Guys and Dolls
Information
- Date
- 7th May 2026
- Society
- Leigh Operatic & Dramatic Society
- Venue
- Palace Theatre, Westcliff
- Type of Production
- Musical
- Director
- Helen Sharpe
- Musical Director
- Rachael Plunkett
- Choreographer
- Crystalle Cox
LODS production of Guys and Dolls proved to be a high energy show with a cast that was full of character and charisma. We went straight from the recorded music to the overture in which each song was presented to us by a group of cast members. This was a great way to introduce us to the cast and the setting of the show. We were in with a bang and the energy didn’t stop there. Helen Sharpe, the Director, had us involved from square one by virtue of the work put in by her team and the cast. I love the way society members are nurtured into production roles and Declan Wright, as Assistant Director had obviously enjoyed the role. Also, thank you Declan for looking after us so beautifully. I always feel as if I’m among friends.
The set was basic but creatively employed with great use of the LED strip lights and rectangles on the brick wall. The rest of the set consisted of one enormous revolving dice which had the mission hall, newsstand and the night club on its faces. This proved a bit cumbersome for the set team, I think, and finding marks, and anchoring this revolve under the dim light was valiantly attempted by the numerous crew. The smaller dice blocks were rearranged by a well drilled cast and used very effectively in a lot of situations especially in,’ Sit down you’re rocking the boat’! The traffic lights and signposts helped to identify where we were along the way!
Music, played by a very talented live band, was fabulous. Rachel Plunkett, Musical Director, had coached the cast into some wonderful harmonies. James Green led the band on the night I was there superbly well. This music lends itself to big band sound and they certainly provided this.
Choreography, by Crystalle Cox, was fun, modern and used the casts talents to the maximum. Some of your cast members stood out by their fantastically rhymical movements and made the dances mesmerising to watch. Crystalle and her dance captains had obviously drilled the steps into the cast very thoroughly as the dances were full of movement and changes of direction filling the stage with colour and energy. The Crapshooters Dance and The Oldest Establishment dances were outstanding with men’s chorus supplemented by very talented female recruits.
Nicely Nicely Johnson, played by Matthew Wallace, and Benny Southstreet, played by Tom Nolan, and the rest of their betting fraternity led us in the great Fugue for Tinhorns, which has some intricate contrapuntal lines ably supported by the cast who were mirroring the beat in the background. This was a great way to introduce the principals in this show. Matthew and Tom both had great voices and strong stage personalities which made this partnership really good to watch. Their energy and humour in the roles persevered throughout the whole show. The whole crap-shooting cast played their parts beautifully from Big Julie, Peter Brown, to Lieutenant Brannigan, Simon Sharpe. They were all so confident in their roles that I was amazed to see such a wealth of talent amongst all the minor principal cast
Nadezhda Beaumont-Lockley as Miss Adelaide was superb. A gorgeous voice coupled with shed loads of personality brought this role to life and her delivery of the great one-liners was beautifully timed. Heather Syrett, as Sarah Brown, played this part to perfection. Her voice, especially in the duet, ’I’ve never been in love before’, was truly lovely. Well done, Heather, this was a lovely performance. The drunk scene was nicely underplayed and very funny! I did love the missionary band as well.
The Hot Box dancers were beautifully dressed in fluffy yellow outfits (which even produced and egg at one point) and had a great dance routine at the Hot Box club. And your whole routines, along with Adelaide, in A Bushel and a Peck and later in Take Back your mink were great!
Nathan Detroit, played by Alex Abineri, was nicely intimidating and also possessed a good voice. You held your characterisation so well and delivered your wise cracks with great timing!
Sky (or should I call you Obadiah?) Masterson was played by James Cohen. This is always a bit of a difficult role to play as he goes from a jack-the-lad character to one who falls gradually in love with Sarah Brown. You took us all with you on this journey and had some spell binding moments and duets with Sarah (played by Heather Syrett). This was a great performance, James, well done.
There were really good American accents that were maintained throughout this very long show! The lighting was good but sometimes left the stage a bit dark. The follow spots filled in most of the gaps however I do love the moody tops lights especially in the garage crapshooter’s scene. Sound was good, only a few missed cues.
Costumes were lovely, especially the black and gold outfits and the yellow fluffy ones for the hot box dancers. The cast had great fedora hats, waistcoats and a lot of very shiny tie clips! Props were appropriate and completely innkeeping with the show.
This was a wonderful show and you all should be justly proud of the production that you put together. Thank you so much for inviting me, I enjoyed it enormously.
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Show Reports
Guys and Dolls