Evita review – a work of screaming fun

Regent’s Park Open Air theatre, London
Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical is so often staged it’s tough to make it fresh, but Jamie Lloyd and co rise to the challenge

Apparently there are 250 babies born every minute; productions of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Evita can’t be far behind. One wonders how a show that is so stupendously successful around the globe that even kids know the words to songs about wayward fiscal policy can keep itself fresh. Jamie Lloyd and company have managed it in the open air of Regent’s Park.

That Tim Rice’s songs have become ubiquitous requires each separate element to work harder, which is where superb lighting and design come into their own. As does Fabian Aloise’s choreography, which as well as the typical tango and salsa styles also nods to the Thriller dance and b-boying. White canvas pumps, worn by the whole cast, slide across the stage in moonwalks.

Trent Saunders is superb and charismatic as disillusioned narrator Che, and it’s clever costuming to have him wearing one of those red Che Guevara T-shirts (think: Camden market or your university boyfriend), which he briefly exchanges for a Peronism tee when swept up during A New Argentina.

Every sinew of the ensemble is on display here, all knocking it out of the park. Samantha Pauly in the title role nails all the comic touches, leaving it late to transform into the blond Eva of the popular imagination, her change of style aided by cast members wielding spray cans.

Lloyd’s Evita isn’t as high-emotion as some can be, but it’s a work of screaming fun, from the flares and ticker tape to the booty-shaking and the knicker-throwing. On a more serious note, it’s an interesting time to watch an exploration of a divisive figure straddling politics and entertainment when the world is currently ruled by them. Still, I’m not sure Ivanka: the Musical would have the same impact.

• Evita is at the Regent’s Park Open Air theatre, London, until 21 September

Contributor

Hannah Jane Parkinson

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Christmas shows: Evita; Peter Pan review – from Argentina to Neverland, a search for connection
The action feels distanced in Nikolai Foster’s coolly striking new production of the Lloyd Webber-Rice musical, while turmoil stalks the Darling household in Cardiff

Clare Brennan

17, Dec, 2023 @11:30 AM

Article image
The Wizard of Oz; Million Dollar Quartet; Great Expectations; And the Rain Falls Down – review

Andrew Lloyd Webber makes plenty of new friends for Dorothy as 50s rockers reunite and Dickens crosses to India, writes Kate Kellaway

Kate Kellaway

06, Mar, 2011 @12:04 AM

Article image
Evita review – breathtaking inventiveness and quicksilver fluency
From the archive: Michael Billington reviews the opening night of Evita with Elaine Paige and David Essex in June 1978

Michael Billington

22, Sep, 2014 @11:52 AM

Article image
The week in theatre: Cinderella; Carousel – review
Andrew Lloyd Webber’s new musical, sparkily scripted by Emerald Fennell, goes to the ball at last. And Carousel gets a salty reworking

Susannah Clapp

22, Aug, 2021 @9:30 AM

Article image
Sunset Boulevard review – sandblasting panache from Glenn Close
A glittering Glenn Close is ready once again for her close-up as Norma Desmond

Susannah Clapp

10, Apr, 2016 @7:00 AM

Article image
School of Rock review – top marks for Andrew Lloyd Webber
Lloyd Webber delivers a rabble-rousing musical with a big heart and the best drilled young actors this side of Matilda

Susannah Clapp

20, Nov, 2016 @7:55 AM

Article image
Whistle Down the Wind review – outstanding production of the Lloyd Webber musical
Tom Jackson Greaves thrillingly fuses movement with music in his revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Louisiana-set take on the classic 60s film

Clare Brennan

31, Jul, 2022 @10:30 AM

Article image
The week in theatre: Aspects of Love; Rose; The Shape of Things – review
A superb cast, including opera star Danielle de Niese, elevates Andrew Lloyd Webber’s plodding 80s musical; Maureen Lipman gives a one-woman masterclass; and Neil LaBute’s romcom gets a sharp, funny revival

Kate Kellaway

04, Jun, 2023 @9:30 AM

Article image
Evita review – oh what a circus as musical gets bizarre update
Argentina’s Eva Perón is reimagined as a modern-day influencer in an incoherent production lacking context

Miriam Gillinson

01, Dec, 2023 @11:00 PM

Article image
Evita review: Tina Arena is resplendent and tough as designer dictator
In Opera Australia’s production, Eva Perón wins over a nation with a Christian Dior dress and steely determination, and a killer ballad steals the show

Clarissa Sebag-Montefiore

20, Sep, 2018 @3:42 AM