Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The director and cast members taking leading roles in The Workshop Players’ upcoming production of My Fair Lady, talk of the challenges of putting on such a legendary musical for their 25th jubilee

- By Shakya Wickramana­yake The two Doolittles: Sulakshana Dias Amaratunga and Vishan Gunawarden­a

Most anyone will agree that songs such as ‘Wouldn’t it be loverly’ and the ‘The Rain in Spain’ transport them back to their childhood, when they watched Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison in Lerner and Loewe’s ‘My Fair Lady’. The 1964 film captured people’s hearts and half a century later, still has the power to move an audience.

This October The Workshop Players for their 25th anniversar­y will recreate the magic of the Broadway version of ‘My Fair Lady’. Known for staging many well-known musicals, The Workshop Players (WSP) seek to introduce a whole new generation to ‘My Fair Lady’, and take all those who fell in love with it years ago down memory lane with this production.

The cast will feature mostly seasoned Workshop Players taking lead roles, with the exception of the role of Eliza. Founder director of the WSP, Jerome L. De Silva is out of the director’s seat and on stage as Col. Pickering. Surein De S. Wijeyeratn­e, Assistant Artistic Director of the WSP will be directing and tells us that the production will be based on the Broadway musical rather than the film, which was in fact adapted from the musical. But he assures audiences that the difference­s between the musical and the film aren’t many and that everything people loved about the film will be in the musical. “Watching (the musical), you see why the movie was made,” he says.

Taking on the all-important role of Eliza Doolittle, the Cockney flower girl, are Daniella Perera (19) and Amarsha Tissera (20). Daniella, who just completed her A’Levels, at Holy Family Convent, Bambalapit­iya and Amarsha who schooled at Lyceum, Wattala and is now reading for her LLB, are both newcomers to the WSP. They have modelled their portrayal on the unforgetta­ble Audrey Hepburn, having grown up watching the movie.

“Audrey is our bread and butter. We absorbed it all,” says Daniella. They seem not to be too daunted by the fact that their first major role outside school is the iconic Eliza and that this production marks the 25th anniversar­y of the WSP. “I’m just trying to take care of myself and learning to focus on my part,” says Amarsha. Daniella says that she feels a sense of responsibi­lity knowing the significan­ce of the production but yet is still excited to go up on stage. And as for Eliza’s cockney accent, the duo found it relatively easy having grown up watching the film. “You go against all the rules of English you’ve learnt,” Daniella jokingly adds.

The use of accents in Sri Lankan theatre has always drawn mixed reactions, but in a play where the accent is a key element in the story, how does one approach it? “You need to balance things out. If you affect a full cockney accent, people won’t understand, but the play is about the accents,” says Surein, adding that regardless how they approach it people will have an opinion about it. But with such a familiar script, there is an advantage that most people will understand it, he says.

Having played Iago in WSP’s production of Othello, Javert in Les Miserables, and Eddie Carbone in A View From the Bridge, Kanishka Herath (26) is used to taking on abrasive and slightly misogynist­ic male characters. So it’s no surprise that he’ll be playing Henry Higgins, the eccentric professor who takes a bet with his best friend (Colonel Pickering) to transform the lowly flower girl Eliza into a ‘lady’. Kanishka considered the portrayal of Higgins as one of his childhood favourites but admits that quite a few women will cringe when his character sings “Hymn to Him” and “Ordinary Man”.

Kanishka who’s in WSP’s organizing committee is not awed by it being their 25th anniversar­y show. “We take the play on its own. We just want to make sure it’s a good show,” he says, a sentiment shared by Surein who says there is no added pressure but the fact that the film is well loved and much watched means that it will be a challenge to meet people’s expectatio­ns but they are confident they can. “Obviously there

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