Showing posts with label I Dreamed A Dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label I Dreamed A Dream. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Elaine C Smith: 'Desperately Seeking SuBo' documentary



Desperately Seeking SuBo documentary to air on STV

STV viewers are in for a treat when one hour documentary Desperately Seeking SuBo hits our television screens.



The programme follows the journey of Elaine C. Smith as she co-writes and rehearses the stage show I Dreamed A Dream, about Susan Boyle’s life so far.

From fascinating stories about the moment Elaine and Susan met, to the Britain’s Got Talent star’s reaction to the first time she saw the show; Desperately Seeking SuBo is a treat for both Susan Boyle and Elaine fans alike.

Watch as Elaine goes in search of a hit and her star. Will she find either of them?

This exclusive behind the scenes look at the new musical about the extraordinary life of Scottish singer Susan Boyle will air on Tuesday October 9 at 8pm.

After the show, there will be more about the musical, Susan and Elaine at stv.tv/susanboyle. For those of you outwith the UK who won’t be able to watch the show go out, log on to stv.tv/susanboyle from 9pm (GMT) on Tuesday October 9 to watch exclusive clips from Desperately Seeking SuBo.

Source (including video): STV

Sunday, 29 April 2012

Bristol interview: Elaine C Smith of Susan Boyle musical I Dreamed A Dream



Vivienne Kennedy interviews Elaine C Smith, star of I Dreamed A Dream at Bristol Hippodrome

This May a brand new musical will be visiting Bristol Hippodrome - I Dreamed A Dream, based on the life story of Britain’s Got Talent runner up and global singing sensation Susan Boyle, will open on Tuesday 01 May and run until Saturday 05 May. It is expected, but not guaranteed, that Susan herself will make a guest appearance at some performances.

A few days ago I spoke to Elaine C Smith, co-writer of I Dreamed A Dream who also stars as Susan in the show.

You’ve co-written I Dreamed A Dream; it must be really difficult for writers to come up with new and original material for shows, what made you think that Susan Boyle’s story would make a good musical?
I suppose I didn’t initially. Lots of other people, in the film industry and all that, and in America, thought “oh yes, this is great, rags to riches, a fairy story type of movie” and it was only when Susan was interviewed about that and asked who she would want to play her that she suggested me. We’d never actually met at that point, but she’d obviously seen me in various things over the years, watching me on TV in Scotland and thought that we’re roughly the same age, from similar backgrounds, blah blah blah...and she knew I could sing as well.
So that was the thrust of it and it was sort of said as a joke to Michael Harrison, the producer, when he’d seen some of the press about it. I thought I’d never get the movie, “it’ll be Michelle Pfeiffer with a bad Irish accent in Hollywood” I said, “but once the movie’s out we should do a stage show.”
I was thinking ten years from now, but Michael phoned be back and said we should do it now, I told him not to be so ridiculous, Simon Cowell will never let us do it, but he pursued it.
I do the audio book of Susan’s life, I read her story, so I had an insight into her life story before it was even published and actually there were so many similarities with our own backgrounds; I really enjoyed the book.
Alan McHugh, who’s co-written it, had done a couple of drafts from the book. I said that if you’re ever going to make this into a show it has to be magical, because what surrounded Susan was magic. People keep talking about Britain’s Got Talent and saying “oh, that’s another Susan Boyle moment”, but there will never be another Susan Boyle moment, this is actually popular culture and show biz history.
For me it was also the absolute end of an obsession with celebrity and of judging a book by its cover, she represented something much more. Even on stage in Newcastle (where the show premiered in March) I remembered thinking “what is going on here? This is more than the sum of the parts. This is magical.”
It is a fairy tale, it is a rags to riches story, it’s not even Cinderella getting to the ball, it’s maybe Cinderella’s older sister getting to the ball and she doesn’t get the Prince but she gets a great career.
There’s a lot of magic around her but also I was fascinated from a writing point of view, about who that woman was? Why did she wear that dress? Why did she not get her hair cut? Why was she looking ten years older than her years? And what made her decide to get up that morning and go? That for me is the magic in it.
Having read her story I realised that it’s even better than Cinderella because this was a woman who was born as the youngest of nine children in a big Catholic family, in a mining community, and there were slight learning difficulties, not profound but slight. The doctor said to her mother “don’t expect too much.” You couldn’t write that, that’s the stuff of the gods.
Because of her learning difficulties, and being slightly indulged probably by her family as well, she was bullied a great deal at school, especially at high school. She was never allowed to have that normal transition when developing, she never had boyfriends, her dad was very strict, and she missed out on things. The only thing in her life that made her feel any good was singing.
In her 20s she found the courage one night to walk into a pub when the karaoke was on and just got up to sing. People had always known she could sing, but singing in front of people was absolutely terrifying for her, but she discovered that it was something she could do.
Her peers encouraged her with it, but then sadly her father died, and then her closest sister died very suddenly from an asthma attack, and all those dreams had to be abandoned. She was the one still living at home and, like many women in poverty, well not poverty exactly but certainly not in very affluent situations, became the one left to look after an ageing parent. Her mother died just before Britain’s Got Talent and at that point she’d lost everything.
She said to me that she hadn’t realised how much she’d let herself go until she saw herself on television.

