I cannot remember how I stumbled on an advertisement for the tour of High Society, but I was lucky that there were just a few single seats left at The Swan Theatre in High Wycombe for the Thursday matinee. This production opened at the Barbican Theatre in London and now has a tour of fifteen different theatres across the country. That started in High Wycombe.
The curtain, when closed, mentions Newport, which is where the original production is set. That is Newport, Rhode Island. Not that far away from our holiday in Hyannis on Cape Cod. When the curtain opens, we are treated to a spectacular set. Later, more scenery drops from above, so this is a serious production. With a full-size orchestra and twenty-eight strong cast members, we were in for a treat.
Leading the cast were Helen George as Tracy Lord (famous in our house for playing Trixie in the eighty-one episodes of Call the Midwife), Freddie Fox as Mike Connor and Julian Ovenden as Dexter Haven. (I have given up buying a programme when everything is online).
Others included Nigel Lindsay and Carly Mercedes Dyer. One of the unexpected pleasures of my seat in the circle was how steep the rows were. I had a completely unimpeded view of the stage and, as a bonus, a good view of the orchestra. The musicians were all impressive, especially the young woman on woodwind. It was great to watch her changing from clarinet to flute, piccolo and saxophone. Sometimes during a number. The biggest thrill for me was the end of the first half when a band (actually members of the orchestra) took to the stage to play Now You Has Jazz. The same instruments as the Louis Armstrong band in the original film, and with that clarinet soaring high.
The songs were all so familiar. I have somewhere an old LP of the 1956 musical starring Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Grace Kelly and Celeste Holme. Tracks on the album that all played last night include "Little One", "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire", "True Love", "You're Sensational", "I Love You, Samantha", "Now You Has Jazz", "Well, Did You Evah?" and "Mind if I Make Love to You". Then we had lots of other Cole Porter songs, including "I Love Paris", "Let's Misbehave", "I've Got You Under My Skin" and "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love".
Here are Helen George and Julian Ovenden singing "True Love". Note the small stand-in for that yacht in the film.
My visit to see the show was enhanced by long conversations with the couple next to me and with another couple at the interval. They were even regulars at the Rex Cinema in Berhamsted.
One thing I found on the net was the absence of one line in the song with the title "Well, Did You Evah?" Apparently my old MONO LP of the musical was the only version to include the words sung by Bing Crosby, "You must be one of the newer fellas", in response to a Frank Sinatra croon. No subsequent stereo LPs, CDs, etc. have these words. Strange.




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