
Hercules review – Disney musical is fun, finely sung but not quite fit for the gods
There is a briskness to its drama, under the direction of Casey Nicholaw, and a pounding out of the material – Songs! Lights! Action! – that makes it seem like a conveyor-belt musical. The characters are not so much divine as 2D, although the sound and optics are always eye-popping, the swivelling set designs intent on moving heaven and earth. Gregg Barnes and Sky Switser's costumes are heavenly, too, and camp as hell: gold dresses, white Spanx and Hercules in a mesh vest and miniskirt-style toga by the end.
Luke Brady is an incredible singer, as Hercules navigates his journey between godliness and humanness with sidekick Phil (Trevor Dion Nicholas). But the title character is rather generic, a Hunkules who is earnest for too long despite shades of Joey from Friends (why not lean in to that?). The cast around Brady is just as strong vocally, but breezy in their dialogue. The animated film's Hades was a fabulous creation, his head permanently licked by flames from his underworld. Here, Stephen Carlile looks and sounds like a pantomime baddie, complete with corny jokes. You want to boo him every time he delivers his lines.
The big booming songs – including seven new numbers written by Alan Menken (music) and David Zippel (lyrics) – come to sound samey and a little soupy, such as the new addition, Today's Gonna Be My Day. They are delivered as briskly as the action by an American-accented cast. Go the Distance is a lovely solo by Hercules but you do not feel quite enough emotion from it. The upbeat numbers work better, especially the reprises of Gospel Truth by the five muses, all powerhouse singers. So there is a stolidity to the story, as if an ancient tablet of stone has taken the place of a flesh and blood heart.
The first half culminates in an NFL style parade, full of military motifs and twirling batons, all taking us outside the story's ancient world and into unimaginative, bland entertainment, with stock choreography (by Nicholaw and Tanisha Scott). But in the second half Kwame Kwei-Armah and Robert Horn's book gets funnier, Hercules turns goofier and his love story with Meg (Mae Ann Jorolan, cool cat to Brady's golden retriever) grows in chemistry. Not everything rights itself, however. The monsters that Hercules meets are certainly big but seem oddly cuddly as if the production is afraid of frightening its younger audience.
Perhaps this musical shows the film's age: this feels like old-school Disney, its hero not quite self-mocking enough (compare him with the brilliantly self-parodying Maui from Moana) and the earnestness heaped heavy. In the programme, Zippel acknowledges the animated Hercules's mix of heart and wit. 'Everything comes with a wink,' he says. You wish for a few more winks here.
At Theatre Royal Drury Lane, London, until 28 March
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Christie Brinkley's awkward moment as ex-husband she accuses of cheating with teen shows up at her book signing... with 40-years-younger wife
She has described their marriage as 'one of the most tormented experiences of my life' – an experience that came to a screeching stop when she discovered he was cheating on her with a teenager. So, it's hardly surprising that feuding exes Christie Brinkley and Peter Cook were careful to keep their distance when both showed up at a fundraising gala in East Hampton on Saturday night. Photos show the former couple at Author's Night – a lavish society bash that raises cash for East Hampton Library – doing their best to avoid each other. Making the encounter all the more awkward was 66-year-old Cook's date for the night: his 26-year-old blonde wife Alba Jancou. Brinkley, meanwhile, was one of the featured authors: signing copies of her memoir Uptown Girl in which she excoriates Cook for his cheating and the six-year divorce battle it precipitated. She wrote: 'Years later, in 2012, after a tumultuous six-year divorce and custody battle with Peter, he called me a liar on national television. 'I never defended myself, and while I'm not interested in talking about him now, I do want to share a little story.' That story began with her giving a commencement address at a graduation ceremony at Southampton High School. According to Brinkley, after the address a man not involved in the event tapped her on the shoulder and told her that Cook, an architect, was sleeping with his 18-year-old daughter. Brinkley continued: 'I knew from Peter's face that he was guilty, and in that moment, I thought I was going to pass out onstage, in front of hundreds of people. 'When I stood back up, I asked the man for his card, but he told me he didn't have one and that he was a police officer in town, so all I had to do was to go into the station if I wanted the full story.' According to the glamorous blonde, she went on to get all the details and kicked Cook out – teeing up a painful divorce and a lengthy custody battle over their model daughter Sailor, now 27. Brinkley has been married four times. Husband number one was French artist Jean-François Allaux (left) while her third was real estate entrepreneur Richard Taubman Brinkley has been married four times – before fourth husband Cook, she was wed to French artist Jean-François Allaux, real estate entrepreneur Richard Taubman and most famously of all, singer Billy Joel. Brinkley and Joel were married from 1985 to 1994 and share a daughter, Alexa Ray, who was born in 1985. Currently single, she has been publicly unenthusiastic about the prospect of a fifth husband and suggested making marriages a five-year deal during an interview with Sex and the City Star Kristin Davis on her podcast earlier this week. The 71-year-old told the Are You A Charlotte? host: You could get married, like, 'We'll see if you want to renew it in five years, 'Every five years, go, 'Do you want to renew?' That way, if you're getting bored or whatever, you can get out of it without all the lawyers and all that stuff.' Cook, meanwhile, has had no such qualms and married his much younger wife in an intimate ceremony in Capri in 2023. The blushing bride, who was just 20 when she got engaged to Cook, wore a stunning appliqued dress by Israeli designer Lee Grebenau for the al-fresco nuptials teamed with a pair of Aquazzura shoes. Jancou told People Magazine the weddings was 'romantic' and that they knew they wanted to get married in Capri because they had vacationed there multiple times Speaking to People magazine after the event, Jancou – who at 26 is a year younger than her stepdaughter Sailor – described the wedding as 'romantic' and 'visually stunning'. She said: 'I mean, who doesn't want to get married in Capri!? We both absolutely love Italy; it is our favorite country. 