Susan Boyle isn’t a fictional character, she’s real and she’s in the theatre most nights, does that bring an added pressure to you as an actress?
To a certain extent yes. When she first saw me in the wig and the dress, she found that really funny, the Britain’s Got Talent stuff. But actually I tell the story as Susan now, so the wig that I wear is her hair now and that freaked her out more than anything, she said “Oh my God, that’s really scary.” We don’t look very much like each other really, but we do on stage.
All I really wanted to do was to honour her and her family, not in a sugary sweet way, it’s not sing-a-long-a-Susan, it’s treating her life and what happened to her in a serious way that gives people a good night out and entertains as well as giving them a bit of popular cultural history if you like.
I said to her that I would feel I’d done my job if the audience were on their feet before she came on, and they are. She wasn’t on stage last night, she’d had to go back to Scotland, but the audience were on their feet anyway and that’s when I think “yes, we’ve done this, this show works.”

Has Susan been enjoying the experience on the nights she is there?
Yes, she came off stage in Liverpool (where the show has been playing from 17 to 21 April) and said “My God, the atmosphere out there was electric.”
When she does appear it is a bit like a religious experience you know; the audience have had this wonderful tale about her life, they get more information and understand just how difficult it has been for her to overcome everything and to get there, and about how she was treated after Britain’s Got Talent, by the press particularly, and yet she’s still here and has gone onto great success, that’s very uplifting. Then she walks on and sings I Dreamed A Dream, so you can imagine the reaction.
She has been really enjoying it I think, and enjoyed being part of a theatre company for the first time really as well, getting the experience that she’s never been able to get. I’ve been lucky, I’ve been doing this for 30 years, but it’s all brand new to Susan.

One of your recent stage appearances as been in Calendar Girls; is it a relief to be keeping your clothes on this time?
Ha ha ha, yeah. I never found it upsetting to do it actually. Calendar Girls is very similar to this show in lots of ways; it’s an incredibly uplifting story about ordinary women and doing something extraordinary. Ironically the worst time appearing with my clothes off was in the rehearsal room and we all were more nervous in front of each other that first time than when we were actually taking them off in front of 2,000 people. Within the context of the play it was great and I think the women in the audience were more worried for us than we were by the end. It was quite liberating as well.

You’re going to be in Bristol for a few days, from 01 to 05 May, what are you looking forward to seeing or doing while you’re in the city?
I came down not long ago to see Sian Phillips, who was also in Calendar Girls, in the first show she did of Juliet and her Romeo at the Old Vic in Bristol (March 2010); I was there for a couple of days and just loved it, I’ve been a few times actually.
I’ll be looking out for my friend Julia Hills, another member of the Calendar Girls cast; she’s doing The Cherry Orchard at the Tobacco Factory so I’ll definitely be trying to fit a matinee of that in.
I love walking all along the river and there’s great shopping; I won’t be stuck for things to do.

The current tour finishes in Manchester towards the end of June, what happens next, does the dream keep going?
Well we’ve had Lloyd Webber on the phone and Cameron Mackintosh. We’re certainly going to be  touring again because we’ve only done Aberdeen and Inverness in Scotland and so we’re going to be doing The King’s, Glasgow, which is just about sold out for two weeks, and Edinburgh, just after the festival. There are lots of discussions about where it will go, we’ll just have to wait and see.
We’ve been a bit overwhelmed by the response actually, from audiences and from reviewers. It’s been really amazing.

