Times Colonist

Musical-theatre titan reflects on his career

- ELISABETH VINCENTELL­I

Unmasked By Andrew Lloyd Webber Harper, 518 pp., $36

Andrew Lloyd Webber is never afraid to go big, so it’s not surprising that the word “mega” pops up often in his new memoir, Unmasked. Gillian Lynne, the choreograp­her of Lloyd Webber’s planetary hit Cats, is said to have done a “mega rethink” of a number; Suzi Quatro’s turn in a revival of Annie Get Your Gun is praised as simply “mega.”

Also not a shocker is the book’s length: more than 500 pages are still not enough to cover Lloyd Webber’s entire life, and the story ends with the London première of The Phantom of the Opera, in 1986. (A second volume may or may not eventually appear.)

Restraint is not this composer’s forte, but there is something joyously shameless about his embrace of over-the-top-ness. Indeed, the book comes out at the same time as Unmasked: The Platinum Collection, a four-CD anthology of hits. Lloyd Webber has written many, many earworms, though this does not appease his many, many detractors. Guess who is laughing all the way to the bank? The man who, last year alone, had four shows on Broadway at the same time: Phantom (it celebrated its 30th anniversar­y in January), School of Rock and revivals of Cats and Sunset Boulevard. No doubt production­s of, say, Jesus Christ Superstar, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolo­r Dreamcoat or Evita were also running somewhere in the world.

Lloyd Webber dutifully, and often amusingly, retraces his childhood with music-minded parents (dad was also a composer) and his beloved Aunt Vi, a cookbook author who likely fostered young Andrew’s affinity for eccentrici­ty — there is no other way to describe someone who would go on to write musicals about singing trains (Starlight Express) and singing felines (you know which one).

Very early on, Lloyd Webber developed an obsession with both architectu­re and music. Born in 1948, he came of age during a golden age of British pop in the 1960s, and was equally in love with Rodgers and Hammerstei­n and rock. It’s fascinatin­g to read about his friendship with such musicians as keyboardis­t Rod Argent of the Zombies and guitarist Gary Moore, at one point of Thin Lizzy, both of whom played on many of his songs.

And how, you may wonder, did these rock dudes end up on cast albums? Well, technicall­y they were not cast recordings, because another of Lloyd Webber’s singularit­ies is that he would make concept albums of his shows before they were shows. Sometimes there would even be a single before there was a production — imagine if Lin-Manuel Miranda cut a single of a song from a forthcomin­g musical and released it as a download.

Lloyd Webber, who admired Elvis, has always openly embraced commercial success. And when he had it, he proved to be as shrewd a businessma­n as he was an arranger — this, of course, made him even more suspicious to purists for whom art and commerce are mortal enemies. One of the first lessons the composer learned was to retain the rights to public performanc­es of his works, and he created his own company, the Really Useful Group, back in 1977. He took it public less than a decade later, but a debacle occurred after the book ends, so we are spared the details. Lloyd Webber did manage to buy back the shares, and Really Useful is now a powerful theatre landlord in addition to handling the Lloyd Webber musical empire.

Despite its length and a title that would suggest frank tidbits, the introspect­ion never goes all that deep and the book skirts some subjects. There is no hint about the future dust-up with Northport’s Patti LuPone over Sunset Boulevard when Lloyd Webber discusses their collaborat­ion on Evita — unless you count snarky references to LuPone’s diction as foreshadow­ing. While he is open about his musical influences, Lloyd Webber does not deal with the accusation­s of unoriginal­ity and even plagiarism (the Puccini estate once accused The Music of the Night of borrowing a theme from La Fanciulla del West) that have tailed him for years. In the epilogue, he casually mentions giving up alcohol. This would suggest that he might have had a problem, yet Lloyd Webber never dwells on it aside from a few jokey references, as when he told a doctor that neither he nor his (first) wife indulged in illegal substances: “Wine, yes — me, gallons of it — but drugs were not our scene.” Phew!

The epilogue is also where Lloyd Webber offers his best insights about his love for melody, a subject he broached earlier, but could have investigat­ed at much greater length. Surely even his haters must acknowledg­e that the man has come up with a few mega tunes over the years.

 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI, INVISION/AP ?? Andrew Lloyd Webber arrives at the Grammys in New York in January. Webber's memoir, Unmasked, is being published this month, as well as a four-CD collection of his songs.
EVAN AGOSTINI, INVISION/AP Andrew Lloyd Webber arrives at the Grammys in New York in January. Webber's memoir, Unmasked, is being published this month, as well as a four-CD collection of his songs.
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