Can Anthony Warlow tackle Fiddler on the Roof?
Nicki Wendt (left) and Sigrid Thornton. Photo: Jeff Busby
In 2005 the famed Chaim Topol arrived down under to tour a production of Fiddler On The Roof around Australia and New Zealand for two years. Without meaning undue respect to the master of the role of Tevye, seeing one performance of that production could feel like you experienced the whole tour.
So it was great trepidation that greeted the news of a revival of Fiddler starring Anthony Warlow in the lead role. Warlow is without doubt one of, if not the greatest Australian musical stage performer. However, after his last musical journey to Russia in 2011’s Dr Zhivago received a decidedly tepid response, could Warlow breathe warmth into another?
Hell yes.
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To be fair, long before Warlow donned the traditional Jewish garb of Tevye, the milkman and father at the centre of this tale of this tale, director Roger Hodgman had overseen an update of the music, choreography and design of this classic piece of theatre that can genuinely lay claim to establishing musical theatre’s capacity to convey darker, deeper concepts than jazz hands and “I-love-him-I-hate-him-no-I-love-him” narratives.
See the intricate maneuvers of a set brilliantly inspired by nested matryoshka dolls. See the simple stage direction that articulates so much without words – or at times lyrics.
Crucially, this production has the ensemble to support and challenge Warlow. From Logie winner Sigrid Thornton to ARIA winner Lior, this is not a traditional musical cast, but then this is not a traditional musical.
Nicki Wendt (left) and Sigrid Thornton. Photo: Jeff Busby
The plot revolves around Tevye’s mission to marry off his five daughters, primarily the three eldest, who in turn challenge his views on tradition in differing ways. All this takes place under the cloud of the forthcoming pogroms. As such there is no fanfare finish to the first act nor the second.
Fiddler on the Roof has purpose and power. The question is always can it carry this weight. When it comes to the current production, the answer is an emphatic yes.
This is not a mournful Fiddler, nor a reverential one. Rather, this production, like the culture it celebrates, finds joy in the smallest moments, beauty in the most ugly.
Most importantly, it’s fun. It is a wonderful night out. A sumptuous celebration of the cast and crew’s many, varied talents. And the ultimate occasion to gleefully sing: “Ya ba dibba dibba dibba dibba dibba dibba dum…”
… and know you got everything exactly right.
Just like this show.
Fiddler on the Roof is playing at Sydney’s Capitol Theatre until 8 May