To a casual observer, a musical comedy about a world war sounds like an endeavour doomed to fail. After all, particularly in this day and age, what humour is there to derive from war?
Operation Mincemeat is a theatre show unlike any other. It has a cast of five, who change characters as easily as day turns into night. What this cast do is something extraordinary. They take a dark, fearful period in history, and a plot that had all the potential to fail and cost us the war, and turn it into a piece of theatre that is side splittingly funny, but also isn't afraid to tap into raw emotion every now and then.
The plot is around a scheme devised by the British to fool Hitler and his armies to divert them away from Sicily, where we planned to invade, and direct them to Sardinia. How do they plan to do this? Well, I won't spoil it, but it does involve creativity and genius that we forget sometimes the army, MI5, and other intelligent agencies build their strategies from.
It's not necessarily the strategy and how it's enacted that makes this such a wonderful piece of theatre, however, because what really needs to sell a piece of theatre about the war is the humans in the thick of it.
You can't, after all, do any piece of theatre about the war and not focus on the human side of it, not just the decisions made in the name of protecting our lands and our freedoms, but what was lost along the path to victory.
Dear Bill, for example, was a poignant song that could've sounded very silly in the wrong hands, but the way it was sung it quickly became clear that whilst the intention was to initially demonstrate an example of a letter a loved one may write to their partner fighting in the war, it drew from experience and that made it a thousand times more powerful. The fact the audience held their breath all the way through the song is testimony to how emotional and moving the song was.
The forces behind the musical were Natasha Hodgson, David Cumming, Felix Hagan and Zoe Robert. I think the fact there is such a thriving fandom behind the musical is a testimony to how their brains and creativity work. A new musical can either sink or float in this industry, and this musical has already taken on a new life of its own, with each performance a new take on the script, and with the difference range of characters and cast combinations, you are never likely to see the same musical twice.
The cast I got to see was Natasha Hodgson, David Cumming, Claire Marie-Hall, Christian Andrews and Zoe Roberts, and each of them shone spectacularly in their roles, encompassing each new character with as much ease as it took to slide on a new piece of costume. Each comedy line went down a treat with the audience, and the rawest moments equally were treated with due care and respect, as, after all, it was a theatre show born from one of life's most difficult periods.
Songs like Born to Lead and A Glitzy Finale opened and closed the show in spectacular fashion, summarising the start and end points of the characters in this period, whilst paying respectful tribute to the real life people behind the roles.
There is a danger sometimes if we make a musical about a real life event, it takes something away from the reality, because real life is not a song and dance, it isn't a string of silly quips and quick costume changes.
War as we are seeing every day in some part of the world or other, is brutal and sad and tragic and desperate. We don't always see the heroes behind the scenes who draft the battle plans, who make the life and death decisions, who weigh up ethical conundrums against the preservation of life; we just see the men carrying out the orders.
What Operation Mincemeat does well I think is that it brings these heroes in the shadows forward, and makes sure they are recognised and appreciated. I think musicals can spark life into history, as is proven by the success of the musicals Six and Les Mis, even if you have to insert some fiction to give it that little spark. We just have to recognise the reality behind the story as well as enjoy the amazing performances the cast give us.
After all, real life war, real life history, is not something to sing or dance about, but even in the darkest of times, hope is a prevalent force, and that is something to celebrate and give a stage for. The moments of victory in between the struggles and defeats, is what life is truly worth living for. Operation Mincemeat not only showcases this point, but it does its best to educate and enchant its audience from the very first note, to the last bow.
The cast, creators, musicians, directors and all other creative forces should be very proud. Their own little operation, Operation Putting On An Amazing Show, was a triumph. I cannot wait to see it again and again and again.
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