effortless. In between routines, each cast member maintained their character by including feline mannerisms in their recline. Dance intervals featuring the White Cat (Claudia Hastings) and Mr Mistoffelees (Tim Haskayne) were especially memorable and very impressive. As well as their poise, apparent professionalism and acrobatics, support from the remainder of the cast really brought each of the performances together seamlessly.

The audience thoroughly enjoyed songs such as “Mr Mistoffelees,” “The Rum Tum Tugger,” “Gus: The Theatre Cat,” “Skimbleshanks, the Railway Cat,” and of course, the much beloved “Memory,” and its reprises. All vocals were fantastic and blended well, with notable mentions to Des Flanagan (Rum Tum Tugger), Jarrod Draper (Munkustrap), Mark Vincent (Old Deuteronomy) and Gabriyel Thomas (Grizabella). It is a highly enjoyable experience to see cast members have fun doing what they do best, committing to their roles in such a way that seems effortless.

From the costumes to the effects, everyone who plays a role in making CATS what it is did a fantastic job, and I highly recommend this production.

To book tickets to Cats The Musical, please visit https://catsthemusical.com.au/.

Photographer: Daniel Boud

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Cats

Cats The Musical

Cats The Musical Rating

★★★★★

Click if you liked this article

1

The opening night of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats at the Crown Theatre, Perth, delivered a polished, high-energy revival that showcased the production’s enduring strengths of choreography and crystalline vocals.

The long-running musical has been entertaining audiences since 1981 but for prospective patrons unfamiliar with Cats, don’t attend the show expecting a plot or even any dialogue. You will have a much better appreciation for it if you go for the exquisite dancing, singing and overall visual extravaganza. Cats is more a sequence of character portraits of the feline characters stitched together by a very thin storyline about a Jellicle Ball for all the Jellicle cats.

The show made more sense when I discovered that it was based on a series of poems from TS Eliot’s “Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats” dating back to the 1930s. It is these poems that inspired the legendary Mr Webber to convert them into a musical.

I cannot fault any of the dancing or singing. The cast performed with remarkable precision and athleticism, sustaining demanding choreography. The unison work in the larger ensemble numbers was exceptionally tight. It is evident that the dancers are professional ballet and classical jazz dancers. The production’s success lies in the cumulative power of its choreography and vocal pieces rather than narrative complexity.

Bringing the cats to life are the dazzling costumes and richly detailed makeup which I was fortunate enough to see up close. Throughout the show, the performers would integrate themselves within the audience, purring, stretching and leaping up and down the aisles of the theatre.

 

 

The production’s scenic design embraces the junkyard setting, transforming the stage into an immersive, feline-sized world. An old oven, a rumpled shirt, car tires, these are rendered at magnified proportions so that the performers read unmistakably as cats in an oversized human environment.

The integration of car engine and police sirens sound effects and a sweeping “torch” effect as the cat ensemble scatter in hidden spots, transforms the junkyard into a living, reactive environment without relying on dialogue.

Gabriyel Thomas delivered a standout solo performance as the weary Grizabella The Glamour Cat, belting out the iconic Memory song.

Tim Haskayne was outstanding in his jazz ballet routine as the Magical Mr Mistoffelees who delivered a mesmerizing performance with impeccable control and grace.

I found it especially amusing and admire the dedication of one of the performers who remained on stage in character for the duration of the interval.

This staging of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats operates with a first-class polish that flows with effortless precision. It is more a mixture of a ballet performance and a musical rather than a conventional musical and in its entirety a form of art to enjoy.

To book tickets to Cats The Musical, please visit https://catsthemusical.com.au/tickets/perth/.

Photographer: Daniel Boud

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