Showing posts with label Reg Livermore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reg Livermore. Show all posts

June 01, 2014

The Australian Production Of "Hair" Changed The Theatre And The Nation


                                                                       


                                                                      

I was there, but not in Sydney. I really enjoyed it! I never owned the Australian cast LP, but I listened to the one above many, many times. I rescued it from my sister's collection which was about to be throw out so I still have it, and still listen to it.

YOU had to be there. And if you didn’t have a ticket, you had to hang about outside the Metro Theatre looking as if you did. And if you couldn’t get up to Kings Cross in that winter of 1969, you had to at least know someone who had seen Hair, the rock musical that defined a generation. 
Almost half a century later, it is difficult to overstate the excitement with which Australians embraced this anti-Vietnam, anti-establishment, pro-love, pro-peace show.

It opened in Sydney on June 5, its much-touted, full-frontal ­nudity competing with a bomb scare that temporarily cleared the theatre of an A-list crowd that included entertainer Graham Kennedy — who did the right thing by leaping on stage for the finale.

Leaping on and off the stage was central to the Hair experience in those hippie, dippie days.
“I used to run along the back of the seats barefoot,” says Reg Livermore, who played the role of Berger. “I perfected the art. Or I would sit in someone’s lap. They probably remembered it all their life.”
                                                                 

What Livermore, now 75, remembers is the exhilaration of the show that transformed him from a traditional music-theatre performer to one of our most original players. He was 30 and somewhat sceptical about the brouhaha when he went along to a preview of Hair, to support his sister Helen, who was in the show.

“I was dumbfounded, knocked back on my heels,” he says. “I just knew that I had to be there, I had to be on that stage. I wasn’t particularly political but as a theatre animal, Hair represented change.”

Within months he was in the show and spent a total of more than two years performing across the country and in New Zealand.

In Melbourne this week, Livermore took time off from his gig in Wicked to visit the Palace Theatre — which, sadly, is set for demolition. In 1971, known as the Metro, it was the venue for Hair. 

His success in the show catapulted Livermore into Jesus Christ Superstar, The Rocky Horror Show and his one-man shows Betty Blokk Buster and Wonder Woman.

“Hair was the right show at the right time,” he says. “It was talking to people and showing things to them that they didn’t have the courage to vocalise. They would go to the theatre (in those days) and see dining room comedies — all rather predictable.”

Hair was radically different and reviewers at the time suggested the Jim Sharman-directed Sydney version was far superior to the original New York production. It had been brought here by impresario Harry M. Miller but it was Sharman’s flair — using experimental filmmaker Albie Thoms and lighting by the collective Ubu — that set it apart.

In his 2012 memoir, Thoms wrote that he had been knocked back by the War Memorial in Canberra when he asked for some Vietnam War footage because it “might degrade the memory of those who fought”. But his 35mm handmade film of a simulated battle, along with other elements of the show, made a big impact on The Australian’s theatre critic, Ray Taylor: “I defy the most atrophied of conscience to get through the anti-war manifestation of Act Two without being shocked,” he wrote. ”How sick and confused our society: the censor wheezes over the innocent and sculptured beauty of the nude scene, while here true ­obscenity goes begging.”

The censor had been anxious, too, about the use of four-letter words but everyone calmed down when NSW chief secretary Eric Willis went along to a preview and said that while it was not his kind of show, it didn’t break any laws.

But Hair broke old ways of thinking.

“I think it changed my attitude to life,” says Marcia Hines. The Boston-born singer was only 16 when she crossed the globe, so young that Harry M was appointed her guardian. It was her big break but even more memorable because a few months later she announced she was pregnant. Her daughter, Deni, was born in September 1970, Hines leaving the theatre after the performance to go to hospital for the induced birth. Nine days later she was back on stage as part of the ensemble, known as “the tribe”.
                                                               

“It wasn’t unusual. I was 17. Other girls (in the show) were doing it too, having babies. Harry M was so mad at us. Several of us became pregnant.”

