Viva Forever! (musical) explained

Viva Forever!
Music:Various artists
Lyrics:Various artists
Basis:Songs by the Spice Girls
Productions:West End

11 December 2012 – 29 June 2013

Viva Forever! is a jukebox musical based on the songs of 1990s British girl-group the Spice Girls. It was written by Jennifer Saunders, produced by Judy Craymer and directed by Paul Garrington.

The show began previews at the Piccadilly Theatre, London, on 27 November 2012 and had its Press Night on 11 December 2012. In addition to their many hits, such as "Wannabe" and the eponymous "Viva Forever", the show's score draws heavily from and features nearly every song on the Girls' debut and sophomore albums, Spice (1996) and Spiceworld (1997), respectively. Also included were several songs from the group's third album—such as their hit "Goodbye"—as well as several solo single releases, including "Look At Me" by Geri Halliwell and "I Turn To You" by Melanie C. The show generated over £2,000,000 in pre-opening ticket sales.

Viva Forever! was panned by critics, receiving some of the worst reviews of 2012.[1] It was announced on 2 May 2013 that the show was to close on 29 June 2013 after seven months with a loss of at least £5 million.[2] In a 2016 interview, Spice Girls group member Mel B admitted to disliking the musical, stating that it "wasn’t actually the kind of show the group hoped for."[3]

Plot

The musical is based on a band member named Viva who lives on a houseboat. The story starts when her band gets through to the audition stages of a TV show. The band get through multiple rounds of the auditions, but on the final round, Viva gets through, without her bandmates. As Viva follows her dreams, Viva Forever! charts her journey into the world of overnight celebrity and its impact on her mother and the friends she thought she'd have forever.

Background

In 2010, Judy Craymer teamed up with Geri Halliwell, Simon Fuller (the one-time manager of the Spice Girls) and Universal Music to start developing a musical entitled Viva Forever!, based on the songs of the Spice Girls.[4] Although the Spice Girls themselves were not to be in the show, they were to influence the show's cast and production choices in a story which uses their music but bears no relation to their personal story. This approach is similar to that of ABBA's music in Mamma Mia!, a show which Craymer produced and helped turn into a global phenomenon.[5]

On 26 June 2012, to promote the launch of the show, all five former Spice Girls attended a press conference in London[6] at the St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel, the location where the group filmed the music video for their breakthrough hit "Wannabe," sixteen years earlier, to the day.[7]

Productions

West End (2012–2013)

On 13 July 2012, the first casting was announced with Hannah John-Kamen as Viva and Sally Ann Triplett as her mother Lauren[8] and following previews from 27 November 2012, Viva Forever! opened in the West End on 11 December 2012 at the Piccadilly Theatre[9] after a delayed start, due to the late arrival of Victoria Beckham, one of the original group members.[10] [11] It was announced on 2 May 2013 that the show would close after only seven months, with a loss of "at least £5 million". Due to poor ticket sales, the show closed on 29 June 2013. It was replaced at the Piccadilly Theatre by the musical Dirty Dancing from 13 July 2013.[12]

Producer Judy Craymer told the Evening Standard, "Despite wonderful audiences, standing ovations and positive social media it has proved very difficult to fight back when such negativity was cast, especially in these very tough economic times."[13]

Musical numbers

When the show first opened, it included 23 musical numbers, featuring some of the Spice Girls' biggest hits including a mashup of "Mama" and "Goodbye", as well as two solo songs from the group's solo efforts: "I Turn to You" by Melanie C and "Look at Me" by Geri Halliwell.[14] [15]

The following musical numbers were part of the show on opening night:

Act I
Act II
Encore

Principal roles and original cast

The following cast and characters are part of the show:

CharacterCharacter descriptionOriginal West End actor / actress
VivaA 20-year-old girl, who lives on a houseboat with her adoptive mother, and is a member of a four piece all-female band. Hannah John-Kamen
LaurenViva's adoptive mother, who lives with her daughter on a houseboat.Sally Ann Triplett
LuceA member of Viva's band, and Viva's friend.Siobhan Athwal
DiamondA member of Viva's band, and Viva's friend.Lucy Phelps
HollyA member of Viva's band, and Viva's friend.Dominique Provost-Chalkley
SuziLauren's best friend.Lucy Montgomery
MitchLauren's friend.Simon Slater
SimoneA TV talent show judge.Sally Dexter
JohnnyA Judge on Viva's TV talent show.Bill Ward
KarenA Judge on Viva's TV talent show.Tamara Wall
AngelThe musical director of the TV talent showBen Cura
MintyA production assistant for the TV talent show Hatty Preston
LeonA stylist for the TV talent showSimon Adkins
LanceThe presenter for the TV talent showAnthony Topham
EnsembleEnsemble membersTom Kanavan, Zak Nemorin, Curtis Angus, Luke Jackson, Oliver Roll, David Rudin, Darren Carnall, Myles Brown, Charlotte Gorton, Rebecca McKinnis, Lucy Thatcher, Roxanne Palner, Charlotte Walcott, Sophie Carmen-Jones, Carla Nella, Kirstie Skinvington, Helen Ternent

Changes to musical numbers

During the course of the show's run, several changes were made to the show's script and musical numbers. "Something Kinda Funny" was replaced with a reprise of "Wannabe", "The Lady Is a Vamp" was reinstated into the show after being removed, and "Say You'll Be There" was re-orchestrated into an up-tempo number more similar to the original version of the song. The Entr'acte was shortened, "Time Goes By" was replaced with a reprise of "Mama", A few lines of "Never Give Up on the Good Times" were added and sung a cappella into the second act of the show, "I Turn to You" was removed from the show as well as the reprise of "Saturday Night Divas", and "Headlines (Friendship Never Ends)" was shortened.

