Total Rating: 
***1/2
Opened: 
April 9, 2003
Ended: 
September 30, 2003
Other Dates: 
Transferred to Cambridge Theatre October 14, 2003; Ended 2005
Country: 
England
City: 
London
Company/Producers: 
Avalon Promotions & Allan McKeown w/ National Theatre & BAC
Theater Type: 
International
Theater: 
National Theatre - Lyttelton
Theater Address: 
South Bank
Phone: 
011-44-207-452-300
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 15 min
Genre: 
Opera
Author: 
Book/Lyrics: Stewart Lee & Richard Thomas; Music; Richard Thomas
Director: 
Stewart Lee
Review: 

 What a coincidence: the new Jerry Springer is named David Soul. And award-winning (2004 Olivier for Best Actor) David Bedella, fresh from time out for filming, re-sizzles as Jerry's Warm-Up Man, and later Satan. Both look and act their risky parts perfectly in this raucous send-up of one "Jerry Springer moment" (on TV) after another (finally in hell, which is really not much different).

In scatological symmetry, onstage choruses in faddish dress and hair non-styles sing obscenities while MC and crew work them up yet - and this applies equally to the audience - rule out hurling things, heckling, throwing up, fighting. After Jerry finally descends central stairs in Follies manner, it's on to Guests With Guilty Secrets. Unsurprisingly, they're mostly sexual or related to bodily functions and psychological malfunctions. Brilliant music and lyrics and, at the same time, unpleasant characters, situations, language that mirror the real Springer TV show elicit memorably over-the-top performances.

When the second half of The Opera moves to hell, David Bedella, with gleaming eyes, seems in his element as a red-suited, suave Satan, just as Leon Craig's flabby and fetish-filled Montel slips unexpectedly comfortably into the swaddling clothes of grown-up Jesus. A pieta brings the blasphemy further. No wonder even Benjamin Lake's still fatter God sings, "It ain't easy being big, being Me."

Perhaps because Jerry Springer's satire is so broad, the show feels more funny than nasty. Or maybe, like Springer fans who merely "eat, excrete, and watch TV," audiences of The Opera constitute a comparable if more sophisticated cult. As for Jerry, after he is shot, he tries to convince us that he doesn't create or solve problems: "I just televise them."

So what does The Opera mean? Is it merely destructive satire or is there a corrective center? Is it really a salacious money-making come-on? Could it be that it simply offers outrageous fun lavishly staged and cleverly set to music? Should anyone care?

Parental: 
adult themes, nudity, smoking
Cast: 
David Soul (Jerry); Guy Porritt, David Bedella, Benjamin Lake, Carrie Ellis, Claire Platt, Ryan Molloy, Leon Craig, Annabelle Williams, Alison Jiear, Christopher Key.
Technical: 
Music Dir: Michael England; Sets: Julian Crouch; Choreography: Jenny Arnold; Costumes; Leah Archer; Lighting: Rick Fisher; Music Arr/Orchestrations: Martin Koch; Sound: Mike Walker; Fight Director: Terry King; Hair/Makeup: Evan Mareges Moore.
Awards: 
Olivier Award: Best Musical
Other Critics: 
SUNDAY TIMES John Peters !; TOTALTHEATRE Caldwell Titcomb !
Miscellaneous: 
The first performance of <I>Jerry Springer</I> was at the National Theatre, April 9, 2003.
Critic: 
Marie J. Kilker
Date Reviewed: 
October 2004