The Scotsman

A glorious, world-class piece of Christmas entertainm­ent

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0 Benny Young is an irascible Scrooge in A Christmas Carol

Bob Cratchit, gazing at his little sick son Tiny Tim – one of Rachael Cannning’s superb puppets – with an intensity of love that fairly rends the heart, the cold misery and cruelty of a creed that treats people as dispensabl­e is exposed with such exhilarati­ng clarity that the Glasgow audience seem set to storm the stage in agreement.

The singing is magnificen­t, the carols are heart-lifting, the sheer craftsmans­hip of the production astonishin­g, as it flows from scene to scene, ghost to ghost. And to see it all on the great thrust stage of Tramway 1, with the audience on three sides, is a bonus; in a show that celebrates community, solidarity and love, in a time when we could hardly need those values more.

And then it’s off on the yellow brick road to Pitlochry, where associate director Gemma Fairlie treats the audience to a delightful, spectacula­r and inventive version of The Wizard of Oz, full of wonderful dance, movement and aerial work (choreograp­her Rebecca Howell) and driven along by a flawless performanc­e from musical director Dougie Flower and his fine ten-piece band. Like A Christmas Carol, The Wizard of Oz has plenty of contempora­ry resonances, not least in its take-down of a bombastic, autocratic leader who turns out to be nothing but a frightened man in a suit, and in its analysis of the qualities ordinary folks need – brains, heart, courage – in order genuinely to “take back control” of their lives.

In this gorgeous Christmas show, though, Fairlie lets Frank Baum’s book and Yip Harburg’s lyrics speak for themselves, as Rachel Flynn’s lovely Dorothy sets out with Toto – first an adorable real dog, then, in Oz, an equally adorable puppet – to conquer the wicked witch, and find her way home; and she’s surrounded by a 14-strong ensemble who fairly dazzle with the range of their singing, acting and movement skills, as well as by three teams of Perthshire youngsters who play various Munchkins with magnificen­t poise and flair.

Add some brilliantl­y effective design by Hannah Wolff, reaching its high point in a spectacula­r glowing-green ensemble version of The Merry Old Land of Oz that has the audience roaring its approval, and you have a musical production of real West End quality, and with added Perthshire warmth and heart, that seems set to give the theatre in the hills a Christmas season to remember.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

 ?? PICTURE: DOUGLAS MCBRIDE ?? 0 The Wizard Of Oz is full of wonderful dance, movement and aerial work
PICTURE: DOUGLAS MCBRIDE 0 The Wizard Of Oz is full of wonderful dance, movement and aerial work
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