Margaret & I went to see this - here's a review....
When I first heard that there
was going to musical featuring the songs of Bob Dylan, I hoped for the
best but I could not help but think that maybe it was one jukebox
musical too far. Playwright Conor McPherson felt the same when he was
asked to pen the story, which came from Dylan’s record company.
Then when you sit and think about
it, Bob Dylan is the ultimate storyteller his work has been covered by
the likes of Adele and Bryan Ferry and his songs are timeless. Weeks
after the call, McPherson started to map the outline of this play with
songs, setting it in Minnesota (Dylan’s birthplace) and set during the
early 1930s against a backdrop of the depression.
Girl from the North Country
is described as a ‘conversation between the songs and the story’ and
that is essentially what you have here. There is natural beauty and
grace, which makes this stand out in a crowded market filled with
artists’ back catalogues at theatres everywhere. There is something
refreshing and intelligent at play here and this marriage of McPherson’s
wonderfully rich writing and the stirring lyrics of Bob Dylan means
that you are left with something unique and stunning in its apparent
simplicity.

If you have seen Conor McPherson’s multi-layered hit The Weir,
you will know that this writer knows how to weave several strands
together, leaving you with well-rounded characters with fascinating
stories to tell. He does it again here and the music of Dylan
compliments this and offers them a voice when society has silenced many
of them.
The setting is an old boarding
house and it’s run by a tired man called Nick Laine, who is struggling
to take care of his ill wife, alongside the needs of his guests. Colin
Connor perfectly conveys the inner struggle that Nick is going through;
the juggling act and sense of disappointment and the feeling that he is
literally ‘clinging on.’
Frances McNamee plays his wife
with a real sense of mischief and unpredictability and when she sings,
she gives a showstopping performance which is a masterclass in how to
reign it in and save the best until last. Her vocals are like honey and
they soothe your soul and break your heart simultaneously.

Marianne (Justina Kehinde) helps
out at the guesthouse as a duty, as she was taken in by the Laines as a
baby. But she has her own troubles. She is pregnant and her father is
keen for her to be married off – to remove the financial burden and
shame. His biological son is an alcoholic wannabe writer and is so stuck
that he cannot help anyone else. Meanwhile, Mrs Neilson (Nicola
MacEvilly) is waiting for money from her husband’s will so that she and
Nick can run off together.
With the cost of living crisis,
the effects of Covid and the nation’s grief following the death of the
Queen, this is theatre which has so many relevant strands – which speak
to audiences right now. It is not maudlin or depressing, it grips you
and the sheer inventiveness leaves you in awe.
You are reminded of old American radio shows, such as the Prairie Home Companion,
as each character sings to the audience into an old microphone and the
songs never interfere with the high drama, they work alongside it, and
the effect feels as if you are hearing these classics for the first
time.

The performances are everything
and there is no weak link here. Justina Kehinde conveys Marianne’s
awkwardness beautifully and she keeps her secrets within with real ease
and she is so natural on stage. Nichola MacEvilly presents Mrs Neilson
as so much more than ‘the other woman’ – she has a heart and wants to be
loved and her vocals highlight this too.
Joshua C Jackson plays the
newcomer to the guesthouse with a real sense of mystery and calm and his
is a towering turn because of his stage presence. I loved his scenes
with Justine Kehinde.
Owen Lloyd makes his professional
debut as bible seller Elias Burke and he plays it perfectly, in all his
desperation. Gregor Milne is excellent as the helpless Gene Laine and
Rebecca Thornhill also impress as Mrs Burke; a woman devoted to her son
Elias – played by Ross Carswell who is a real find, again making his
stage debut.
The ensemble fills the stage and
vocally give this show so much in terms of gospel and folk, providing
the show with the feel of an instant American classic. No song is wasted
but Like a Rolling Stone and idiot Wind really stand out, as they elevate the drama and provide so much emotion in minutes.

Conor McPherson has crafted a
superb piece of theatre and you almost run out of superlatives. The
music is sweeping and heartfelt and the central plot strands involve you
at every turn. Girl from the North Country is as raw and poetic as a Bob Dylan song. There is only really one word to describe it; flawless.