Thank you very much for taking time out to talk to me today, I just have one final question for you – last year you appeared on Celebrity Mastermind, coming second in your episode; if you could take part in one other celebrity show would you learn ballroom dancing, ice skating or how to cook?
Probably ballroom dancing. I’ve got to do a bit of it in this show but also because my father, who died just a few weeks before we started, ballroom danced four nights a week and one of the things that kept him going when he was in the hospice was watching Strictly. It’s not that I’m a huge fan of it but I know that it kept him going and it was a big thing for him, so that would be the main reason and not because I think I’m Fred Astaire or Ginger Rogers.
Certainly not ice skating; that would be too terrifying!

I Dreamed A Dream opens at Bristol Hippodrome on Tuesday 01 May and runs until Saturday 05 May.  There will be performances at 7.30PM each evening and matinees at 2.30PM on Wednesday and Saturday. Tickets are priced from £19.50 to £39.00.

Source: Guide 2 Bristol

Monday, 2 April 2012

Susan Boyle musical 'I Dreamed a Dream': a hit with critics!




The musical based on the life of singing sensation Susan Boyle — remember her rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream” from Britain’s Got Talent heard around the world? — are in from last night’s opening, and here’s a surprise: The show, fittingly titled I Dreamed a Dream, is supposed to be pretty darn good.
Starring Elaine C. Smith as Boyle — with a cameo appearance by Boyle herself in the finale — Dream premièred last night at Newcastle’s Theatre Royale, and we’ve rounded up the glowing notices it got (one of them calls the show “a delight”) for you here:

The Telegraph: “[Elaine C. Smith's] eerie impersonation of the singer strikes all who hear it dumb with awe. …  The overall shape of the show is hard to fault, and in matching the gutsy good humour of its heroine without stooping to hagiography, this is a delight that deserves to go far, and fast, as she has done.”

Daily Mail: “Ed Curtis’s production, performed before a bank of TV screens, is more than just a get-rich-quick scheme or a piece of craven hagiography. It’s also a jolly good knees-up. Between moments of throat-clearing reverentiality and tear-stained crooning, there is much fun to be had.”

Scotsman: “There is a kind of paradox at the heart of this version of Susan Boyle’s story, in that it comes in the form of a first-person narrative, and therefore gives a powerful, articulate speaking voice to a woman famously able to express herself best through the songs she sings; the Susan conjured up for us by Elaine C. Smith, in a tremendously effective and moving star performance, almost inevitably has a confidence and presence, when not singing, that Boyle famously lacked.”

I Dreamed a Dream plays in Newcastle until March 31, before heading out to tour Britain and Ireland.
 
Read more at Entertainment Weekly

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Elaine C Smith persuades Susan Boyle to appear in musical

Susan Boyle is to make a guest appearance in the stage show charting her rise to fame. The Britain's Got Talent star has agreed to appear at the end of I Dreamed a Dream, which stars Elaine C. Smith as the singing star.

Elaine told the Sunday Mail: "Susan has become a great pal and I'd do anything for her. "We are similar in many ways - two Scottish lasses from mining villages who were supposed to get married, have kids and be quiet. "But Susan and I didn't quite turn out like that. I'm so honoured to be able to tell the story of her amazing life."

Susan added: "I am thrilled to be part of the musical and I'm looking forward to stepping on stage.
"It is an honest portrayal of my life and has been a cathartic process to be involved in."

The show will examine Susan's early life in Blackburn, West Lothian, and show what has happened to her since she became famous. Elaine said: "We are aiming for a Billy Elliot-style story which tells the rags-to-riches tale of Susan's life. When I first read the script to Susan, she got upset but then she said, `You've made me cry...but you've made me smile more'."

The musical will be the first time that Susan has been part of a nationwide tour. Her management team hope it will pave the way for a worldwide concert tour. Elaine says: "It is about trying to get Susan ready for the next stage in her career. "There's a big part of Susan's story still to be told."

Source: STV

Sunday, 19 February 2012

Elaine C Smith promoting I dreamed a dream - The Musical


Listen here to Elaine C Smith being interviewed on BBC Radio Scotland about her role in I Dreamed A Dream

 

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Elaine C Smith to star as Susan Boyle in new stage show



I DREAMED A DREAM (Palace Theatre, Oxford Street, Manchester, June 19-23)
Susan Boyle will make a guest appearance in this eagerly awaited new show based on her life story. Starring Elaine C Smith (Rab C Nesbitt) the musical follows Susan Boyle’s rise from humble beginnings to global icon and features signature songs from her multi-platinum selling albums.
Ring 0844 372 7272 or visit www.manchesterpalace.org.uk for ticket information

Source: Flintshire Chronicle
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