FLOWERS, PHONETICS, PHABULOUS
Always a joy to have them back: the phoneticist and the flower-girl, born to enthral one another and us. Cheers first for Keziah Ibe as Eliza, fresh out of Arts Ed on a first professional job. She eooowessand garrrrns at the start with confidently alarming shrillness, then suddenly – as the opera-crowd leave the stage to Covent garden workers round a brazier – sings “Wouldn’t it be loverly” at first merrily then downstage with a brief wistful sadness, then again cosily with the gang. Ibe from the first sinks deeply into character, face, voice, and body: defying Higgins with brave frightened brio then winning every heart in the house when suddenly the knack comes to her, and the sweetness of her voice breaks through with “I could have danced all night!”. And you believe, and foresee, that the infuriating educator who showed her this power is the only man for her.
Hadley Fraser, playing Higgins to the OCD maximum, was to me an absolute joy: but then I am a sucker for anyone who can deliver complex Lerner-and-Loewe numbers while running at speed round a revolving living-room and shinning up a high library ladder in a rage about woman. I loved his wild physicality, including the theatrical cringing or rejoicing in the corner during Eliza’s eventual victories: he quite drove away memories of Rex Harrison in the film. My companion I should confess was less enthusiastic, yearning I think for more professorial dignity. But I thought him an absolute blast. So is Gary Milner’s spirited Doolittle, though it feels odder these days to laugh merrily at his willingness to sell his daughter to a random toff for a fiver.
But overall the joy of Rachel Kavanaugh’s production is its fabulous liveliness: a relief after the oddly flat feeling I had at her Barbican Top Hat. Stephen Mear’s choreography contributes much to its delight, and Peter McKintosh’s elegant, detailed but rapidly fluid set design carries the story through its three hours always bracingly. The costumes from East End to Ascot are magnificent: honour to Poppy Hall’s wardrobe team for flawless high-speed changes for the nimble ensemble. And almost best of all , the older women are wonderful. Finty Williams is Mrs Pearce the sensible housekeeper, reasoning with the appalling Higgins at the start and eventually, fondly, assistd by her team of eye-rolling maids helping him into his shirt and tie in his thwarted fury at Eliza’s flight. Rachel Stanley’s Mrs Eynsford-Hill is perfect, all hat and good manners, and even finer is Belinda Lang as Higgins’ own exasperated matriarch. When in the latter scenes Higgins and Eliza properly confront, the glint in the mother’s eye at the stage’s edge lights up the night. Luverly!
cft.org.uk to 5 sept
rating 5
extra mouse for set/costume…







