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Bringing Bart back to his original stage

May 12, 2014 15:12
Elliot Davis

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

It is apparent that for Elliot Davis, Lionel Bart (who died in 1999) is very much alive. We — that is me and Davis — are talking at the gorgeous Theatre Royal Stratford East where Davis’s reworked version of Bart’s 1959 musical Fings Aint Wot They Used T’Be, starring Jessie Wallace from EastEnders and Spandau Ballet’s Gary Kemp, is opening.

This is the stage where the show was first seen. Old black and white photos of the musical, which is set in a gambling den, adorn the bar along with those of other landmark shows created at Joan Littlewood’s Theatre Workshop.

Davis is remembering how things used to be when he worked for Bart in the mid 1990s. At the age of 21 he had contacted the legendary composer (not through Bart’s agent but, a little weirdly, through his accountant) for advice on how to make a career in musical theatre. Davis ended up working for him.

“I would have done anything,” says the 41-year-old composer, unintentionally almost quoting a line from one of Bart’s songs in Oliver! “He’d say: ‘I need you to write this, can you come round?’ And he would give me his dictaphone. He’d been walking around Hyde Park or wherever going ‘daba, daba, daba, daba...’” To every “daba” Davis attaches a higher note in the scale. “So I would sit at the piano and go: ‘Like this?’ And he’d say: ‘Darker, moodier — what about that chord?’”

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