The article published by Vanessa
Thorpe on the website observer.guardian.co.uk on the 24th o March, 2013 is headlined
“Reality TV is harming the theatre”. The
article reports at length that the doyenne of dance, Gillian Lynne, who is soon
to receive an Olivier special award, believes culture of instant fame is bad
for stage shows.
Speaking of the
situation it is interesting to note that the woman behind a host of bestselling
West End shows over the past 30 years is worried about the future of the
industry. Gillian Lynne, the doyenne of live dance as choreographer of Cats, The
Phantom of The Opera and Aspects of Love, is to receive an Olivier
award for lifetime achievement next month. She told the Observer she
senses a growing threat to musical theatre from television.
It is an open secret
that at 87, Lynne is the most successful choreographer of several generations.
The Olivier award will celebrate her contribution to theatre and a career she
believes has been built ona commitment to her art and a dislike of shortcuts.
In spite of a close working relationship with Lord Lloyd-Webber, who uses TV
contests to pick out his new stage stars, Lynne fears the reliance on
celebrities has undermined her craft.
There is some
comment on that her Olivier award means she joins an elite list of previous
recipients, including Lloyd Webber, Stephen Sondheim, Dame Maggie Smith and Sir
Alan Ayckbourn. The ceremony in London will crown a career in which she has danced with
both Frederick Ashton and Fred Astaire. It’s necessary to note that Lynne
danced the Black Queen in Checkmate, among other leading roles, at the
Royal Opera House, where Dame Ninette de Valois picked her out as a rebel. Eventually,
Lynne left Covent Garden, returning much later to choreograph and dance in
opera interludes. In recent years, she has complained that the Royal Ballet has
let its dancers forget the sensuality of dance.
The article draws a
conclusion that in the West End, where she appeared on stage with Dudley Moore
and then worked with Anthony Newley on the revue show The Roar of the
Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd, Lynne blossomed. To my mind, we must
be proud of such magnificent choreographers. Gillian Lynne is a doyenne o dance
nowadays and what a pity we know so little about her interesting life and her
brilliant career.
GOOD!
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The article reports at length that the doyenne of dance, Gillian Lynne, who is soon to receive an Olivier special award, believes THAT culture of instant fame is bad for stage shows.
THE ARTICLE STRESSE THAT (RATHER THAN -There is some comment on that) her Olivier award means she joins an elite list of previous recipients,