Rome: The Musical
PRESS RELEASE
THE DOMINION POST SEASON OF
ROME
THE MUSICAL
Written & Directed
by Music by
PAUL JENDEN
GARETH FARR
You are invited to a
fun-packed evening of lust, greed and murder.
Welcome to the Caesars! And a decadent Roman
feast of power and intrigue.
Mid-winter madness is upon us again – and what better way to celebrate the season than to join the fun at Circa Theatre with a fabulous night of music, singing, dancing and extravagant costumes at the World Première of ROME The Musical which opens on Saturday 21st June (Winter Solstice!) at 8pm, and runs until 26 July.
Jenden and Farr - the creators of the hugely successful Troy and Monarchy, complete their trilogy of historical musicals with a wild romp through the Roman Empire. The events of decades are condensed into the space of just one evening when Julius Caesar hosts a dinner party that is interrupted by the arrival of the infamous and exotic Cleopatra.
Talking about the trilogy, librettist, costumier and director, Paul Jenden says, “The three musicals share a strong historical content combined with wit, humour and an eye for entertainment. They treat history with a deceptively light hand, but in fact they are based on extensive research - many fans of the show particularly enjoy the historical accuracy at the heart of the madness.
“One of the large recurrent themes is the nature of power: TROY described the disaster of a royal family’s pride and folly; MONARCHY described the burden of power on a monarch; and ROME looks at how even a proud republic ended up electing a royal family.
“However, the focus of all three shows is the effect of larger events on individuals.
“The history of Rome contains centuries of amazing personalities, but in the process of writing the show I found that they shared so many character traits - ambition, greed, ruthlessness. Julius Caesar and his family seemed to represent the best and worst of the Roman Empire, so ROME condenses decades of history into one night and one cast of characters. Instead of the actors having to play up to 10 characters each, in ROME everyone plays only one part. But what parts - Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, Cleopatra; all characters that the actors can really get their teeth into. And, because we are familiar with them, I have been able to play a little with their stories, so In ROME Caesar invites them all to a dinner on the 15th of March - the infamous Ides of March.
“It’s a bit like Agatha Christie - a small group of odd characters at dinner; one dies, then another... a sort of whodunnit in which we already know who done it.
Or do we? There’re a few twists that might be historically accurate or not...
“On a musical note, the band in ROME is quite different from the previous two shows –it has a small orchestra that contains no keyboards, not even a piano. The Klezmer-style group is made up of clarinet, violin, accordion, bass clarinet and percussion, all under the expert hand of Musical Director, Michael Vinten, briefly lured away from the world of opera.
“The gleefully anachronistic musical styles also disguise the serious consideration and work that goes into the score. At least two weeks of the rehearsal period are spent just learning the music! And there are recurrent musical themes and motifs in the three works. One theme in particular, heard in the first Trojans’ song, has been quoted directly in each work - an interesting “spot the theme” undertaking for fans of the shows.
“And … no togas! ROME is where Jenden and Farr meet Fellini!
“ROME is set in an undefined but somewhat contemporary age, and the costumes were designed with an eye on the latest couture shows from Paris and Milan. The set is inspired by the present day Roman ruins that fit comfortably into modern life, perhaps as a warning that Roman follies are likely to be repeated...
“From a personal perspective, a
significant amount of time spent working in Rome has helped
me considerably, plus being welcomed into my partner’s
Italian family,” says Jenden.
“Rome is one of my
favourite places, I can’t think of anywhere else as warm,
as beautiful or as crazy.
I remember a film critic
writing that she always believed that Fellini made
fantasies, but after visiting Rome she realised that he made
documentaries...”
So … bring a healthy appetite
and indulge yourself in Roman extravagance, but … don’t
touch the grapes...
Starring
-
CHRISTINA CUSIEL, JASON WARD KENNEDY, LYNDEE-JANE
RUTHERFORD, MARTYN WOOD, EMMA KINANE, JEFF KINGSFORD-BROWN,
SARAH LINEHAM, LOUIS SOLINO, JULIAN WILSON
MUSIC
DIRECTOR - MICHAEL VINTEN
Assisted by Sarah
Lineham
ORCHESTRA: -
Clarinet – Debbie
Rawson/Tui Clarke
Bass Clarinet – Hayden
Sinclair
Accordion – Rebekah Greig
Violin – Chris Prosser
Percussion
– Rich Wise
ROME
THE
MUSICAL
Opens at on Saturday 21st June at
8pm
and runs until 29th July
$20 Specials – Sunday 22nd June – 4pm; Tuesday 24th June – 6.30pm
Performance times:
Tuesday & Wednesday 6.30pm
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
8pm
Sunday 4pm
Ticket Prices:
Adults -
$38; Concessions - $30; Friends of Circa - $28
Under
25s - $20; Groups 6+ s- $32
BOOKINGS Circa
Theatre 1 Taranaki Street, Wellington
Phone 801
7992 www.circa.co.nz
--
PAUL
JENDEN
Writer, Director, Costume Design,
Choreography
Paul Jenden wrote and directed his first
play at 8 years old: a classroom adaptation of
Charlotte’s Web. In 1975 he graduated from Victoria
University with a degree in French Language and Literature
and began a theatrical career that has seen him established
as a director, designer, choreographer and writer.