Hines felt the anti-war message strongly —“We felt we were doing something really poignant, really important” — but says the musical is less relevant today.

“When I hear about people putting on Hair, now, I think, why?”

By Helen Trinca
Below: a picture of the Australian Cast Recording.

                                                                  

With thanks to The Australian

More information at Milesago

Reg Livermore also co - wrote "Ned Kelly" with Patrick Flynn.

Some of the performers on "Ned Kelly" were also in "Jesus Christ Superstar, for example Jon English, Trevor White, John Paul Young and Reg Livermore himself.
                                                                    

I believe Harry M. Miller and Jim Sharman,below, were involved with the "Jesus Christ Superstar" and "Hair" productions.
                                                                    


After "Hair" both Reg Livermore and Marcia Hines went on to perform in "Jesus Christ Superstar".


Related: 
 G.Wayne Thomas - Morning Of The Earth And Open Up Your Heart

Deborah Jones: 10 highlights From The Australian Stage

Marcia Hines and Russsell Crowe - a Brand New Single.Posted here. 



♥♥Remembering Jon English♥♥


December 11, 2012

Jon English & the Cast of "Ned Kelly" The Rock Opera- What Else Is New? - Updated


                                                                   
                
 
The Rock Opera "Ned Kelly" was written by Reg Livermore and Patrick Flynn.

This album was recorded in 1974, according to the record label. However, according to Jon English's site it says he sang this role in 1976 - see below.
 
It features Jon English as Ned Kelly, Trevor White as Aaron Sherritt, Reg Livermore as Sergeant Hare, Janice Slater as Ma Kelly, Arthur Dignam as Constable Fitzpatrick and Tony Rose as Constable McIntyre.

Included also on the recording were John Paul Young, or John Young as he was known then, and Peter Chambers as other Kelly gang members. As you can see there was much of the cast of the 1972 Australian production of "Jesus Christ Superstar" which I have covered in another post.

On this track: Jon English, Trevor White, John Paul Young, Peter Chambers and Arthur Dignam.


This is the first track on the album. I really like it as it has a nice upbeat tempo. 
As the story progresses the music becomes more sombre.


If you set your You Tube player to a larger mode there is plenty of information about it from the album cover.


As far as I can tell this version, with this cast, was not actually performed on stage but I could be wrong.


                                                             
Update:The link above to Jon's site no longer works as the site is being updated.

From Doug Parkinson’s site:
                                   
 


More from “The Age"
 

[.....]


Call it destiny or fate, but the recurring pattern to emerge in Livermore’s life is one where things could have turned out very differently. For instance, had Livermore’s musical Ned Kelly premiered anywhere other than in Adelaide, the show may have had more than one chance. The out-of- town tryout system long-established in the United States has never worked in Australia. 
Almost inevitably, when opening night comes, so does crunch time

[....]




Details for Various Artists - Ned Kelly, The Rock Opera
 
My focus here is primarily the musical, not the retelling of the Ned Kelly story.

I see it as a part of our musical cultural history.

The first ever feature film made in Australia was about Ned Kelly.
Then many years later there was one with Mick Jagger, and another much, much later with Heath Ledger.

The Ned Kelly version with Mick Jagger introduced me to the music of Waylon Jennings. 
That was a big plus!

                                                                    
                                 
For those who are too young to know Waylon Jennings was part of Buddy Holly's backing group, the Crickets.

After their last concert together with Richie Valens (Donna,La Bamba) and The Big Bopper (Chantilly Lace) they had to go to another gig.
The only way out was by bus or chartered plane.

Sadly the chartered plane didn't have much space so they tossed a coin for the seats.

Waylon lost the toss! A bad coin-toss saved his life. Until his death he never got over this incident!.

 Hence "American Pie" was written by Don McLean - and the line .."the day the music died" refers to this incident.

