Meet the three Alisons in Pick Me Up Theatre’s York premiere of Fun Home

Alison times three: Libby Greenhill, left, Hattie Wells and Claire Morley in the Fulford Social Hall rehearsal room for Pick Me Up Theatre’s Fun Home. Picture: Kevin Greenhill

PICK Me Up Theatre’s York premiere of Jeanine Tesori and Lisa Kron’s award-garlanded musical Fun Home opens at the York Medical Society, Stonegate, on September 10.

Director-designer Robert Readman was thrilled when the rights became available. “I jumped at the chance to produce this amazing Broadway musical – it’s such a moving and unusual story and I love the score and the book,” he says.

“It’s a remarkable show that won Tony awards for best musical, score, book, leading actor and direction, and we’re very lucky to have such a magnificent, tight cast to bring to life Alison Bechdel’s best-selling graphic novel, based on her own life. And I feel the atmospheric, very intimate venue of the York Medical Society will work so well for our production.” Please note, the seating capacity is only 40, so prompt booking is advised. 

First staged in the UK at the Young Vic in London in 2018, but yet to play the West End, Fun Home now makes its Yorkshire debut  with its story of Alison at three stages of her life as memories of her 1970s’ childhood in a funeral home merge with her college love life and her coming out.

Claire Morley in rehearsal for Fun Home. Picture: Kevin Greenhill

When her father dies unexpectedly, graphic novelist Alison dives deep into her past to recall the volatile, brilliant, one-of-a-kind man whose temperament and secrets defined her family and her life. Moving between past and present, Alison relives her unique childhood at the family’s Bechdel Funeral Home, her growing understanding of her own sexuality and the looming, unanswerable questions about her father’s hidden desires.

“Fun Home is a refreshingly honest, wholly original musical about seeing your parents through grown-up eyes as Alison looks back on her complex relationship with her father and finds they had more in common than she ever knew,” says Robert.

Readman’s cast will be led by Claire Morley as adult Alison, aged 43, Libby Greenhill as Medium Alison, aged 19, and Hattie Wells as Young Alison, aged nine, joined by Catherine Foster as Helen, Alison’s mother, Dale Vaughan as Bruce, Alison’s father, Teddy Alexander as John, Oliver Smith as Christian, Britney Brett as Joan and the multi-role-playing Cain Branton as JRoy/Pete/Mark/Bobby.

“Fun Home is one of those cult musicals where if you know it, you rave about it,” says Claire, who is performing in her first musical since playing a Ronette in Little Shop Of Horrors in her All Saints schooldays. “If you don’t know the show but come next week, I’m hoping it will become some people’s favourite musical.

Libby Greenhill’s Medium Alison: “Some of her scenes about self-identity and discovering she’s a lesbian are quite funny,” she says. Picture: Kevin Greenhill

“I’ve known about the show for some time, though I’ve never seen it, but I love the songs. I’ve used Maps for auditions and Changing My Major (Libby’s solo in our show), at drama school, and when I saw Pick Me Up Theatre were doing it, I thought ‘this is my chance’.”

Libby, 16, who is studying for A-levels in Classical Civilisation, Religious Studies and English Language (“my passion”), was the first to be cast by Readman in December. All Saints pupil Hattie followed later that month, picked while starring in Pick Me Up’s Oliver!, when appearing in Fagin’s gang alongside her mother Rhian’s Mrs Sowerberry. 

Looking ahead, Hattie, aged 11, has been cast as one of two Annies in York Light Opera Company’s production of Annie at York Theatre Royal next February.

Claire’s Alison will be omnipresent on stage. “Her memories make these characters emerge from her past. In one song, I sing that she’s 43, a similar age to when her father committed suicide, and so throughout the show she’s looking back on her life, her teenage days and childhood, and her relationship with her father.”

Young Alison actress Hattie Wells singing in the Fulford Social Hall rehearsal room. Picture: Kevin Greenhill

Libby says: “The musical is based on Alison Bechdel’s graphic novel, where she’s looking back over her memories, switching between 19-year-old Alison, in her first year at college in Pennsylvania,  and 11-year-old Alison, and there’s no dragging in this show. It’s very immersive, about one hour 40 minutes long, so there’s no interval.”

Claire says: “The show builds to this dramatic event, so if it had an interval, it would break the momentum, and staging it in the round with the audience on all sides will benefit the show too.”

Hattie has found herself growing into the role. “It felt weird at first because things didn’t all make sense to me, and it seemed quite strange, especially when Bruce [the father] is really angry, when it’s very scary as Dale [Vaughan] is really good at being angry,” she says.  “It’s helped to watch clips on YouTube and to work with Robert in rehearsals.”

Libby stresses that Fun Home is not a dark comedy but has elements of both.  “There are dark things with the father, and then, in some of Medium Alison’s scenes about self-identity and discovering she’s a lesbian, they’re quite funny,” she says.

“Ultimately it’s life-affirming as Alison tries to work out how to move on while reconciling herself with how she was emotionally manipulated,” says Claire. “I think everyone who comes to the show will recognise something from their own lives, although it’s very specifically one person’s memories – and it’s definitely not all doom and gloom. It’s a good musical where people will come up with differing interpretations.”

