The Scotsman

Flashdance

Playhouse, Edinburgh

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

IT’S a genre in itself, the 1980s movie-turned-musical about dance as a symbol of freedom and self-realisatio­n; and Flashdance is perhaps the

most powerful of them all, a story that pumps out the usual follow-your-dreams ideology of an individual­istic age, but also shows a strong, self-aware scepticism about whether personal dreams are always the answer, when you live in a rustbelt city devastated by economic change.

The heroine – played with real passion at the Playhouse this week by Verity Jones – is Alex Owens, a working-class Pittsburgh girl who works as a welder by day and a burlesque bar dancer by night, but dreams of one day becoming a fully trained “proper” dancer. Her story is complicate­d by her burgeoning romance with the boss’s son, Nick, tasked

with sacking many of Alex’s co-workers; and in songs like Nick’s Justice In The World, the show glimpses a political complexity that is less present in more familiar big numbers like Maniac and What A Feeling.

So there’s plenty to enjoy from all kinds of angles in the latest touring version of Flashdance. The script and lyrics are as sharp and witty as ever, Matt Cole’s choreograp­hy is smart, sexy and full of explosive energy, the central performanc­es – particular­ly from the women in the cast – are gorgeous, heartfelt and hard to fault; and even on a bleak January evening, the 16-strong cast give the story of Alex and her world everything they’ve got, in two hours of vivid, passionate entertainm­ent that will leave you tapping your feet and singing the tunes, as you head out into the chilly night. Finalperfo­rmancestod­ay;alsoathis Majesty’stheatre,aberdeen,4-9june.

 ??  ?? Verity Jones and the women give a performanc­e hard to fault
Verity Jones and the women give a performanc­e hard to fault

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