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The Grinning Man (musical)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Grinning Man
Artwork for the West End production
MusicTim Phillips
Marc Teitler
LyricsCarl Grose
Tom Morris
Tim Phillips
Marc Teitler
BookCarl Grose
BasisThe Man Who Laughs
by Victor Hugo
Premiere20 October 2016 (2016-10-20): Bristol Old Vic
Productions2016 Bristol
2017 West End
2022 Moscow
2024 Melbourne

The Grinning Man is a tragicomic musical based on Victor Hugo's 1869 novel The Man Who Laughs with a book by Carl Grose, music by Tim Phillips, Marc Teitler and lyrics by Carl Grose, Tom Morris, Tim Phillips and Marc Teitler.

Production history

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Bristol (2016)

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The musical made its world premiere at the Bristol Old Vic, beginning previews from 13 October, with a press night on 20 October, for a limited run until 13 November 2016. The production was directed by Tom Morris, set designed by Jon Bausor, costume designed by Jean Chan, movement direction by Jane Gibson, lighting design by Richard Howell, sound design by Simon Baker, with puppetry direction and design by Gyre & Gimble (Finn Caldwell and Toby Olié).[1]

London (2017-18)

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Following the success of the Bristol run, the musical transferred to the Trafalgar Studios (Studio 1) in London's West End beginning previews from 5 December, with a press night on 18 December 2017.[2][3] The production ended its extended run on 5 May 2018.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, it was announced the Bristol Old Vic would stream an archive recording of the production (featuring the original Bristol cast) on YouTube from 26 June to 3 July 2020.[4]

The playtext was published by Samuel French, Inc. on 5 May 2021.

Moscow (2022)

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On 4 February 2022, an opening reading of the musical took place, the musical made its world premiere in Moscow at the Yauza Palace, beginning previews from 23 September, with opening night on 21 October.

Melbourne (2024)

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On 19 December 2023, it was announced that the production would make its international premiere at Alex Theatres St Kilda, beginning previews from 25 April, with opening night on 2 May. The run is expected to end 19 May. This production combines elements from both the Bristol and West End productions.

Cast and characters

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Character Bristol (2016)[5] West End (2017) Moscow (2022)[6] Melbourne (2024)[7]
Grinpayne Louis Maskell Pavel Stukalov / Yaroslav Bayarunas / Aleksey Petrov Maxwell Simon
Osric / Young Grinpayne N/A N/A Pavel Stukalov / Andranik Petrosyan Matthew Hearne
Barkilphedro Julian Bleach Ruslan Gerasimenko / Denis Saraikin / Aleksey Petrov Jennifer Vuletic
Ursus Sean Kingsley Andrey Shkoldychenko / Denis Saraikin Dom Hennequin
Duchess Josiana Gloria Onitiri Amanda Wilkin Galina Bezruk / Galina Shimanskaya / Yuliya Olejnik Melanie Bird
Dea Audrey Brisson Sanne Den Besten Vilena Sokolova / Daria Yanvarina Luisa Scrofani
Young Dea N/A N/A N/A Lilly Cascun
Osric the Freak-Wrangler of Stokes Croft / Lord Hazlitt Trelaw Ewan Black Pavel Stukalov / Andranik Petrosyan N/A
Mojo Head / Archbishop Kupsak Stuart Angell James Alexander-Taylor Aleksandr Kazakov / Andrey Shkoldychenko / Andrey Yezhov N/A
Mojo / Cellist N/A N/A Ruslan Gerasimenko / Andrey Abeltsev Cameron Bajraktarevic-Hayward
Lord David Dirry-Moir Stuart Neal Mark Anderson Nikita Radchenko / Igor Skripko / Artem Eliseev Anthony Craig
Queen Angelica Patrycja Kujawska Julie Atherton Anastasiya Makarova / Olga Vecherik Stephanie Astrid John
King Clarence Sean Kingsley Jim Kitson / David Bardsley Denis Saraikin / Andrey Shkoldychenko Dom Hennequin
Lady Trelaw / Quake Gloria Obianyo Sophia Mackay Yuliya Olejnik / Daria Burlyukalo Shelley Dunlop
Lord Trelaw / Guitarist N/A N/A N/A Luke Leong-Tay
Mojo Body / Frozen Woman Alice Barclay Loren O'Dair N/A N/A
Ensemble N/A Christina Bloom Yuliya Olejnik / Daria Burlyukalo / Kristina Tolmacheva N/A
Ensemble N/A Jonathan Cobb Aleksandr Kazakov / Andrey Abeltsev N/A
Ensemble N/A Leo Elso Aleksandr Sharabarin N/A
Ensemble N/A Claire-Marie Hall Valeriya Morar / Daria Marincheva N/A

Song list

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A cast recording was released on 13 July 2018, featuring the Original London Cast, which contained 19 songs from the show, including a bonus track 'Only a Clown', recorded by Julian Bleach.

Reception

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The Grinning Man received mostly positive reviews, with The Guardian calling it "a fabulously theatrical conceit" and giving it four out of five stars,[8] and The Stage calling it "unusual yet enticing".[9] However, the Evening Standard gave it two out of five stars, citing the "dismayingly unclear" narrative and "largely unmemorable" music and singing.[10]

References

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  1. ^ "The Grinning Man". Gyre & Gimble. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
  2. ^ Armitstead, Claire (31 December 2017). "The Grinning Man review – the greatest freakshow in town". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  3. ^ Naylor, Gary. "BWW Review: THE GRINNING MAN, Trafalgar Studios". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  4. ^ Ltd, Supercool (17 June 2020). "The Grinning Man". Bristol Old Vic. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
  5. ^ "Bristol Old Vic | West End stars lead the cast for new British musical premiering this autumn at Bristol Old Vic". www.bristololdvic.org.uk. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  6. ^ "The Grinning man".
  7. ^ "The Grinning Man AU Program" (PDF).
  8. ^ Armitstead, Claire (31 December 2017). "The Grinning Man review – the greatest freakshow in town". the Guardian. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  9. ^ Shenton, Mark (26 January 2018). "Is The Grinning Man part of a new golden age for West End musicals?". The Stage. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  10. ^ Mountford, Fiona (19 December 2017). "Trafalgar Studio's new play The Grinning Man will give you the creeps". Evening Standard. Retrieved 1 October 2018.