In
1980 he left New Zealand to base himself in New York City
and toured in the U.S.A. and Canada as well as Europe and
Asia. He returned to live in New Zealand in 1989.
Paul
has many successes to his name. His first production at
Circa Theatre was Fairy Stories in 1996, which began
a series of highly successful Christmas shows. His
Dancing the Gay Fandango at Taki Rua in 1991 became a
top selling show at the 1994 Adelaide Fringe Festival and
Melbourne’s Midsumma Festival. His sparkling 1989
production of Le Papillon was one the most popular NZ
works ever mounted by the Royal New Zealand Ballet and with
Maclary Theatre Productions he produced The Hairy Maclary
Show which has toured widely in New Zealand featured in
Adelaide’s Come Out Festival and at the Victorian Centre
for the Arts.
At Circa he has designed sets and costumes
for Dirty Weekends, Boys at the Beach, Travesties,
Cinderella, Aladdin and Jack and the Beanstalk
and worked as a movement consultant on Stones in his
Pockets, The Cherry Orchard and The Underpants.
He was the lyricist for Roger Hall’s Cinderella,
Aladdin and Who Needs Sleep Anyway and has
twice teamed up with Gareth Farr to write the highly
successful TROY The Musical and Monarchy – the
musical.
He has twice been voted Costume Designer of
the Year at the Chapman Tripp Theatre
Awards.
GARETH
FARR
Composer
Well-known New Zealand
composer and percussionist Gareth Farr was born in
Wellington on Leap Year Day 1968. He studied composition,
orchestration and electronic music at Auckland University
and was a regular player with the Auckland Philharmonia and
the Karlheinz Company. Further study followed at Victoria
University, Wellington, where he became known for his
exciting compositions, often using the Indonesian
gamelan.
He played frequently as a percussionist with the
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra before departing New Zealand
to study composition with Christopher Rouse at the Eastman
School in Rochester, New York, where he graduated Master of
Music.
In 1993, at the age of 25, Gareth became Chamber
Music New Zealand’s youngest composer-in-residence. Since
then, his works have been commissioned and performed by the
NZSO, the Auckland Philharmonia, the Wellington Sinfonia,
the New Zealand String Quartet, and a variety of other
professional ensembles in New Zealand and overseas. From
the Depths Sound the Great Sea Gongs, a commission from
the NZSO to commemorate the orchestra’s 50th anniversary,
was premiered at a Gala Concert in March 1997.
Gareth was
commissioned to write a work to celebrate the opening of Te
Papa, and the resulting work, combining symphony orchestra
with soprano, tenor and karanga was hailed as “music with
a powerful and moving impact that transcends idiom and
individual taste”. Another highlight was the performance
of two of Gareth’s works by the NZSO at the Sydney
Olympics; the percussion concerto Hikoi which was
composed for and performed by the internationally-renowned
Evelyn Glennie, and Wairua, a unique work combining a
Maori kapa haka group with the full symphony
orchestra.
In addition to his music for the concert hall,
Gareth has written music for television and film, including
The Strip, a 20 episode NZ drama series, and
Spring Flames, a short film directed by Aileen
O’Sullivan. Dance has also featured strongly in Gareth’s
recent work with The Wedding based on the book by
Witi Ihimaera for the Royal NZ Ballet, and Maui: One Man
Against the Gods with Tanemahuta Gray. And, of course,
Gareth wrote the music for TROY The Musical and
MONARCHY The Musical at Circa.
Gareth’s music is
heavily influenced by his extensive study of percussion,
both Western and non-Western. Rhythmic and timbral elements
of his compositions can be linked to the complex and
exciting rhythms of pacific island log drum ensembles and
the dynamic and colourful sounds of the Indonesian
gamelan.
Five full-length CDs of his music have been
released to date on the Trust Records label - chamber
orchestra, chamber music, string quartets and two orchestral
CDs. A CD single of Te Papa was also released in
1998.
Gareth was made an Officer of the NZ Order of Merit
for services to music and entertainment in last year’s
Queen’s Birthday Honours.