The three Alisons will be seldom seen on stage together. “There’s only one moment where we acknowledge each other,” says Hattie.

Pick Me Up Theatre in Fun Home, York Medical Society, Stonegate, York, September 10 to 19, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday and Sunday matinees. Content guidance: Themes of LGBTQ+, suicide and strong language. Parental guidance: 12 plus. Box office: ticketsource.co.uk/pickmeuptheatre.com.

Pick Me Up Theatre’s show poster for Fun Home at York Medical Society

Pick Me Up Theatre to stage York premiere of five-time Tony award winner Fun Home at York Medical Society in September

Libby Greenhill’s Medium Alison, Hattie Wells’s Young Alison and Claire Morley’s Aliso in Pick Me Up Theatre’s Fun Home. Picture: Matthew Kitchen

YORK company Pick Me Up Theatre will stage Jeanine Tesori and Lisa Kron’s award-garlanded musical Fun Home at the York Medical Society, Stonegate, York, from September 10 to 19.

Please note, the seating capacity is only 40, so prompt booking is advised at ticketsource.co.uk/pickmeuptheatrecom for this electrifying version of Alison Bechdel’s graphic novel.

The winner of five Tony Awards on Broadway, Fun Home opened at the Young Vic, London, in 2018 to sell-out audiences. Now comes its York premiere, directed and designed by Robert Readman.

Dale Vaughan’s Bruce, Alison’s father in Pick Me Up Theatre’s Fun Home. Picture: Matthew Kitchen

Meet Alison at three stages of her life as memories of her 1970s’ childhood in a funeral home merge with her college love life and her coming out.

When her father dies unexpectedly, graphic novelist Alison dives deep into her past to tell the story of the volatile, brilliant, one-of-a-kind man whose temperament and secrets defined her family and her life. Moving between past and present, Alison relives her unique childhood at the family’s Bechdel Funeral Home, her growing understanding of her own sexuality and the looming, unanswerable questions about her father’s hidden desires.

Director Robert Readman was thrilled when the rights to Fun Home became available.  “I jumped at the chance to produce this amazing musical – it is such a moving and unusual story and I love the score and the book,” he says.

“Fun Home is a refreshingly honest, wholly original musical about seeing your parents through grown-up eyes as Alison looks back on her complex relationship with her father and finds they had more in common than she ever knew.

Pick Me Up Theatre’s poster for next month’s production of Fun Home at York Medical Society

“It’s a remarkable show that won Tony awards for best musical, score, book, leading actor and direction, and we’re very lucky to have such a magnificent, tight cast to bring to life Alison Bechdel’s best-selling book, based on her own life. And I feel the atmospheric, very intimate venue of the York Medical Society will work so well for our production.”

Readman’s cast will be led by Claire Morley as Alison, Libby Greenhill as Medium Alison and Hattie Wells as Young Alison, joined by Catherine Foster as Helen,  Dale Vaughan as Bruce, Alison’s father, Teddy Alexander as John, Oliver Smith as Christian, Britney Brett as Joan and the multi-role-playing Cain Branton as JRoy/Pete/Mark/Bobby. Natalie Walker is the musical director.

Pick Me Up Theatre in Fun Home, York Medical Society, Stonegate, York, September 10 to 19, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday and Sunday matinees Content guidance: Themes of LGBTQ+, suicide and strong language. Parental guidance: 12 plus. Box office: ticketsource.co.uk/pickmeuptheatre.com.

REVIEW: Shrek The Musical, Grand Opera House, York, until Saturday ***

Brandon Lee Sears’ Donkey, Antony Lawrence’s Shrek and Joanne Clifton’s Princess Fiona en route to Duloc in Shrek The Musical

IN August 2014, Yorkshire had the honour of staging the British regional premiere of DreamWorks Theatricals’ Shrek The Musical at Leeds Grand Theatre, when 2023 Strictly Come Dancing quarter finalist Nigel Harman was the director, incidentally.

Now the latest tour plays York, with co-directors Samuel Holmes and Nick Winston at the helm and 2016 Strictly champion Joanne Clifton playing the Grand Opera House for the fourth time, after The Rocky Horror Show in 2019, preceded by Flashdance and Thoroughly Modern Millie in 2017, here revelling in the role of Princess Fiona.

Nik Briggs’s presence in Monday night’s audience was a reminder that Shrek The Musical has turned this theatre green once before: he played the not-so-jolly ogre in York Stage’s production in 2019.

Holmes and choreographer Winston oversee a 2023-2024 touring production big on video, sound and lighting design, bigger still on big numbers, and biggest of all on big, big love. All that and a particularly towering Shrek as played by the lovably lumpen, grumpy Antony Lawrence.

You will surely know the iconoclastic story and characters from the first DreamWorks animated Shrek film in 2001, but the book and lyrics by David Lindsay-Abaire and persistently perky music by Jeanine Tesori were new to the 2008 musical.

