Showstopper! The Improvised Musical
Showstopper! The Improvised Musical is an improvised comedy, musical theatre show founded in London in 2008. It has toured the UK extensively, usually sells out at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe every year, had its own BBC Radio 4 series in 2011 and performed a 10-week run in London's West End in 2015, for which it won an Olivier Award.
The idea of the show was conceived at a workshop that two of the creators attended in London.[1][2] The objective of the show is to improvise a musical based on suggestions from the audience. The audience provides the show setting, title and several musicals or musical theatre composers whose styles are then pastiched in the show.
It is chaired by Dylan Emery and Sean McCann and stars Jonathan Ainscough, Ruth Bratt, Justin Brett, Matt Cavendish, Joshua Jackson, Ali James, Pippa Evans, Susan Harrison, Adam Meggido, Philip Pellew, Andrew David Pugsley, Lauren Shearing, and Lucy Trodd as the core cast of comic actors.[3] The core musicians are Duncan Walsh Atkins (keyboards - also musical director), Chris Ash (keyboards, reeds and deputy musical director) and Alex Freeman (percussion). The technical director (who also improvises the lighting) is Damian Robertson. The directors are Adam Meggido and Dylan Emery.
After making a debut at the Edinburgh Festival in 2008,[4] the show began a residency at the Kings Head Theatre[5] before transferring to The Drill Hall.[6] It has toured the UK,[7] Ireland, Singapore, Canada, India, Belgium, Italy and Hong Kong, and in 2011 had a series of 30-minute shows for BBC Radio Four.[8][9] From 2011 the show started a series of one-off nights at The Ambassadors and the Criterion in London's West End. Then in September 2015, it opened at the Apollo Theatre (Shaftesbury avenue) for a limited run of 10 weeks.[3] After the run, it continued with a series of one-off nights at the Lyric (also Shaftesbury avenue) and at The Other Palace Theatre.
The show has occasionally featured guest performers, including the British comic actor Matt Lucas,[10] Mike McShane, Channel 4 newscaster John Snow[citation needed], Nicolas Parsons, Jim Bowen, radical vicar and peacemaker Donald Reeves, actor and singer Keith Jack, a cappella group The Magnets and others.
It has received several industry awards including the 2009 Mervyn Stutter Spirit of the Fringe Award[11] and in 2016 won the Olivier Award for best entertainment and family show.[12]
The theatre troupe responsible for Showstopper! The Improvised Musical is called The Showstoppers (The Showstoppers – The Improvised Musical). They also have a children's show called The Showstoppers' Kids Show.
The show was created by Adam Meggido and Dylan Emery with the backing of Keith Strachan and all three continue to run the show. The show has had two general managers - James Seabright (Seabright Productions) then Suzanna Rosenthal (Something for the Weekend). Seabright came back to produce the West End run.
References
[edit]- ^ Wiegand, Chris (23 January 2019). "Showstopper! The hit musical that's made up every night". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
- ^ "Showstopper! The Improvised Musical - Profile". eventseeker.com. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
- ^ a b [1] Nimax Theatres, retrieved 06-09-2015
- ^ Fringe Review Fringe Review, 06-10-2008 retrieved 11-02-2011
- ^ TimeOut.com The best musical improvisational group we've ever seen., Time Out 29-06-2009, retrieved 11-02-2011
- ^ The Drill Hall Showstopper! The Improvised Musical, retrieved 11-02-2011
- ^ "Reviewed by LewisLoves: Showstopper! the Improvised Musical". Lewis Loves. 25 May 2017. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
- ^ bbc.co.uk Showstopper! The Improvised Musical, retrieved 11-02-2011
- ^ Guardian.co.uk Rewind radio: Vanessa Feltz; Music Planet; Showstopper – review, retrieved 11-02-2011
- ^ The Independent Little Briton with a large talent, 05-05-2009 retrieved 11-02-2011
- ^ "Mervyn Stutter's 'Pick of the Fringe'". www.mervspotfringe.com. Retrieved 20 June 2023.
- ^ Cheesman, Neil (4 April 2016). "Showstopper! The Improvised Musicals wins Olivier Award". LondonTheatre1. Retrieved 20 June 2023.