The Daily Telegraph

Lock up your doubters – this is as good as we’ve been told

- Dominic Cavendish CHIEF THEATRE CRITIC

‘Alexander Hamilton – my name is Alexander Hamilton – and there’s a million things I haven’t done but just you wait, just you wait.” The cheer that goes up in the gloriously renovated Victoria Palace theatre when Jamael Westman steps forward, solemn, serene and self-possessed, introducin­g the hero of Lin-manuel Miranda’s musical phenomenon – the most talked-about show of the century – is like the rapture of a crowd of believers meeting their saviour.

The fervour that attends this show – which retells the story of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the US Treasury, using a predominan­tly non-white cast and a welter of rap – is off the scale. “The Greatest Show on Earth”, one paper declared. C’mon! But seriously folks, there’s going to be more where that came from, because – lock up your doubters: it really is as good as we’ve been told. Can you quibble that it’s a bit too cold, a bit too clever, and a bit too crammed with exposition? Perhaps, but it displays an artistic sophistica­tion that makes most of its British counterpar­ts look like they’re mumbling into their shoes.

On stage, it sounds, first off, amazing – studio-recording levels of clarity. A bullet-hail of words comes our way – witty, lacerating, compact and playful; thanks to director Thomas Kail, his team and the mainly British cast (across the board superlativ­e) you barely miss a syllable. And you’ll be spoilt for choice as to what to come out humming. Streetwise and collegesma­rt, Miranda does things with rap so nifty that even people who hate it will relent, and he keeps shifting tempo and mood, a magpie maestro: there are roof-raising soul numbers, achingly tender ballads too, here a nod to Gilbert and Sullivan, there a hint of Kander and Ebb. Thanks to the through-sung craft and graft of the piece, though, they form a unified whole.

It also looks remarkably appealing: the aesthetic is very stripped-back but the towering brick-walls (with wooden walkways) combine with precisiont­ooled choreograp­hy to create a sense of gravitas and whirling lightness.

In the course of over two and half hours, we’re spun through the profession­al travails and private torments (drawn from the 2004 Ron Chernow biography) of a fascinatin­g and under-sung Founding Father as he races from impoverish­ed Caribbean origins to the heart of George Washington’s inaugural presidency, taking in heroism in the War of Independen­ce, scholastic endeavour in the drafting of the Constituti­on, and a whole heap of politickin­g that culminated in his death in a duel at the hands of his rival Aaron Burr (Giles Terera). Yet even that doesn’t do justice to the experience, because the ingenious collision of contempora­ry sounds and “colour-conscious” casting with period-dressed historical subjectmat­ter makes us see this epic as a biography of the dawn of the USA. Who knew the birth-pangs of a nation could bring so much pleasure? Even if you miss some references, you feel the gist: there’s a continuum between then and now and it’s thrillingl­y compounded by the fact that America’s nemesis George III (a tour-de-force from Michael Jibson as the comic show-stopper) once lived round the corner; he bought what became Buckingham Palace.

So, far from standing at one aloof remove from this foreign import, then, it’s as if a vast arc of history, spanning centuries, has come full circle here. Look what we managed to do after we left you, the show says, in playfulnes­s not anger. The awed answer from our side can only be: like, wow.

 ??  ?? Immigrants, we get the job done: Jamael Westman plays Alexander Hamilton, above
Immigrants, we get the job done: Jamael Westman plays Alexander Hamilton, above
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