EVITA

Isaac Theatre Royal, Christchurch

15/09/2016 - 01/10/2016

Production Details



Don’t cry for me Argentina …

The meteoric life and death of The Rainbow of Argentina, Eva Peron. 

Recorded in 1976 as a two-disc Rock Opera concept album, Evita was a huge musical success from its first release. The famous anthem “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina” went to No. 1 in Britain and around the world in the months following its debut, making a star of the recording artist Julie Covington.

The stage musical then opened in London in 1978 making a global star of the shows, till then, unknown leading lady, Elaine Page. The West End production won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Musical, and then went on to open on Broadway where it was the first British production to receive the Tony Award for Best Musical.

The story of Evita tracks the journey of Eva Duarte, following her early life, her meteoric rise to power, charity work, and eventual death, aged 33. Duarte became Eva Perón, the wife of the Argentine president Juan Perón and the prototype of the mid-20th-century power blonde. The musical explores the very contemporary idea of fame as an amoral religion.

Evita is one of the great masterworks from the powerhouse team of Andrew Lloyd Webber (music) and Tim Rice (Lyrics). The concept of a theatrical Rock Opera, launched first as an album, was building on the success they had enjoyed with Jesus Christ Superstar.

Evita enjoyed a string of worldwide productions after its initial London staging and was then released as a major film in 1996 starring Madonna in the title role, and Antonio Banderas as Che. The Showbiz Christchurch Evita is based on the successful revival production that opened in the West End in 2006 to critical acclaim, and then again on Broadway in 2012.

This production of Evita will capture all the grandeur and majesty from the giants of the modern musical, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice. An unmissable theatrical experience that will create memories to last a lifetime.

Winner of 6 NY Drama Desk Awards, 2 Olivier Awards, and 8 Tony Awards, Including Best Musical

At the Isaac Theatre Royal, Christchurch
September 15 – October 1 2016
Evening performances at 7.30pm.
Sunday Matinees, 4 p.m Sept 18, 25.
Tickets starting from $47.50 (Includes GST and a $2.50 ITR Heritage Levy) 
All bookings at Ticketek 0800TICKETEK www.ticketek.co.nz 



Theatre , Musical ,


Hits all the right notes

Review by Christopher Moore 16th Sep 2016

“Any musical which begins with a funeral can’t be all bad,” the producer, Hal Prince, reportedly commented after reading the first draft of Evita.

Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s musical voyage through of the life and times of one Maria Eva Duarte de Peron, or Evita to her adoring thousands, is still not at all bad.  In the musical’s latest reincarnation presented by Showbiz Christchurch it is all good – in fact, it’s very good indeed.

Any musical constructed on such a delicately balanced blend of beauty and bombast will always present major challenges to the director and cast. One false step and the entire edifice will descend into lachrymose, over-blown portentousness.  Under Stephen Robertson’s finely-tuned direction, principals and cast successfully negotiated the perilous line to emerge with a production which became a revelation. [More

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Engaging, accessible, dazzling

Review by Grant Hindin Miller 16th Sep 2016

Where do I begin? Halfway through the first act it strikes me that New Zealand musical theatre is in triumphant form, for this production of Evita is a triumph, a tour de force, and I am deeply impressed. 

Evita is the brainchild of Tim Rice who, in 1973, caught the tail-end of a broadcast about Eva Duarte, the working-class actress who rose to become first lady of Argentina, as wife of Juan Peron. Eva’s popularity soared through her controversial charity work and her extraordinary charisma. The stage musical was informed by Argentine director Carlos Pasini Hansen’s film Queen of Hearts, which Rice saw “at least twenty times” and “was hooked”.

An original, if politically risky concept for a stage musical, it shows Rice and Lloyd Webber, perhaps ironically, at their best. Evita is a powerful theatrical performance and experience. 

It’s difficult to know how much of the choreography and styling of such a famous show is prescribed. Harold Prince directed the West End and Broadway productions. However, Hon Lianne Dalziel, Patron of Showbiz Christchurch, states that “this production brings fresh life to a classic with new design, direction, and orchestration”.

Stephen Robertson, the director/choreographer of the current Showbiz Christchurch production, is to be applauded for his great eye for detail. The amateur cast is large and with a large cast there will often be one or two performers who, shall we say, are less attentive than others. Not so in this production. I am struck by the focus and commitment of every cast member. This is a stunning performance.

The sets, though simple, are evocative and effective. The costume department has done a brilliant job. The music, under the direction of Richard Marrett, is superb. The actors are ‘in the zone’. In such a stellar cast it seems unjust to single out individuals but this heaven has a Venus and a Sirius.

Emily Burns is phosphorescent. What a star! As Evita, her transformation from a coquettish girl of fifteen to an ailing woman of thirty-three is entrancing to watch. Her stage presence is compelling and I couldn’t take my eyes off her. And Jack Fraser who plays Che, the everyman narrator, is a dynamic and powerful presence. These two need to own and command the stage and they certainly do. 

To be fair, all of the leads hold their own. I love the sensitivity of Roy Snow, as Peron, performing ‘She is a Diamond’, and Jane Leonard as Peron’s mistress, singing ‘Another Suitcase in Another Hall’.

The ending is unusual. I’m not sure if it’s a timing factor but I’m not prepared for the final line. It’s only the fall of the curtain that alerts me to the play’s conclusion. Is this a writing failure or an issue of timing? 

This Showbiz Christchurch production of Evita is an ambitious undertaking and sports an enormous cast. It has brilliant set pieces with well-honed scene transitions, impressive orchestrations, dynamic choreography, and a tiara of sparkling performers. It succeeds in translating what is a foreign and complicated life into an engaging and accessible tale, with characters we come to care about. It’s the first time I’ve seen the show and I love it. 

If you long for world class production values, for the quality of performances found in the West End, or on Broadway, you can find them from now to October 1st at the Isaac Theatre Royal in this dazzling production of Evita. Congratulations to all involved.

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