9 to 5 The Musical
Information
- Date
- 2nd November 2023
- Society
- Walmsley Church Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society
- Venue
- Walmsley Parish Hall-Bolton
- Type of Production
- Musical
- Director
- Nora Howcroft
- Musical Director
- Cath Hilton
- Choreographer
- Lara Syddall
- Written By
- Music and Lyrics by Dolly Parton & Book by Patricia Resnick
On a cold wet rainy day in Bolton, Walmsley Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society had the right tonic putting on Dolly Parton’s Musical 9 to 5 set in the offices of Consolidated Industries. Music and Lyrics by Dolly Parton and Book by Patricia Resnick.
The composite set with desks on wheels for easy movement. The back cloth was an horizon of skyscrapers and virtual clock top centre, that was then used to project Dolly Parton herself giving a prologue and epilogue about the show. Stage Right was Hart Jr’s office with bookcase, desk with large picture of himself. Ladders and large Chesterfield filled the space. Stage Left was another settee. The cast helped moved the set which helped with the flow. Stage Crew Anne Cocking, Nora Howcroft, David McGreavy, Gill Pollitt. Lida West and Janet Witt. Stage Manager John West. Properties by Anne and John Cocking. Sound was unobtrusive as it should be by Lea Royse and Elodie Perrier. The lighting worked well and I liked the uplighters at the back of the stage, which gave atmospheric lighting when needed. Lighting by Norman Bowers and Nathan Emmison. Costumes all looked good set in the pre-contemporary period. Wardrobe by Eileen Reeves.
Lara Syddall choreographs, while it is not an all-out dancing show the dream type sequence of the three girls Judy, Doralee and Violet was full of energy as were the Company numbers. Cath Hilton as Musical Director takes us through the score and the well-known 9 to 5 number. Nora Howcroft directs and the comedy is definitely brought out and executed well. The story of misogyny at its height and the empowerment of women emerging: if they stick together, they can achieve is the through line. What is scary is, it is still relevant in today’s society. The piece is oddly liberating and definitely has the feel-good factor.
The 27 strong cast has well defined characters and at some point, all had their comedy moments. Loved the lady in the hospital scene in the dressing gown and stick wandering around lost. Jo Whitaker played the “Likes a drink” Margaret. The dream sequence was very funny and worked well. Michael Chesterfield played Dick. Kathryn Nuttall as Maria gave great energy on stage. Catherine Hall played Missy/Doctor. Teresa Harper played Kathy. Julie Ogden played Detective. David Seager played the supportive husband Dwayne. Matthew Shallicker usually in the Youth Group played Josh Violet’s son.
Oliver Hall played the awkward toyboy Joe in love with Violet. Loved the performance of Let Love Grow. Eileen Reeves played Roz Keith, the hidden dominatrix secretly in love with her boss. The Song Heart To Heart was very entertaining with great comedy acting thrown in. David Wilson played Franklin Hart Jr the boss everyone gets to hate (apart from Roz). Creepy and not p.c. – as intended - acting out his lust over Doralee with just that edge of discomfort. Last seen being escorted off by Bob.
The three female leads played by Lauren Carroll as Judy recently separated and clueless in the work stakes. Olivia O’Connell played Doralee Rhodes, larger than life characters says it how it is but a heart of gold. Vicki Wilson played Violet Newstead – a single mum far more capable than her boss and looked over every time. The character Judy arriving, the office gossip about Doralee and the rude boss all sets off a chain of events, making the women firm friends. There was a great rapport between them and three very distinct characters forming a friendship really worked. Each having their moment when dreaming up how to get rid of Hart. Dance Of Death Judy and Company in glitzy evening dresses. Cowgirls’ Revenge Doralee and Company in cowboy/girl outfits and Potion Notion was Violet and Company as Snow White and friends. I Just Might Make It had lovely harmonies. And I appreciated the ode to Charlie’s Angels with the gun pose at the end. A real feel good show and Walmsley must be delighted with the audience reaction. Thank you for the invite from my guest Angela and I.
Liz Hume-Dawson
© NODA CIO. All rights reserved.