CHRISTINA
CUSIEL
Cleopatra
One of NZ’s finest
vocalists, Christina Cusiel was classically trained from the
age of 10, and has studied with several prominent vocal
tutors including Malcolm McNeill. While studying at
Christchurch Jazz School she started a six-piece ensemble
called Midas Touch, a Manhattan Transfer influenced show
band. Midas Touch became the first NZ band in over a decade
to be invited to perform in Switzerland at the prestigious
Montreaux Jazz Festival, where they performed alongside
world-renowned artists such as Betty Carter, Bobby McFerrin
and Cassandra Wilson, before opening for Dionne Warwick in
Auckland and Wellington.
In 1996 Christina was named
Female Vocalist of the Year in the Wellington Music
Awards.
She was then contracted to perform for the Hard
Rock Café in Guangzhou for 6 months, and on returning to
Wellington she fronted the Roger Fox Band before forming her
own group, funk/soul band Lady Marmalade and the Jazz group
the Christina Cusiel Trio. She later toured NZ with her
original music, joining well-known TV and Radio personality
Gary McCormick on his Millennium Man tour.
When the Tommy
Loungerillo Orchestra was formed for the International Laugh
Festival in Wellington and Auckland and Nelson Festival of
the Arts, Christina became a Loungerillo and formidable
ex-wife of Tommy – Shirley Loungerillo. Meanwhile Cristina
was performing once again with her Jazz ensemble to sold-out
concerts at Wellington and Waiheke Jazz festivals.
In
2002 Christina joined the Beat Girls – a high-energy fully
choreographed and costumed show specialising in music from
60s girl groups to Mowtown to Disco and ranging to today.
Christina has performed in Beat Girl shows It’s My
Party, The Beat Girls Mid-Winter Christmas Show, A tribute
to the Andrews Sisters and Beat Girls Birthday
Bash.
Christina was last seen at Circa as Elizabeth
2 in Monarchy The Musical last year.
JASON
WARD KENNEDY
Mark Antony
Jason has worked extensively in theatre’s throughout NZ, Australia and Germany in over 50 professional productions including Cats, Phantom of the Opera, Urinetown, Guys & Dolls, Les Miserables, Tanz Der Vampire (Dir Roman Polanski), TROY The Musical, Jesus Christ Superstar, Little Shop of Horrors, South Pacific and Fly me to the Moon. Jason has performed in a variety of concerts, sung with several bands, has several TV & Film credits and toured with several children’s productions including CapitalE and The Wriggles as Captain Feathersword. He was last seen in Wellington in Handyman at Bats.
EMMA
KINANE
Calpurnia
Emma graduated from NZ
Drama School in 1988. Her first professional role was
playing a 7-foot-long homicidal axolotyl in Jism.
Since then she has played diverse roles in musicals such as
Lifelines, Aunt Daisy!, Shakers,
Tomfoolery, and the corporate-commissioned,
group-devised, Glaxo the Musical which is perhaps
best forgotten. Emma’s favourite singing role involved
channelling various pop stars in Dead Tragic. She
was part of the two earlier Paul Jenden and Gareth Farr
collaborations, Troy the Musical and Monarchy the
Musical in 2006 and 2007 and is thrilled to be back
again this year for Rome. Emma was last seen at Circa
as Violet in The Winslow Boy.
Her dramatic roles
include Gertrude in Hamlet, Zebrowski in The
Temptations of St Max, and Violet in Steaming.
She played “Miss” Aslaksen in Ibsen’s An Enemy of
the People, which won the Chapman Tripp 2003 Production
of the Year Award.
Emma’s comedy roles include Yvonne
in Sisters, Phil in The Sex Fiend, Phoebe in
As You Like It, Emily in Social Climbers,
Titania/Hippolyta in A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
Trish in Pack of Girls, and Robin in Mum’s the
Word.
TV credits include guest spots on Outrageous
Fortune, The Killian Curse, Coverstory, Ivanhoe (Dark
Knight), Freaky and Willy Nilly. Her favourite
short film role was Sue in The Man Who Couldn’t
Dance.
Emma is a published writer of short stories
and poetry. She has worked with Tim Spite’s SEEyD
Collective twice, co-writing and performing in Turbine
in 2007 and Paua in 2008. She has also
co-written two short films produced during the 48 Hours
Furious Filmmaking Festival last year and this year.
She
received the Evening Post Best Actress of 1990 Award for her
work as Ruth in Noel Coward’s Blithe Spirit and was
nominated for Best Performance in 2007’s Chapman Tripp
Awards for Fat Pig at Circa.
Emma is married to
Musical Director Michael Williams and they have two children
Barnaby and Claire.
JEFF
KINGSFORD-BROWN
Julius Caesar
Jeff has
been involved in professional theatre both in NZ and
overseas, as an actor and director for over twenty
years.
Jeff last appeared at Circa in the Roger Hall
pantomime, Jack & the Beanstalk as Bob the Butcher,
and before this as a variety of monarchs and miscreants in
Farr & Jenden’s highly acclaimed Monarchy - the
Musical last year. As well as acting & singing in
ROME, Jeff is currently directing Helen
Moulder in A Vote for Cynthia, a one-woman show being
staged at Circa in July.