Critical response

The theatrical reviews following the opening Press Night (First Night) were largely negative:

"I'll tell you what I wanted, what I really really wanted – I wanted this terrible show to stop. Viva Forever! has absolutely no redeeming features whatsoever. This show is not just bad, it is definitively, monumentally and historically bad. I shall not dwell on the plot because, goodness knows, Jennifer Saunders, its writer, certainly hasn’t done. Its producer, Judy Craymer, may profess to have spent some money on it, but I have no idea where it has gone and, as for the songs, they are uniformly scummy, scratchy and screechy. There is no acting to speak of, either, so I shall not identify any of the girls who appear in it, lest they be subjected to recriminations. Thrown together without any great thought and ugly in every respect, Viva Forever! marks the West End coming to an unequivocal dead end. This musical is tawdry, lazy and unedifying, and one could sense a miasma of disappointment emanating from an audience of up-for-it Spice Girls fans realising that they had paid top whack to see a clunker."[16]

"Charmless, messy, lacklustre... so lacking in any truly original or challenging spark of its own. Viva Forever! forever? I rather think not."[17]

"The real problem is the songs. For one thing, there aren't enough memorable hits in a career that lasted for three albums to support two hours of theatre."[18]

"One of the biggest disappointments is Jennifer Saunders’ rather trite book which is symbolic of what is sadly a lazily put-together show. Saunders exhibits her lack of experience in writing for the stage. It soon becomes clear that the Spice Girls’ back catalogue is not generally of a high enough standard to be reinterpreted in this way."[19]

"Jennifer Saunders’s script, which ought to carry us efficiently from one song to the next, is ponderous. Aspects of it are positively bizarre."[20]

"The world premiere of the Spice Girls' musical certainly had its moments of high drama which kept the audience glued. Unfortunately, none of it was happening on the stage."[22]

"Viva Forever! is a phoney, manufactured musical about a phoney, manufactured band, marooned by a structurally inept, unfunny script."

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.thestage.co.uk/columns/mister-producer/2013/02/viva-forever-vs-the-bodyguard/ Viva Forever! vs The Bodyguard – Mister Producer – The Stage
  2. http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/production/2013/05/dirty-dancing-replace-viva-forever-west/ Dirty Dancing to replace Viva Forever! in the West End – Production News – The Stage
  3. News: Mel B Says Spice Girls Reunion Is Still On. Playbill. Michael. Gioia. 22 December 2016.
  4. News: The Spice Girls unveil West End show. . 26 June 2012 . 26 June 2012.
  5. News: Viva Forever Mamma Mia creator creates Spice Girls musical . The Times . London . Ben . Hoyle . 22 January 2010 . 23 May 2010 .
  6. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-18576789 "Spice Girls unveil West End show"
  7. Sinclair, David (2004). Wannabe: How the Spice Girls Reinvented Pop Fame. Omnibus Press. p. 75.
  8. Shenton, Mark. "Initial Casting Revealed for West End's 'Viva Forever!', Featuring Music of The Spice Girls", Playbill.com, 13 July 2012
  9. Web site: Viva Forever, Musical Featuring Spice Girls Songs, Confirms West End Opening at Piccadilly Theatre . . 26 June 2012 . 26 June 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120629045305/http://www.playbill.com/news/article/167444-Viva-Forever-Musical-Featuring-Spice-Girls-Songs-Confirms-West-End-Opening-at-Piccadilly-Theatre . 29 June 2012 . dead . dmy-all .
  10. http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/entertainment/access-all-areas/a/-/15616070/ Posh delays opening night show
  11. http://entertainment.stv.tv/showbiz/205448-spice-girls-musical-premiere-delayed-while-posh-is-stuck-in-traffic/ Spice Girls musical premiere delayed while Posh is stuck in traffic | Showbiz | Entertainment | STV
  12. http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/production/2013/05/dirty-dancing-replace-viva-forever-west/ Dirty Dancing to replace Viva Forever! in the West End – Production News – The Stage
  13. Web site: Spice Girls musical Viva Forever! to close in West End with £5m losses. . 2 May 2013 . 17 January 2018.
  14. Web site: Viva Forever Musical Workshop Footage . . 26 June 2012 . 26 June 2012.
  15. Web site: Viva Forever! Spice Girls reunite in London . . 26 June 2012 . 26 June 2012.
  16. News: Viva Forever!, Piccadilly Theatre, review . London . The Daily Telegraph . Tim . Walker . 19 December 2012.
  17. News: IoS theatre review: Privates on Parade, Noel Coward Theatre, London Viva Forever! Piccadilly Theatre, London In the Republic of Happiness, Royal Court, London . London . The Independent . Kate . Bassett . 16 December 2012.
  18. News: Viva Forever! – review . London . The Guardian . Miranda . Sawyer . 16 December 2012.
  19. http://www.thestage.co.uk/reviews/review.php/37893/viva-forever- The Stage / Reviews / Viva Forever!
  20. https://www.standard.co.uk/goingout/theatre/viva-forever-piccadilly-theatre--review-8410813.html Viva Forever!, Piccadilly Theatre - review - Theatre - Going Out - London Evening Standard
  21. http://www.tqsmagazine.co.uk/musical-review-viva-forever/ Musical Review: Viva Forever | TQS Magazine
  22. http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/caroline-frost/review-spice-girls-viva-f_b_2282698.html Caroline Frost: REVIEW: Spice Girls' 'Viva Forever!' Just Needs More Songs And Some Plot
  23. http://www.whatsonstage.com/reviews/theatre/london/E8831355305082/Viva+Forever!.html Viva Forever! Reviews at Piccadilly Theatre - London - Whatsonstage.com