What: 🎵 Andre Schwartz - Any Dream will do - My Pad met Webber
https://tickets.tixsa.co.za/event/andre-schwartz-any-dream-will-do-my-pad-met-webberynlysdt
When:
Where: 🕳 After Dark @MacFee
How much:
🎟️ R150.00Balcony
🎟️ R230.00Main Floor
Music of the Night - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfV88epo23g
In this bilingual production, Schwartz explores his relationship with all that
is Andrew Lloyd Webber. A relationship that started when he encountered
Andrew’s work for the first time at the age of 12 upon seeing Joseph and his
amazing technicolor Dreamcoat. He utilizes this connection with Webber as well
as further interactions as a platform from which to tell his own life story.
Stripped. Raw. Vulnerable.
Schwartz’ Mother, who had a substantial influence on his life is quoted as
saying: “Weave your coat and create a tapestry of colors, let it shine as
brightly as you want it to, dream whatever you want, even if dreams and
reality become indistinguishable. You decide your own truth, but always
remember your way home.”
Home is where the truth lies for Andre. Varying between moments when his coat
shone vividly becoming the first Phantom in South Africa with Webber’s seal of
approval, to moments where every hint of colour faded from his coat, upon
receiving a diagnosis of Motor Neuron Disease.
The narrative as well as songs, such as Any Dream will Do, You must love Me,
Music of the Night, No Matter What, Memory and Send in the Clowns, weave
together forming a unit that places this piece firmly in the genre of pure
theatre. If you are expecting a “lounge music” version of any of these
favorites, then you are coming to the wrong show.
Send in the Clowns is the only song in the production that is not written by
Webber. “I marvel at the insolence of young artists who think they have owned
the right to interpret this song. Their waltz with time is brimming with life.
Whereas we, from whom youth has deserted, realize the ultimate clown” says
Schwartz.
The songs are presented unguarded, stripped and shamelessly honest - as is
Schwartz’s life story.
The show moves between moments of immense pain experienced by the artist, to
exalted moments of hope and inspiration – the key message of the show. Humour
is omnipresent and razor-sharp – very often self-demeaning.
Packed houses, standing ovations, rave reviews and theatre nominations around
the country are testament to the success of this production.