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As originally published in
The NZ Herald
9/2/2000
Meatworks Sky City
Theatre
by Susan Budd
A determinedly unglamorous musical, Meatworks charts the progress
of a group of freezing workers who decide to form a cooperative when posed
with the threat of closure.
Their road is not easy. A posse of vegetarian activists threatens sabotage,
the Hooray Henry owner arrives from Mother Englad to put a spanner in the
works, but love promises to conquer all.
No fewer than 46 songs, which follow each other in dizzying succession,
are interspersed with short passages of dialogue. As mosts ongs are sung
solo, the effect is of a series of monologues. Development of characters
and relationships is made difficult with characters trapped in their thought-bubbles.
Although some songs are very good, their qunatity leaves teh audience
with the impression of a continuous blur of sound. The first act of 90
minutes would lend itself to judicious cutting of songs and dialogue.
Roger Morton has beena successful director of plays of Steve Berkoff
which are gritty, stylised, passionate pieces. With the more naturalistic
writing of Meatworks, he is less successful. The sketchily-drawn
characters are not easily brought to life and the cast of 12 are too often
treated as still, silent witnesses to the soloist as they stand uneasily
about the stage.
When the cast fill the stage singing and dancing the atmosphere is
electrifying. But it happens too seldom. The production needs more choreographed
and energetic movement.
Witha tendency to warm, fuzzy treatments of its themes, Meatworks
lacks guts and pizazz. It is as sweet as Salad Days and as true
to life.
Willa O'Neill holds centre stage as Jenny, the Zambesi-clad receptionist
no man can resist. Bopping in platforms and threatening to wriggle out
of her tiny dress, she is as cute as pie. She has the "wow" factor
- and she can sing, too. Jan Hellriegel and Peter Sa'ena-Brown are the
singers of the cast and it is a joy to hear them.
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