Their songs, more forceful than overtly melodic, match the bright and bouncy tone of the trademark irreverent humour that adds playful send-ups of The Lion King and Les Miserables to the original film template of satirising and redefining the fairytale pecking order established by Grimm and Disney.

Joanne Clifton’s Princess Fiona and the Pied Piper’s tap-dancing rats performing Morning Person in Shrek The Musical

Hence the presence of myriad fairytale characters, in the manner of Stephen Sondheim’s Into The Woods, all in rebellious mood, from Georgie Buckland’s Gingy, who takes the biscuit, to Scotty Armstrong’s Big Bad Wolf, Mark D’arcy’s Pinocchio to Jonathan David Dudley’s Pied Piper.

All have their moments in song and dance, less so in dialogue, dominated instead by the big four of Lawrence’s Shrek, Clifton’s Princess Fiona, Brandon Lee Sears’ Donkey and James Gillan’s foppish Lord Farquaad.

Not forgetting a terrific turn by blues-belting Cherece Richards as the power-vocal front of the love-sick Dragon, hot on guarding Princess Fiona in the tower (as well as a second role as the Wicked Witch).

Early days in her professional career after leaving the Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts this summer, keep an eye and ear on this BA Musical Theatre 2023 graduate, who more than makes the grade in Shrek, even with a huge dragon puppet design by Jimmy Grimes behind her.

Shrek The Musical’s naturally solitary, swamp-dwelling Shrek is even ruder, definitely windier, than his film version, still irascible, still wary, but nevertheless teaming up with Sears’ irrepressible Donkey to extract Clifton’s temperamental, bored, probably bipolar Princess Fiona from her tower to deliver her to Lord Farquaad for her fairytale nuptials.

Lawrence’s Shrek makes being glum a joy, his warts-and-all unconventional hero experiencing the highs and lows, the frictions and fallouts of buddy movie relationships with Sears’ jive-talking, ever-excitable Donkey, a hoofer with hooves and a Little Richard meets Prince lip.

Swamp invaders: Antony Lawrence’s Shrek in argumentative mood with Cherece Richards’ Wicked Witch and the fairytale folk in Shrek The Musical

Lawrence’s big Scottish fella warms to Clifton’s equally unconventional Princess Fiona: her favourite role, she says, one that testifies to the creed of being who you want to be, rather than living up to other people’s expectations. Clifton is the triple threat writ large: stirring singer, swish dancer and humorous actress.

The show’s humour works on two levels: sometimes pantomimic for children, especially in the fairytale characters and in its love of raucous burps and bottom burps in Shrek and Fiona’s unbeatable party-piece duet, I Think I Got You Beat.

At other times, adult, smart and savvy, such as the observation that if you look grotesque, your life is “Kafka-esque”. Then stir in that British favourite, high camp, in the fruity form of Gillan’s big-headed but diminutive Lord Farquaad, with his curtain of silken hair, Shakespearean airs and Kylie hot pants.

Philip Witcomb’s set and costume designs echo pantomime; Winston’s choreography is full of individual swagger and ensemble electricity, and if the singing is often better than the songs, Shrek The Musical’s return to York, with its big, bright wonderful fairy world, fits the festive mood of shows at this time of year.

In the words of the closing I’m A Believer, if you thought love was only true in fairy tales, Lawrence and Clifton make it a good starting place.

Shrek The Musical, Grand Opera House, York, until Saturday, 7.30pm and 2.30pm Wednesday and Saturday matinees. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Everything’s gone green: Brandon Lee Sears’ Donkey, Joanne Clifton’s Princess Fiona and Antony Lawrence’s Shrek strut their stuff in the finale to Shrek The Musical

DreamWorks Theatricals’ Shrek The Musical to play Grand Opera House. When?

Shrek The Musical: Arriving in York in 2023

WEST End smash Shrek The Musical is on its jaunty way to the Grand Opera House, York, from November 27 to December 2…NEXT year.

After that long wait, join unlikely hero Shrek and his noble steed Donkey, beloved Princess Fiona and the evil Lord Farquaad as they embark on a big, bright, musical adventure that reimagines the Oscar-winning DreamWorks film and William Steig’s book for the stage.

After Broadway and London success, the producers of Hairspray and Priscilla Queen Of The Desert have joined forces with directors Sam Holmes and Nick Winston and designer Philip Witcomb for the touring production.

Full of unexpected friendships and surprising romance, this fun-filled musical comedy promises a cast of vibrant, magical fairytale characters and a “Shrektacular” score by composer Jeanine Tesori and lyricist David Lindsay-Abaire, topped off by Neil Diamond’s I’m A Believer.

DreamWorks’ animated film Shrek celebrated its 20th anniversary last year. Shrek The Musical was first performed on Broadway in 2008, produced by DreamWorks Theatricals and Neal Street Productions en route to receiving eight Tony nominations and the award for Best Costume and Set Design.

The original West End production was nominated for Best New Musical at the 2012 Olivier awards, where Nigel Harman received the award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Lord Farquaad.

Shrek The Musical was staged previously at the Grand Opera House by York Stage Musicals in September 2019.

Tickets are on sale on 0844 871 7615 or at atgtickets.com.