LAMMPS’ ‘The Lightning Thief’ Uplifts & Entertains

The Lightning Thief by LAMMPS (Leeds Amateur Medics Musical & Performance Society) honours Rick Riordan’s classic tween novel whilst securing many laughs in this upbeat, accomplished and tightly packed full of talent, musical adaption. A constant pace and an entire cast consisting of strong singers means this European musical debut showing at Riley Smith Theatre is a definite success. Lightness and laughter results in a highly watchable production which brings out warm fuzzy feels and above all funny, feel-good storytelling.

Rick Riordan’s smash hit and seriously good first Percy Jackson novel merits exactly the style of musical treatment which LAMMPS delivered: enthusiastic, occasionally sincere, consistently technically adept, and subtly self-aware throughout. Starting the musical with characters singing doing simplistic chorography conveying how they feel, created both familiarity and informality. Percy Jackson’s central theme is the plight and yearning of its underage ‘demigods’ – whimsically explained through song – and songs were the perfect vehicle to feature these individual tales succinctly and interestingly. There were no overpowering Ancient Greek style narrators, instead where production and cast truly showed off, was in the action.

Image: Abby Swain

Tone established, Cameron Mullin who superbly realised twelve-year-old Percy Jackson, was an asset to the production with his rousing vocal ability, comedic knowhow, and solid characterisation. Present in nearly every scene, Mullin’s energetic eyes, impressive clarity of diction in speedy American-accented singing and easy rapport with others meant the zany two-act show went on without drag. As Mullin was always in character as the fictional baby of the cast, the child, the show could diverge elsewhere in approach whilst retaining its heart. Percy was the one who exhibited realistic character growth. Mullin’s restless cartoonish zeal – awkward arms and splayed hands – did not disappear but as shown from the Act 1 finale and onwards, he matured. In this believable, intriguing world, an updated mythological twist of good versus evil, the main character needed the most humanity to sell this implicit coming-of-age story.

Alongside Percy, the cast had a winning combination of protagonists, main characters, cameo characters, and principals. This meant there was a variety of visual feasts in the foreground, background, and stage scenery whenever the ensemble cast united to tell fabulous mini stories. An assured use of staging levels meant minor characters could visually represent flashbacks, points or illusions which was not overdone nor distracting. The Lightning Thief made complete sense as a musical when its main Camp Half-Blood setting was revealed; its happy, youth-orientated songs reflective of any summer camp. The contrasting colour scheme of ocean blue and contrasting heroic orange was smartly utilised in stand-out moments where chromatic seas of bodies flowed elementally across the stage. The costumes further in flourishes, grouped the classical and ‘70s disco, which together with particular plot-points, gave the performance a groovy surface. The cast’s collective silliness effectively undercut impressive, earnest main characters.

Image: Abby Swain

Also, the large cast enabled scene-stealing characters to return later to the proceedings to big cheers from the lively audience. Grumbling head of camp Mr. D, Cara Staniforth, jazzed it up hilariously whilst Percy’s other teacher Mr Brunner, Henry Marshall, brought paternal concern and physical humour. Smooth-talking Poseidon, Abraham Sondhi, boastfully gruff Ares, Ciara Devlin, and delightfully upfront Hades, Kayleigh Corbin, made the gods useless parents and adults. These camp, colourful characters returning on stage led each time to a bit of Bacchanalian bravado – a cheeky nod and a cheekier shimmer – but most importantly, the cast knew to reign it in.

The directorial decision by Ruth Rusnak to allow laughs, but not to indulge in sending-up characters, paid off in a funny but never deliberately provocative show. Actors were kept at their best in a production which was like a zippy train, a forceful motion periodically aided by the intelligent use of a well-timed projected screen. A small criticism would be that some songs intrinsically were too expositional, a breathless way to communicate a book’s plot. When the plot slowed down, the songs soared, and this was when Niamh Robinson’s ensemble chorography triumphed. Charon’s, Adele Kirby, tour of the underworld and the catch-the-flag songs, were wow moments for all involved.

