Hugh jackman the show review
Jesse Hassenger, The Guardian: Fans, then, will probably come away from the show satisfied with Jackman's razzle-dazzle energy and relentless positivity.!
Hugh Jackman: The man.Www.broadwayworld.com › article › Review-Roundup-Hugh-Jackman-in-.
The music. The show – review
In a breathless two-and-a-half hours, accompanied by dancers, vocalists and orchestra, Jackman revisits highlights from his musical career – songs he’s sung, songs he’s always wanted to sing.
After The Greatest Show and Come Alive, he takes us back to the beginning, recounting how he got his first professional job playing beefy blockhead Gaston in a stage version of Beauty and the Beast.
Of all his formidable, envy-inducing skills, he is a truly great actor.
He devotes a lot of care and attention on Soliloquy from Carousel, which marked another important step in his career, and later races through a Broadway medley, ticking off Luck Be a Lady, Singin’ In the Rain and I Got Rhythm in quick succession.
Each time, he transports you to the dramatic moment in each musical. Of all his formidable, envy-inducing skills, he is a truly great actor.
At the end of the first act comes a couple of numbers from Les Misérables, the highlight of which is one of his supporting vocalists, Jenna Lee-James&