'We have traveled all over Italy together and the one place that really stood out to us was Capri. We loved everything from the views, the food and the culture. It is so romantic and visually stunning.' Architect Cook added: 'We had vacationed there in 2021, and spent the day of our third anniversary taking a boat trip where we kissed under the Faraglioni. 'About a year after our trip, Alba found a perfect terrace overlooking the Faraglioni, and we knew that was where we wanted to get married.'


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
With tariffs, a DC takeover, and Putin summit, Trump is now fully unleashed. And the world's tolerance for pain put to the test
Donald Trump is finally getting almost everything that he wants. But the question is, how will everyone else respond to that? On Wednesday, he arrived at the Kennedy Center and announced that he would host the annual honors award ceremony, a first for a president. For a president who loves the theatrical, it's definitely a coup, especially given that he removed the board members that Joe Biden nominated before the new board made him chairman. Trump has long had a flair for the theatrical–at his rallies, he regularly plays 'Memory' from Cats and 'Do You Hear the People Sing?' from Les Miserables –and it further reflects how he wants to remake parts of government that were previously nonpartisan and unchanged by who occupies the White House into his own image. But while Trump taking over the performing arts center is campy and even a bit weird, it shows how Trump feels no scruples and that he can finally realize the vision he wants for the country. The only question at this point is what the rest of the world's pain tolerance will be. Earlier this week, Trump made the unprecedented announcement that he would seize control of the Washington, D.C. police department and deploy the National Guard onto the streets of the nation's capital. Trump has long griped about crime and in many ways, it's a chance for him to live out the vision he wanted during the 2020 George Floyd protests, where he could deploy active duty troops onto the streets of American cities. He tried similar measures when he deployed the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles, though, as The Independent's Inside Washington newsletter flagged on Monday, that move led to his approval rating dropping. And much of the deployment of the National Guard has proven to be policing theater, given that guardsmen and women have been patrolling the tony Georgetown neighborhood. Washington, D.C. is an overwhelmingly Democratic city that has also seen a large slice of its workforce laid off thanks to the chaotic cuts unleashed by Trump's former consigliere Elon Musk and his apprentice at the Department of Government Effieincy, Edward Coristine, also known as 'Big Balls,' whom right-wing influencer Benny Johnson insisted receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Trump having troops roaming the city will likely not land well with the public nationally or in the district. But that's not the only area where Trump has finally removed the handcuffs. Last week, after a prolonged pause, Trump resumed his 'Liberation Day' tariffs. Trump had initially paused them the week after he announced them in April, saying he noticed the bond market had gotten 'a little queasy.' Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, had gone on Fox Business to speak with Maria Bartiromo, one of Trump's favorite pundits, the day before the pause. But this time, Trump is brooking no opposition from the lords of finance. Earlier this month, he responded to a poor jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics by sacking the chief statistician and nominating E.J. Antoni, an alumnus of the conservative Heritage Foundation, the think tank behind Project 2025. On Tuesday, the bureau put out a report showing that inflation for the core Consumer Price Index, which includes items for everything except food and energy, rose by 0.3 percent and inflation overall rose by 0.2 percent in July. And core CPI also rose by 3.1 percent in the past year. But Trump has not backed down. In response, he blasted Goldman Sachs's CEO, David Solomon, after a report by the investment titan showing that consumers are eating 22 percent of the tariffs. Clearly, Trump is not afraid of the fallout and believes that if he just gets the right people, he will get the result. Then there's the matter of Russia and Vladimir Putin. On Friday, he will host the Russian authoritarian in Alaska as he hopes to bring an end to Moscow's war in Ukraine. In recent months, Trump has seemed to come around on Russia, expressing his frustration with Putin, realizing that the rest of the Western world already knows: Putin has no interest in ending the war unless he can claim territory he believes rightfully belongs to Russia. This will be a stark contrast to the 2018 summit in Helsinki, when he seemed to brush off American intelligence and sided with Putin's denial that Russia intervened in the 2016 election. That earned him severe criticism, not the least of which came from the late John McCain. Now, McCain is dead and most of the old school Republican hawks have left the Senate. The ones who remain will not put up a fight. Instead, Trump gets to host Russia's president on American soil and, as if to make an even bigger point, he's hosting it in the home state of Lisa Murkowski, a Russia hawk and perpetual Trump critic. Trump knows that no matter what, he can push Murkowski and she will not push back. During Trump's press conference announcing the D.C. takeover, he said that police can 'do whatever the hell they want.' Trump clearly believes he can do the same. The question now is what will the consequences be of an unfettered Trump?