As well as the great lead, integral to the story’s smooth running were the other brilliantly acted members of the main trio: Natalie Hall playing Annabeth and Grover as Mya Lane. Best friends Percy and Grover’s friendly chemistry was an underlying strength and Hall impeccably brought out Annabeth’s nuanced bright nature. Both carried scenes and sang fantastically throughout. Luke played by Zak Muggleton impressed with his rich voice and dimensionality. Whilst Percy’s mom Sally portrayed by Leah Greenman acted and sang with beautiful tenderness, pivotal for the show’s emotional appeal. The performance was kept buoyant by constant comedy and elevated by main characters who sang their way past relatability and into enticing, truthful characters.

Incredible leads, a cohesive cast, and considerable humour makes LAMMP’S The Lightning Thief a victory for musical theatre adaptations. A must-watch production for the family and as shown here, for students.

Cover image courtesy of LAMMPS

Dev Halls’ High School Musical is an earnest love letter to the franchise

On Friday 25th February Devonshire Hall and the LUU Backstage Society concluded their three day run of ‘High School Musical on Stage!’, directed by Jess Simmons and based on the original High School Musical film. The adaptation follows the same course as the film, focusing on American high schoolers torn between the expectations placed on them by their cliques and their creative desires hidden within.

Immediately noticeable is the love that both audience and production have for the High School Musical property. The mania surrounding the 2006 made-for-TV film had to be experienced to be understood, which this production benefits from due to the cast and crew being made up entirely of first year students. The audience was immersed from the get-go, with the customary phones-off announcement concluded with “What team?”, and the audience’s emphatic roar of “Wildcats!”, highlighting just how embedded the film is in early Gen Z culture; I was sat alone and the Wildcat reflex took over me nonetheless. Although the American accents of almost every character left something to be desired, they weren’t especially distracting and almost complimented the endearingly cheesy nature of the franchise. The transitions were seamless, the sets charming and the lighting appropriately utilised throughout.

Credit: Jackie Slipper

The musical is instantly set apart from the film, with Sean Lomas as Troy singing the songs himself, which is more than can be said for Zac Efron in the first film. Lomas especially impressed when allowed to sing in a higher vocal range than songs like ‘Get’cha Head in the Game’ allow, and shone in ‘What I’ve Been Looking For’. The highlight of Elise McCracken’s consistent performance was in her solo, ‘When There Was Me and You’, with her vocal flourishes impressing throughout.

Any High School Musical fan will understand that the true star is Sharpay. She was played adeptly by Caitlin Lister who completely understood the assignment with all the sass and drama expected from the character matched with her own powerful, belting voice that outshone Ashley Tisdale’s by a mile. Josh King provides a refreshingly tortured aspect to Ryan, an oft overlooked character who finds solace only in his (perfectly executed) jazz squares. Maisy Dodd beautifully dominated the stage with her rendition of Ms Darbus, bringing all of the overacting and theatrics expected of her character and delighting the audience with nods to the romantic chemistry between herself and Coach Bolton (Uma Dell).

Credit: Jackie Slipper

The musical standout of the production was certainly ‘Stick to the Status Quo’, with the stage being fully utilised and eliciting a wonderful audience response. Especially notable was the surprisingly powerful verse by Sam Bolles as Zeke and the relentless ‘popping and locking’ of Charlotte Haren as Martha. The live band performed stunningly all night, with the inclusion of a full brass section serving to highlight the dedication of those behind the production.

High School Musical on Stage! proved to be an earnest love letter to the franchise, the inclusion of brick phones and chunky laptops showing an eye for detail and a level of care and passion that felt completely natural for a production led by those who grew up on High School Musical. Knowing that there is also a production of High School Musical 2: On Stage! in existence, one can only hope that the talented Backstage Society will cast their eyes towards a sequel.