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Theatre

Theatre review: The Bridges of Madison County

This romance fails to engage

July 24, 2019 17:22
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ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

2 min read

While the transfer of Trevor Nunn’s intimate Menier production of Fiddler On the Roof continues in the West End, it is doubtful that Nunn’s new show for the theatre will join it.

Jason Robert Brown’s musical version of the late Robert James Waller’s best-selling romantic novel — best known for the 1995 film in which Clint Eastward’s peripatetic photographer Robert Kincaid falls for Meryl Streep’s Iowan farm-wife — amounts to a long evening of the inevitable.

Jenna Russell is on typically excellent form in the Streep role of Italian-born Francesca, wife to farmer Bud (Dale Ripley) and mother of their teenage children. It’s a seemingly idyllic life they lead, and Brown’s sweeping opening number, To Build A Home, is a lesson in exposition as it reveals how Francesca left war-torn Napoli and ended up in placid, flat-as-Norfolk Iowa.

It’s the archetypal place where nothing happens. Then Bud takes the kids to Illinois for a few days and up rolls a battered old pick-up truck driven by stranger, played by Edward Baker-Duly. Physically Baker-Duly is more Kevin Bacon than Clint Eastwood, which is no barrier to his being the rugged, silent type. His polite, and chivalrous Kincaid has become lost while searching for of the last of seven local bridges which he is photographing for National Geographic.