Ladies in Black
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| Ladies in Black | |
|---|---|
Promotional image featuring Tim Finn (left) and Christen O'Leary (right) | |
| Music | Tim Finn |
| Lyrics | Tim Finn |
| Book | Carolyn Burns |
| Basis | The Women in Black by Madeleine St John |
| Productions | 2015-16 Brisbane/Melbourne 2017 Aus National Tour |
Ladies in Black is an Australian musical with music and lyrics by Tim Finn and book by Carolyn Burns, based on the 1993 novel The Women in Black by Madeleine St John.
Set in Sydney in the 1950s, the musical tells the story of bookish school leaver Lisa who joins the sales staff in fashionable department store, F.G. Goode's. Over a summer that changes her life, she befriends the colourful denizens of the women's clothing department. Each of the characters is on the precipice of change – facing independence, working for a living and what it means to be a woman.
Productions
Ladies in Black premiered in Brisbane in a season from 14 November to 6 December 2015 at the Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre, produced by the Queensland Theatre Company in association with the Queensland Performing Arts Centre.[1][2] It transferred to Melbourne for the Melbourne Theatre Company, playing at The Sumner, Southbank Theatre from 16 January to 27 February 2016.
The production was directed by Simon Phillips with musical direction by Isaac Hayward, choreography by Andrew Hallsworth and orchestrations by Guy Simpson. The cast included Sarah Morrison (Lisa), Christen O'Leary (Magda), Bobby Fox (Rudi), Kathryn McIntyre (Myra/Dawn), Lucy Maunder (Patty), Naomi Price (Fay), Carita Farrer Spencer (Mrs Miles), Kate Cole (Miss Cartright/Joy), Andrew Broadbent (Frank), Deidre Rubenstein (Miss Jacobs/Mrs Crown) and Greg Stone (Mr Miles/Stefan).[3]
Ladies in Black was remounted for a four-city engagement in 2017:
- Sydney from 3 January, at the Sydney Lyric
- Brisbane from 28 January, at the Playhouse, QPAC
- Melbourne from 25 February, at the Regent Theatre
- Canberra from 27 March, at the Canberra Theatre
Critical reception
The musical was very positively received.
The Age called Ladies in Black "a unicorn of the stage: a full-blown, home-grown musical that actually works" and "probably the best Aussie musical since Priscilla went global". It wrote: "Tim Finn's songs range from Broadway-inspired big numbers to true-blue ballads, from witty patter songs to shades of blues and jazz standards. They're beautifully integrated with the dramatic action, and the comic lyrics are priceless."[4]
The Australian stated that Finn "has approached Ladies in Black with such wholehearted sincerity and creative generosity ...creating an immensely engaging score filled with gorgeous melodies that make you care about the characters singing them."[5]
ArtsHub indicated that "a comedy of mid-20th century manners, Ladies in Black is a paean to an optimistic future – the future of an uncomplicated gender equality and seamless multiculturalism. But Finn’s canny lyricism transports the play from its late 50s context to a subtle but salient comment on social issues of today."[6]