| Luck
changes everything
Musicals Man
Prince of Punters
Diehard fans are passionate about their musical cause
Power to voice passions
Subject:
MB Interview - The West Australian - Arts
Luck changes everything
By Ron Banks
MICHAEL BALL admits having
been lucky in the timing of his career in music theatre.
He emerged on to the scene from acting school just as the British
stage was about to enjoy a renaissance through the blockbuster musicals
such as Les Miserables and The Phantom of the Opera.
His first big break was as Marius, the young revolutionary in Les
Miserables, followed by the similar role of the young lover Raoul
in The Phantom of the Opera.
These roles were followed by the lead in Andrew Lloyd Webber's Aspects
of Love and then as the army captain in Stephen Sondheim's Passion.
Starring roles in such celebrated musicals established Ball as one
of Britain's biggest music theatre personalities, with a parallel
career as a recording artist and a concert performer.
He recently spent 16 months in the lead role as Caractacus Potts
in the London production of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, the stage version
of the popular film that featured Dick Van Dyke as Caractacus.
It meant being upstaged by a car in this whiz-bang production noted
for its special effects, but the production is still running in
the West End.
Ball confesses, however, that he has no desire to return to this
particular musical, and this year is taking a break from the music
theatre stage to concentrate on his concert career - a move which
brings him to Australia this month.
"It's my first time here and I'm looking forward to meeting
people and seeing the place," says Ball on the phone from Sydney.
His concerts, naturally enough, will mostly feature songs from the
musicals in which he established his career. One of them will be
Love Changes Everything, the song from Aspects of Love that Ball
turned into a hit recording.
He says his hit record was the breakthrough into a wider public
arena than just music theatre fans and gave him the confidence to
further his recording career. He even came second in the Eurovision
song contest in 1992.
His success in Aspects of Love led to an invitation to reprise the
role on Broadway and his career broadened even further when on his
return to England he began hosting a television variety show.
He has now done two television series, in which he has invited his
show business connections to perform with him.
It's a successful musical profile for a performer who says he originally
wanted to be an actor. "My mum is Welsh, you see, so I was
surrounded by music and even my dad had wanted to be an actor before
he went into business," he says.
Ball was born in the West Midlands but spent some of his early childhood
in Cape Town when his father was posted overseas.
However, he went to a secondary boarding school in England and enrolled
in the Guildford School of Acting to further his ambitions on the
stage.
"It wasn't until I was at acting school that I stumbled on
the fact that I had a voice," he says. From that point Ball
threw himself into music theatre, making his professional debut
in a Welsh production of Godspell. A stint in The Pirates of Penzance
was followed by his first big break in Les Miserables.
Ball's career has now carved a trajectory through stage shows, recordings
and concert appearances that shows no sign of flagging.
He says the age of the blockbuster musical is probably over, though
he takes comfort from the fact that there is still room for those
smaller, more intimate shows that continue to bring fans into the
theatres.
His most intimate show so far has been his solo effort Alone Together,
which he created for the Donmar Warehouse in London.
"It was just me, a piano and the story of an actor, whose life
was told entirely in songs - none of which I'd ever sung before,"
he says.
Michael Ball is at the Burswood Theatre on March 23.
© 2004 West Australian
Newspapers Limited
All Rights Reserved.
Subject:
Interview - Sunday Mail 21/3/04
Musicals Man
By Ritchie Yorke
IT'S A tough life being
a musical performer in the UK at this damp and muddy time of year.
British superstar Michael Ball isn't especially amused when asked
about his health and prevailing weather.
``What do you expect? It's grey and miserable and raining in London
today. Just winding me up, you are,'' he mutters -- even though
he's not really upset.
``But tell me, what's it like down your way? I'm really looking
forward to getting back down there, not only for that summer weather,
but in order to do my first proper Australian tour.''
The man regarded as Britain's leading musical theatre star has played
one previous Sydney concert in 2001, which was well received. Now
he wants to go the full Aussie tour itinerary.
``I put my toe in the water and had such a good time that I vowed
to get back and see more of the country as soon as possible. I just
can't wait.''
The tour brings him to his Queensland debut at the Concert Hall,
Brisbane, on March 30.
It will be a show that's not only easy on the ears and eyes, but
also with the odd unexpected deviation. Ball, 41, might be the king
of musical comedy and drama but he doesn't mind ploughing other
furrows and forms.
``I approach a concert as you would construct a musical,'' he said.
``You try to take an audience on a journey. You give them the highs
and excitement; you give them the pathos and emotion; and you end
up with a big party at the end.
``That's so that people leave at the end feeling better than when
they went in. And they'll leave with a desire to come back.''
Ball, whose fame has crossed the Atlantic and now the Pacific --
via his lead roles in a flock of musicals (think The Pirates of
Penzance, Les Miserables, Phantom of the Opera, Passion and Aspects
of Love), was especially excited about his most recent role in the
London West End hit Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
``I've just finished my residence as Caractacus Potts in Chitty
at the London Palladium. It's still running there and is reported
to be the most expensive stage musical ever.
