9 to 5
The Mayflower Theatre, Southampton
With the Dolly Parton and film connection you expect 9
to 5 to be a feel good musical. However it lacks a sympathetic
personality to engage with. Most of the leading characters are wafer thin
stereotypes within a story about female empowerment. Mark Moraghan plays a misogynistic
CEO of Consolidated Industries, Franklyn J. Hart, who goes to great lengths to
make the main characters’ lives a misery.
Jackie Clune is workaholic Violet Newstead, who is
cheated out of a promotion that Franklyn gives to a man. Natalie Casey plays
the newcomer to Consolidated Industries, Judy Bernley, newly divorced, who has never
worked outside the home. Amy Lennox stands out from the trio as the Dolly Parton
character, Doralee Rhodes, who shows that there is more to her than being
Franklyn’s secretary during her song, Backwoods Barbie.
During the first act the plot meanders as it establishes
the character’s problems with their boss. The musical is full of reoccurring jokes
that are not funny, including an alcoholic secretary, Margaret. The “token good
guy” of the story, Joe, is played capably by Mark Willshire though the
character is underused . It is only by the end of the first act that the story
picks up, when a misunderstanding leads to a harebrained scheme to kidnap
Franklyn and find a way to discredit him. Yet it is clear during the second act
that the plot feels predictable.
There were some bright moments. Bonnie Langford was the
highlight of the show as Franklyn’s crotchety executive assistant, Roz Keith,
who gives a weirdly enticing performance during Heart to Hart, in which she
expresses her secret desire for Franklyn. Dollie Parton makes appearances in
the form of a projection at the start and end of both acts to give a narration
of the story. There is some great choreography on the ensemble’s part which
could have made for a fun musical. Yet 9 to 5 lacks heart,
making it difficult to relate to a thinly drawn story. Only see it at a Restricted View.
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