I think the mini-series, “The Last Outlaw”, was very detailed and well worth watching - probably the best version of the Ned Kelly story I have seen. 
This was actually made by the same team who made “Against The Wind”.
 
A shame they didn’t use the talents of Jon English and Mario Millo for the soundtrack of “The Last Outlaw”, as I think the soundtrack for “Against The Wind” is way superior to this.
Having said that it doesn't diminish the impact of the series.

                                                                       



There is much more on Ned Kelly on the internet, and of course one must not forget to mention the Sidney Nolan paintings. 

Ned Kelly was most definitely a legendary and iconic figure in Australia’s history so it is not too surprising that his story has inspired many people in all fields of the arts


                      
Update #1:


Just found out that... “The Show originated as a 1974 concept recording and was subsequently adapted as a stage production, which opened on 4 February 1978 at Her Majesty's Theatre, Sydney. 
Revised in 2000 with some new songs and lyrics.”

Via Youtube

                                                      
                                                                    

Update #2



This article dated January 6th 1974 – The Sydney Morning Herald
lick to enlarge image.

Update #3 

Update: Such is life: 130 years on, Ned returns home to join his mother in Kelly country.

                                                      With thanks to The Australian.

Update#4 

                                                               
Ned Kelly's Childhood Home Up For Sale


                                                                    


TINY Beveridge, a quiet rural township of barely 100 people about 40km north of Melbourne, doesn’t seem the kind of place that could produce a criminal, but it was a childhood home to Australia’s most notorious outlaw, Ned Kelly. 
And now, it could be home to you.

The legendary bushranger’s childhood home, a ­historic 1859 cottage built by his father John “Red” Kelly, is up for sale.

The property at 44 Kelly Street, being marketed by Andrew Bellino and Rocco Di Battista of Ray White Craigieburn, retains many of its original features, ­including a bluestone chimney, the original iron grates and wood-grained ledged and braced doors. Much of the building, unsurprisingly a little worse for wear, was built using materials found in local bushland.

The original cottage has been listed on the Victorian Heritage Register because of its unusual architecture, thought to be because of the Irish heritage of its builder.

The cottage has an earthen floor, with drainage running between rooms that reach the peak of the ­corrugated iron roof.
But the 1.45ha property also comes with a newer house, a modern, four-bedroom home built in 2002.

“This property not only includes a well-kept family home that is ready to move into, it’s also an opportunity to secure a piece of Australia’s history,” Andrew Bellino says.

“The heritage listing in place means that the former Kelly home has never been and will never be changed. The building as it stands today is exactly as it was when Ned Kelly lived there as a child.”

Kelly was born in Beveridge, but was thought to have moved to the house when he was four or five and lived there for half a decade.
The town itself is full of historical gems. The former Catholic church where Kelly attended school for a number of years, built from the same local bluestone in a gothic style, is perhaps the most impressive building.

Bellino says it is difficult to put a price on the ­property.

“There aren’t a lot of sales in the area and certainly none that are comparable to this property,’’ he says.

“Throughout the marketing campaign we’ll listen to what the market is saying and that will guide the price expectations on the property.”

The National Trust of Australia will be entering the bidding war.

As of Thursday the trust had scraped together $100,000 but is seeking help from the public to drum up the estimated $650,000 it believes will be needed to buy the house.

National Trust of Australia (Victoria) CEO Martin Purslow said they were committed to safeguarding and preserving the historic site for the future.

‘The Ned Kelly story has a resonance with Australians and international visitors worldwide and Ned Kelly himself is one of our most significant Australian cultural heritage folk heroes,’ Mr Purslow said.

The property is scheduled to be auctioned at 2pm on September 20.
Below: The real Ned Kelly. Picture credit: The Australian
                                                                    





                                                                


Thanks to GR for almost all of the pictures. 

                                                             

Jon English and Janice Slater during production. Many thanks to Garry for this picture.

                                                                  



                                                                        

Picture credit above: Fairfax

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♥♥Remembering Jon English♥♥