``I opened in that and did it for 18 months and had the time of
my life. I really loved it.''
But he emphatically isn't a fan of the profusion of what he calls
the ``compilation shows'', built around pre-existing songs.
``There are some good new shows but I've become a bit tired of the
compilation shows. We've got a real glut of them here at the moment.
``I thought that Mamma Mia was brilliant but now we've got the Queen
musical We Will Rock You; the Rod Stewart thing (Tonight's The Night),
one about Elvis (Jailhouse Rock) and one about Cliff Richard (Born
to Rock 'n' Roll: The Cliff Richard Musical).
``I think the abundance of compilations is preventing people from
creating new things. And the trouble is that it's so expensive to
mount theatrical shows.''
His concerts feature an assortment of show tunes and familiar chestnuts.
He performs with a 12-piece band and has a featured guest singer,
Danielle Everitt, who proffers two tunes.
Ball has released 11 albums in the UK, with the most recent release
in Australia called A Love Story, which came out in late January.
* Michael Ball plays the Concert Hall, Brisbane, on March 30.
A Love Story is out through EMI Music.
Caption: Michael Ball
Library Heading: MUSIC SINGERS, MUSIC CONCERTS
BIOG: MICHAEL BALL Column: Encore
On Stage
Section: FEATURES Type: Music Review
© News Limited. All
rights reserved.
Subject:
interview - Herald Sun 19/3/04
Prince of Punters
By Jill Fraser
MUSIC
MICHAEL BALL'S WORLD OF MUSICALS TOUR
IN BRITAIN, Michael Ball
is a superstar. This enviable position, he maintains, is because
of a stubborn refusal to simply sit back and watch as his fledgling
career was shaped by the narrow constraints of musical theatre.
Though primarily described as ``Britain's No.1 musical star'', in
reality Ball juggles dual careers.
Without his recording and TV success, he questions whether he would
have the success he does.
Six months after finishing drama school, Ball was plucked from 800
hopefuls to play the lead in a West End production of The Pirates
of Penzance.
``I think they gave me the part because I was cheap,'' he jokes,
recalling his impressive support cast of ``household names''.
The opening-night audience included producers Cameron Mackintosh
and Trevor Nunn who were casting for Les Miserables. Ball landed
one of the leads and the rest was history.
With a golden voice and still-boyish good looks, 40-year-old Ball
has a legion of devoted female fans.
Being mobbed on street corners is rare for a musical theatre star,
but for Ball it is common.
Fans fly all over the world to see his shows, which allays his fear
that his first-ever Melbourne performance next Thursday will fail
to draw a crowd.
He admits that coming to Melbourne, where he is a relative unknown,
is ``taking a punt''.
But Ball's curriculum vitae is dotted with career gambles.
A desire to ``break the mould'' led him to turn his back on musicals
for six years at a time when offers were coming in thick and fast.
But with a canny realisation that ``musical theatre's limited roles''
wouldn't sustain him, he set out to build a recording career.
Eleven gold and platinum albums later, he feels his decision has
been vindicated.
His latest gamble resulted in him accepting a role in the musical
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, which entailed dancing on stage for the
first time.
``I knew it would be bloody tough,'' he says. ``I have never had
lessons in dance or in singing, for that matter.
``I've always managed to get away with using my instinct. Sometimes
I wonder what I'm doing in this business.''
He confesses that the choreographer ``worked my butt off'', but
that it paid dividends.
As usual, Ball's performance won rave reviews. He describes his
concerts as a mix of ``great hits from great musicals'' and favourite
tunes; pieces familiar to many.
``I treat my concerts like a theatrical evening. I take my audience
on a journey.
``I give them light and shade, surprises, something to think about
and something to laugh at.
``And I always end up with a bit of a party,'' he says.
Better bring your dancing shoes.
Caption: Winner: Michael
Ball has taken many gambles in showbiz.
Illus: Photo
Section: ENTERTAINMENT
© News Limited. All
rights reserved.
Subject:
Interview - Sydney Morning Herald 19/3/04
Diehard fans are passionate
about their musical cause
Michael Ball has a close
connection to his fans, writes Bernard Zuel.
The middle-aged woman too
blonde, tanned and casually dressed on a Thursday morning to be
anything other than a tourist could not have ditched her husband
faster. They'd been watching Michael Ball have his photo taken and
now, seizing her opportunity, she came barrelling towards him. Happy
to oblige, he asked if their photo was to include her husband.
``No, no, just me,"
she said in a Brummie accent, waving a dismissive hand in hubbie's
direction before saying, to anyone and everyone, ``Fancy seeing
Michael Ball here."
Fancy that indeed. Ball
may not earn a second glance in most parts of Sydney but anyone
who's attended a West End or Broadway musical in the past decade
would know his face, his name and certainly his voice.
