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Lloyd Webber play for Jozi in 2010 Print E-mail a friend
Written by Lucille Davie   
Monday, 10 March 2008

The announcement on the stage of the Nelson Mandela Theatre

The Andrew Lloyd Webber and Ben Elton musical, The Boys in the Photograph, will be staged at the Civic Theatre as part of Joburg's World Cup offerings.

Executive Mayor Amos Masondo is pleased to announce the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Ben Elton production (Photo: Enoch Lehung, City of Johannesburg)
Executive Mayor Amos Masondo is pleased to announce the Andrew Lloyd Webber and Ben Elton production (Photo: Enoch Lehung, City of Johannesburg)

THERE are 823 days to go to indulge in football overload; but there are also 823 days to go to sit in the plush red seats of the Civic Theatre for The Boys in the Photograph, a musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Ben Elton.

The musical will be put on at the Nelson Mandela Theatre from 23 May to 8 August 2010, as one of the parallel events the City is organising for the fans who are expected to converge on Joburg during the 2010 FIFA World Cup™.

Originally called The Beautiful Game, the award-winning musical was first performed in London's West End in 2000. It focuses on a group of boys growing up in an atmosphere of religious intolerance and hatred in Belfast in Northern Ireland in the late 1960s. The plot centres on a football team, made up of Catholic and Protestant youngsters, with a Catholic coach.

Political and religious violence overwhelms the team - some become members of the IRA, in the process destroying their lives. The story has relevance to apartheid South Africa and the racial hatred that tore families apart.

In a formal event on Sunday evening, 9 March, Executive Mayor Amos Masondo announced the musical as one of the events running parallel to the World Cup.

World-class offering
"This theatre event will provide an additional world-class offering to both soccer lovers and theatre goers. It will further enhance global awareness of the rich culture of entertainment, build cross-cultural relations and foster nation building."

The boys in the photograph (Photo: Enoch Lehung, City of Johannesburg)
The boys in the photograph (Photo: Enoch Lehung, City of Johannesburg)

Multi-award winning playwright Lloyd Webber, now a baron, is rewriting the play together with comedian and author Elton because they felt that the musical did not achieve its full potential, they told Toronto's The Star newspaper in January.

"The beautiful game" was football giant Pelé's description of the sport, and it led to the audience being confused about what to expect. "People thought they were coming to see Andrew Lloyd Webber's soccer musical and it's no more about soccer than My Fair Lady is about flower sellers," Elton told The Star. "It's about a team, a group of young people. They could be playing anything. It really doesn't matter what."

The rewritten musical will be put on in Toronto in April 2009 before it comes to Joburg.

Lloyd Webber has written some of the world's most famous musicals, including The Phantom of the Opera, Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita and Cats. Elton has written and produced various episodes for the television series Blackadder, The Thin Blue Line and The Young Ones, among others, as well as novels Stark and Popcorn, among others.

Local cast
Bernard Jay, the chief executive of the Civic Theatre, said he saw the original musical in Hungary and was "delighted" to get it for the Civic. The musical would have an entirely local cast and casting would start soon. "[Lloyd Webber] and [Elton] will be coming out here to teach kids how to play soccer on stage."

Bernard Jay announces that the cast will be all-South African
Bernard Jay announces that the cast will be all-South African

Jay praised the City's local 2010 organising team, especially executive director Sibongile Mazibuko. "Sibongile Mazibuko came into my life - thank you to Sibongile; without her we wouldn't have taken the project to where it is."

He will produce the musical, with Simon James and Claire Pacariz as associate producers.

The mayor summarised the City's achievements to date in preparing for the World Cup. So far R1,9-billion had been spent; the revamp of the Ellis Park Stadium was 30 percent complete, and R190-million had so far been spent; the new Orlando Stadium was 85 percent complete, with R284-million spent; the Dobsonville Stadium was 65 percent complete, at a cost so far of R61-million; the new Rand Stadium was about 75 percent complete, costing R43-million; work had not yet begun on the Ruimsig Stadium, however, where R10-million would be spent.

"This will deepen global recognition and ensure that South African artists continue to be part of performing award winning productions at theatres abroad," Masondo concluded.

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