A MUSICAL IS BORN…OUT OF POP”S PAST
I liked this rackety, brassy, exhilarating banger of a show: a cartoonish bit of history, a jukebox musical with a heart of gold . It’s from an East Anglian touring consortium of five theatres with a feeling for their North Sea coast, celebrating the brief, glorious cheek of a 1960’s pirate station: Caroline, a battered ship anchored off the coast to beam all-day pop records to teenagers fed up, as the entrepreneurial founder said, with listening to Vera Lynn on the BBC Light Programme on Sunday afternoons.
Its creator Vikki Stone builds it around a fictional couple, shopgirl Caroline shopgirl and Robbie, one of the first DJss (loosely based on Tony Blackburn). Haunting the record shop with bno money and hanging around with his mates, sharing chips and scuffles on the Clacton seafront, he is recrsuited by the entrepreneur Declan echoing the real Ronan O’Rahilly) and his chic partner, who sees the advertising potential of the station as more and more young women were working and wanting glamour and fashion and music to move to.
Against them is the Postmaster-General who hastily brought in the Marine &C Broadcasting Offences Act: played here (as he was in Riochard Curtis’ flop movie about the period) as puritanically right-wing, huffing about the moral decadence of the young. In reality, it was Tony Benn , pillar of the Left, and the issue was more about interfering with shipping radio channels than morality. Actually, Benn suggested the BBC should start a rival pop channel, and was sternly told by the BBC Chairman Lord Normanbrook “You can’t have popular music all the time, it would be like having the pubs open all day”
But despite the chic-lefty treatment of the minister (Gareth Cooper enjoying his villain-role a great deal) the heart of the tale is real, and fun; and the staid old BBC of course read the room and within weeks of Caroline being criminalized it started Radio 1, poaching several pirate-ship DJs. So it’s all well worth telling again, and not just for my generation ( a cheerful grandad next to me murmured “I was a scooter-boy!”). Two newer generations all around, though, cheered every roaring number, as the onstage band flowed around with blasting saxophone and fierce drum-beat, reminding us what ferocious fun pop was long before today’s angry rap and morose break-up songs. Everyone erupts at old Stones numbers like “Not Fade Away” and My Generation, but there’s sweetnesss in “What becomes of the Broken Hearted’ and Robbie’s astonishment at his new baby “Can’t take my eyes off o’you”.
It’s a nimble company of actor-musicians, only ten in all, deftly moving in and out of characters. Claire Lee Shenfield as Caroline is particularly nifty, blasting out Lulu’s terrifying “Shout!”in glee as she marries her Robbie on the ship “under Panamanian law’, then with gentle sweetness crooning “You’re my world!” when it turns out she’s both pregnant not not technically married. Jake Halsey-Jones as Robbie is pretty adorable too, leading the fierce band in |Not Fade Away, twistin’ and shoutin’ in between cracking very terrible DJ jokes and introducing jingles for forgotten names. Director Douglas Rintoul knows to keep his young cast moving, leaping and springing on and off tables, playing emotion and abruptly becoming bandsmen (I specially enjoyed the Postmaster-General suddenly taking over the drum kit)
It’s the simplest of plots, sometimes properly sweet as Eloise Richardson plays the heroine’s supportive friend Mary and Caroline defends herself to her washtub mother : this artfully prevents the show from feeling overbearingly macho (because pop, frankly, used to be just that)
www.wolseytheatre.co.uk to 2 May
then: QUeens, Hornchurch, New Theatre Peterborough , Mercury Colchester, Theatre Royal Bury St Edmunds to end June
RATING 4