While ahead of him lies
a radio production of Sunset Boulevard, with Petula Clark for the
BBC, behind him are three different productions of Les Miserables
and star turns in the likes of The Phantom of the Opera, Pirates
Of Penzance and, recently, the extravagant Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
which have made his name in musical theatre.
He also successfully revived
in London a Stephen Sondheim musical that bombed on Broadway, and
created a one-man show for Sam Mendes's Donmar Warehouse Theatre
; which stripped Ball of his usual orchestra, stage patter and songs,
and surprised many by becoming a major success.
Altogether it's earned him
the kind of enthusiastic, if not fanatic, support that encourages
``a planeload" of British fans to fly to Australia for his
five-concert tour, which begins tonight.
``There are certain fans
who come to everything I do," he says.
``And fans here will look
after them, take them out so they're not afraid or isolated. They're
really nice people."
They're also really specific
in their nature.
``The majority OK, all of
them are women," he says with a smile. ``Well, the diehards
are women. They'll drag their old man along sometimes, but it's
difficult for women to travel alone and if they can't get their
old man to come along, because he's sat in front of the telly watching
sport, they want an outlet."
Lonely women who follow
him from the UK (``from all around the world, actually".) to
Australia, many of them writing letters to him asking for advice.
Odd behaviour? An eyebrow could be raised at least.
``None of them are weird,"
Ball assures. ``None of them follow me home. Nobody's trying to
jump me in hotels or anything. It's just a really healthy outlet."
For all the mild mockery
from disgruntled media types who don't get anyone stalking them
no matter how hard they may try Ball's connection to his audience
goes beyond the stage door. But not quite how you imagine.
Twelve years ago his sister-in-law,
Angela, died of ovarian cancer, within six months of being diagnosed.
The speed of her deterioration the fact that even then it was clear
more could have been done if her cancer had been detected earlier
galvanised Ball and her family.
``When Angela died we became
extremely angry and put all our energies into finding out why there
wasn't more research going into this," Ball says, his expressive
hands working furiously. ``We discovered there was one tiny research
unit in London that was about to close for lack of funding. We said
that we would try and make enough money to keep it going. At that
point it was testing 150 women nothing, absolutely nothing, for
one of the biggest killers of women.
``Ovarian cancer is not
very trendy but because of my profile at the time, because I'm a
bloke talking about it, going on chat shows talking about ovarian
cancer, it got a lot of interest in the UK and we began to make
serious money. We eventually got 150,000 women being tested and
we've now been given a grant for £22 million from the Government.
``Predominantly my fans
are women who are susceptible to this disease and this was a way
they found out about this, about the simple blood tests that could
catch it in the early stages, and the support groups. It's not all
nutty fanaticism."
Michael Ball performs at
the Wollongong Entertainment Centre tonight and the Opera House
Concert Hall tomorrow.
Subject:
Sunday Herald Sun 19/3/04
Power to voice passions
By Bob Crimeen
Michael Ball Melbourne Concert
Hall
In short: Britain's musicals king conquers Melbourne.
SILVER-HAIRED grannies gyrating
like bare-tummied teenagers in the front rows of Melbourne's Concert
Hall?
Such is the power of Welsh-born Michael Ball, Britain's undisputed
monarch of musicals, that this scenario happened on Thursday night.
It was not the first time this adoring group, including British
women who have attended all of his five Australian concerts, had
leaped to its feet.
As Ball made his entry -- upstage centre, through a parted curtain,
blue-lit smoke (yes, shades of Phantom of the Opera theatrics) --
masses of the audience jumped spontaneously to their feet.
Innumerable times, as Ball belted out ballads, musical theatre favourites
and rock songs, or soothed the senses with poignant songs, adoring
fans rose to acclaim his artistry.
They acknowledged a consummately skilled performer, who could not
have been more enthusiastic about his work had it been his first
concert.
A man prepared to take risks that would daunt most other singers.
With a voice that has some vibrato, but awesome strength, Ball fearlessly
executes the genre's most thrilling, climactic crescendos without
fault and with a power that had the audience in a controlled frenzy.
True to the World of Musicals Tour title, musical theatre was the
focus of Ball's program.
There were excerpts from Funny Girl, Sweeney Todd, The Lion King,
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Jesus Christ Superstar, Godspell, Evita,
Jekyll and Hyde, Phantom (Phantom/Christine and Raoul/Christine
duets with leggy Australian Danielle Everett), Aspects of Love .
. . even the Irish dance extravaganza, Riverdance.
But Ball, a handsome heart-throb who has only to arch an eyebrow
to make women swoon, was no less convincing in lesser-known songs
such as the Elvis tribute, Walking in Memphis, I Was Born to Love
You, the self-penned Just When I Needed Somebody to Love, So What's
the Future, and rock tinglers such as Dancin' in the Dark and Help
Yourself .
Michael Ball promised to return. So will this legion of adoring
fans who had a real ball with Michael.
Section: INSIDE ENTERTAINMENT
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