One must ask why director Sasha Regan let Betty Blue Eyes‘ big number get away so badly. But the questions don’t stop there. The lighting design is noticeably problematic, you start to wonder what went wrong. For a fun, fizzy show, the cast are frequently lit from overhead rather than from the front, creating unintentionally dark shadows on the cast, and indeed the show. Staircases are lit while performers are talking elsewhere. This may suggest a lack of technical rehearsal time, although the decision to swathe so much haze on the stage, that you expect Brigadoon to emerge from the fog at any time, must land at the lighting designer’s door.
Reuben Speed‘s set design is another disaster. Trying to be all things, it ends up being nothing – only making sense when devoid of performers. The single moment it works is when the planning committee of Shepherdsford are literally talking down to Gilbert Chilvers from the upper lever of the set. But for most of the show, the set feels crammed into too small a space, the actors having to dodge practical lights as they descend stairs or play scenes from behind where the set is obscuring the action.
You would think that the director and producer who is the founder of Union Theatre, who has directed such exquisite productions such as Iolanthe at Wilton’s Music Hall, would understand the challenges of her own venue. The seating rake is poor so anything performed on the floor will be invisible to half the audience further back in the auditorium. Betty herself, the pig named in honour of Princess Elizabeth, is a gorgeous piece of puppetry. Her fabric-patchwork design feels right for the make-do-and-mend era in which the piece is set. Georgia Boothman‘s skill in making Betty real is extraordinary. She could make you vegan by the end of the show given the care and attention she gives to animating Betty. However the director’s decision to put the pig on the floor during her own theme song, the infectious Betty Blue Eyes, rendering her invisible for half the audience, is a baffling decision.
Later, a pivotal moment when Gilbert and Joyce first meet, explaining why these two different characters ever got together, is played…guess where…at floor level!
There are many factors that make this production of Betty Blue Eyes timely and important. It’s the first in-house production at the Union Theatre since Covid. It’s the first London revival of Betty Blue Eyes. The timing of the run-up to a big Royal event, while a cost-of-living crisis is happening, is uncanny. The Union Theatre has just received a £120,000 bill from their landlord. So it’s bewildering that this production fails to seize the moment. With a glorious cast and a note-perfect performance by leading man Sam Kipling, this should have been a rave. Instead while the cast are fantastic, the production makes a pig’s ear of it.