
Annie
The Courier and Advertiser - May 2005
VIBRANT MUSICAL JOURNEY
Review
ANNIE THE musical is at the Gardyne Theatre, Dundee, this week and is sure to warm your heart and bring a tear to your eye, writes a music critic.
Annie takes you with her on a colourful journey in a feast of vibrant songs, dance and costume. On the opening night a charming, captivating and confident Rachel Weir played Annie perfectly.
Agnes Boardman is in top form as the flamboyant, comical, but intoxicated Miss Hannigan. The orphans excel as they sing and dance to the popular tunes, and play up to the scheming Miss Hannigan.
Alex Robertson shines as Molly, Annie's closest friend at the orphanage.
Life changes dramatically for Annie as she leaves the orphanage to spend two weeks with the billionaire, Mr. Warbucks, played strongly but sensitively by Brian Boardman.
As Annie begins to fill his life with joy and new meaning, the audience warm to his secretary, the endearing and caring Grace Farrell, played by Tricia Stewart.
The conniving but comical villains Rooster Hannigan (Ross Cameron) and Lily St. Regis (Lisa Lynch) make the show complete, alongside Annie's newly found four-legged friend, Sandy (alias Tally).
The Evening Telegraph - May 2005
A SHOW TO MELT YOUR HEART
Review
Classic musical Annie, performed by Tread the Boards Youth Music Theatre, is a cracking show (writes a theatre critic).
You’d have to have a heart of stone not to have it melted by this show.
The eternally optimistic Annie is convinced that one day her parents will return and she'll be re-united with them after 11 years. The orphanage is awful, run by the drink sodden Miss Hannigan. Oliver Warbucks is a billionaire, who decides to take in an orphan for Christmas - you've guessed! It's Annie.
She meets the President of the USA, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and at the time of the Great American Depression. Annie's optimism - best summed up in that hit song Tomorrow - inspires the President to launch his New Deal to get America back to work
~ and to help search for her parents.
Rachel Weir, who plays Annie, is a great little trouper with a clear, clean voice giving applause must go to the girls who play the other orphans, with a special mention for young Alex Robertson, who plays Molly, Annie’s best friend at the orphanage.
Agnes Boardman, who plays the truly dreadful Miss Hannigan, has a wonderful voice and really brings lots of humour to the part. Brian Boardmasn plays super-rich Daddy Warbucks, giving a portrayal of some depth as he goes from the hard-nosed businessman whose heart is melted by Annie, whom he eventually agrees to adopt.
Tricia Stewart sparkles as Grace Farrell, who wins the heart of the billionaire. Another good voice here.
No allowances were needed for the opening night. The hard-working ensemble is great ~ so too is the dog Sandy (played by Tally). The sets and costumes are excellent and the band under the direction of Andrew Grier is terrific.
© D C Thomson & Co., Ltd 2005
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