Les Misérables, as a phenomenon,
needs no introduction. Victor Hugo’s novel
was first published in 1862, and was hugely successful – critically and
popularly – changing the reading public. In the guise of Boublil and Schönberg’s
musical it, too, became a popular and critical success following its
English-language premiere in London
in 1985, and similarly changed the musical-theatre landscape. One of the
longest running musicals in history, it first came to Australia in 1987 at
Sydney’s Theatre Royal, before touring the country over the following five
years. Reconceived and restaged in London in 2010 to celebrate its twenty-fifth
anniversary, ‘Les Mis’ has been given
a new lease of life and is again touring the world, and is now playing in
Melbourne’s Her Majesty’s Theatre prior to its Perth and Sydney seasons in
2015.
“[It] is still playing to full
houses and regularly breaking box office records after almost [thirty] years,”
producer and impresario Cameron Mackintosh writes in the program. “New
audiences are discovering the extraordinary impact of this exhilarating and
emotional tour de force while existing Les
Mis fans come back again and again for more.” As an international brand, it
is impregnable, untouchable. As a piece of musical theatre however, it is not
without its flaws. And therein lies the problem with this production, the
experience, and the whole Misérables thing.