SARAH
LINEHAM
Soothsayer & Asst Musical
Director
Sarah has only just finished a
season of the acclaimed Musical The Last 5 Years,
where she played the lead role of Cathy. Last year Sarah was
guest soloist with the Vector Wellington Orchestra
and Orpheus Choir, singing hits from right across the
musical theatre repertoire. She also toured The North Island
with Operatunity, and was part of the ground-breaking
Indonesian/New Zealand stage production Spinning
Mountain for WOMAD and the Capital E International
Children’s Festival.
She has performed the role of
Helen (plus other colourful characters) in the smash hit
Troy - The Musical at Circa Theatre, played Lisette
in Ken Hill’s Phantom of the Opera in Tokyo and was
a company member for the NZ touring production of
Evita. In 2003 Sarah wrote and performed the play
Fever – A Peggy Lee story at Circa,
Christchurch’s Court Theatre and the Nelson Arts Festival,
and released an accompanying tribute album, featuring the
songs of Peggy Lee.
Sarah has played Maria in Wellington
Musical Theatre’s West Side Story, toured New
Zealand with Ray Woolf as Maria in The Sound of
Music, and performed in musicals including Sweeney
Todd (Downstage), Dirty Weekends (Centrepoint)
and The Happy Prince (Capital E tour). For many
years Sarah was a member of the New Zealand Opera Chorus,
the New Zealand National Youth Choir, and Voices New
Zealand.
Sarah is an experienced recording artist,
performing on numerous television soundtracks including
Amazing Extraordinary Friends, Revelations and Secret
Agent Men, as well as guest performances on shows such
as McDonald’s Young Entertainers. She recently
recorded vocals on the new Phoenix Foundation album Happy
Endings. In addition to her performing roles, Sarah has
produced vocal recordings for artists such as Tim Beveridge
(Come Rain, Come Shine), and worked as Assistant
Music Director for the recent TV2 musical drama series
Karaoke High.
LYNDEE-JANE
RUTHERFORD
Octavia
Lyndee-Jane Rutherford is an actor and award winning theatre director. A graduate of Toi Whakaari: NZ Drama School she has performed in over 30 theatre productions throughout New Zealand, including Fat Pig, Mum’s Choir, The Vagina Monologues and In Flame, for which she received a nomination for Actress of the Year at the 2003 Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards. Lyndee-Jane is a familiar face on TV having been core cast of the comedy series Skitz, The Semisis, the TV2 kids show WNTV and most recently TV One’s acclaimed drama series The Hothouse. In 2006 Lyndee-Jane was awarded Best New Director at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards for her production of Duncan Sarkies’ Lovepuke. Lyndee-Jane has been core cast in all three “the Musicals” with Paul Jenden and Gareth Farr, Troy the Musical, Monarchy the Musical and now Rome the Musical.
JULIAN
WILSON
Octavian
Julian is a graduate of Toi Whakaari: NZ Drama School and has appeared in numerous theatre productions all over the country, including Play2 in Auckland in 2002, The Expert at Circa Studio, kid's shows Out of my Mind, Motormouth, Songs of the Sea and Papershaper for Capital E: National Theatre for Children, performed at the Fortune Theatre in Dunedin in Lulu, The Graduate and Hamlet, and starred as Seymour in Little Shop of Horrors at Downstage Theatre in 2005. At Circa, Julian has appeared in Golden Boys in Circa Two, doubled as Howard Wagner and Stanley in Death of a Salesman, played Benjamin Cohen in The Underpants (for which he won Best Male Supporting Actor at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards 2006), Fag in The Rivals, and has developed a reputation for being a Dame - appearing as the infamous Widow Twankey in Aladdin and Hilda Hardup in Jack & the Beanstalk. Last year he, and other bits of him, appeared at Downstage in The Graduate, and Othello, numerous characters in Monarchy - the Musical , The Dumb Waiter at Toi Whakaari, and this year has started out strongly with rave reviews in the Fortune Theatre's recent production of Moonlight & Magnolias.
MARTYN
WOOD
Brutus
Martyn graduated from Toi Whakaari: NZ Drama School in 2006 and has since appeared in Lovers of Central Park for Fringe ’07, Two Brothers and This Is Our Youth at Circa, Finding Murdoch, Angels in America and Urinetown: The Musical at Downstage and Footballistic at BATS. Last year he produced the sell out season of Sexual Perversity in Chicago at the San Francisco Bath-house, where he also played the role of Danny, for which he was nominated as the Most Promising Male Newcomer at the 2007 Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards. He will next be seen in the Wellington premiere of Mr Marmalade which he is also producing, before touring Sexual Perversity to Auckland.
ENDS