Telegraph
15 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Bollywood-inspired ‘Christmas Carol' to feature anti-refugee Scrooge
A Bollywood-inspired adaptation of A Christmas Carol will feature a version of Ebenezer Scrooge who 'despises refugees', the director has revealed. The 'modern-day' musical, based on the Charles Dickens 1843 novella, will feature the titular character as a 'British-Indian' man named Sood. In her director's statement, Gurinder Chadha said: 'Our Scrooge, called Sood, is a rich British Indian who despises poor people and refugees in particular.' 'Sood has decided that immense wealth brings him status and standing, so to hell with the poor, unemployed and disenfranchised who didn't work as hard as him to get where he is.' Ms Chadha, who is well-known for Bend It Like Beckham and Bride & Prejudice, suggested the inspiration for her film came from well-known faces in British politics, saying: 'Sounds familiar to some of our current British Indian politicians?' The film, titled Christmas Karma and slated for release in November 2025, is described in a press release as a celebration of 'all of modern Britain's communities and cultures'. The London-set musical 'is very true to the original text and sentiment', according to Ms Chadha, and will teach audiences 'the urgent lesson of how prejudice, poverty and division in all its forms shapes Sood and our society today'. The British-Indian director added: 'A hundred and eighty-two years later, Dickens' novella still resonates globally in today's sometimes harsh world.' The novella is a tale of redemption which follows Scrooge as he meets a supernatural reckoning. Ms Chadha writes that it is the author's 'plea for a kinder, more tolerant Britain'. Playing the protagonist in the upcoming film is Kunal Nayyar, known for his role as Raj Koothrappali on the US sitcom The Big Bang Theory. He is joined by Boy George as the Ghost of Christmas Future, Eva Longoria as the Ghost of Christmas Past, Hugh Bonneville as the Ghost of Jacob Marley and Billy Porter as the Ghost of Christmas Present. EastEnders star Danny Dyer will also feature in the musical as a London cabbie. Ms Chadha described the film as her 'ode to Dickens' and Italian-American director Frank Capra – who made It's a Wonderful Life – but 'with a contemporary twist'. She said she was also inspired by one of her family members who was a Ugandan refugee. 'He came to Britain around Christmas time having lost his home in Uganda as a child and arriving to a hostile welcome as a refugee,' she said. 'For years he didn't feel Christmas was for him and the hardships he faced as a child left him despising it.' The film's soundtrack has been influenced by gospel, reimagined Christmas songs, Christmas carols, Bhangra, traditional music of Punjab, as well as rap and classic pop. Ms Chadha said that she hopes the audience will 'be invested to beg [Sood] to move on, transform, and be part of a society that doesn't allow Scrooges, twisted and shaped by prejudice to grow'. She added: 'It is an affectionate, hopeful, musical celebration of the Britain of today and the future for our kids.' It marks the latest in a series of controversial takes on the author's novels. In 2023, Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight adapted Dickens' 1861 novel Great Expectations into a six-part series for the BBC that featured mental health issues, prison breaks, toxic relationships, recreational drug use and self-harm. The limited historical drama series, which rates at a low 5.4 on IMDb, also featured an expletive-laden script and an ethnically diverse cast. Mr Knight also created a bold retelling of A Christmas Carol in 2019, which shocked period purists with its radical and horror-filled narrative. The BBC helmed another controversial adaptation of Dickens's work when it filmed Bleak House in the style of a television soap opera in 2005. Andrew Davies, who wrote the adaptations' 16 episodes, said at the time that he hoped to attract a younger audience to the classic tale by highlighting the novel's sexual themes and stripping away its Victorian 'sentimentality'.