Review | Fantastically Great Women Who Changed the World at Chichester Festival Theatre: 'Overacted, oversung, over the top'

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It should have been a giveaway from the title.

There’s no way to read it without picturing a wide-eyed young thesp with a rictus grin enunciating every word like their drama GCSE depends on it.

Yet here I was, naively taking my seat for what I thought would be a sequel of sorts to the smash hit musical Six.

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With the same production team behind both, this does follow a similar formula.

Fantastically Great Women is at Chichester Festival Theatre, January 2022. Frances Mayli McCann and cast. Picture by Pamela RaithFantastically Great Women is at Chichester Festival Theatre, January 2022. Frances Mayli McCann and cast. Picture by Pamela Raith
Fantastically Great Women is at Chichester Festival Theatre, January 2022. Frances Mayli McCann and cast. Picture by Pamela Raith

It’s a one-act show featuring a series of historical figures who sing pop songs, in this case penned by one half of Xenomania: writers for Girls Aloud, Sugababes, Kylie and more.

But whereas Six felt like a pop concert, Women quickly resembled a primary school history lesson – which I would have known had I done a little digging beforehand, as the show is an adaptation of a children’s picture book.

The lead character, 10-year-old Jade, hides in a museum during a school trip in an attempt to save her parents’ marriage.

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Fantastically Great Women is at Chichester Festival Theatre, January 2022. From left: Jade Kennedy, Frances Mayli McCann, Eva Marie Saffrey. Picture by Pamela RaithFantastically Great Women is at Chichester Festival Theatre, January 2022. From left: Jade Kennedy, Frances Mayli McCann, Eva Marie Saffrey. Picture by Pamela Raith
Fantastically Great Women is at Chichester Festival Theatre, January 2022. From left: Jade Kennedy, Frances Mayli McCann, Eva Marie Saffrey. Picture by Pamela Raith

Soon enough the exhibitions come to life and she encounters a parade of famous women throughout history, including Amelia Earhart, Emmeline Pankhurst, Rosa Parks, Frida Kahlo, Marie Curie and Jane Austen, to name a few, who each have a lesson to impart via the medium of song.

If I could use one word to describe the result, it’s earnest.

Everything is overacted, oversung, over the top – and the plot becomes incredibly repetitive.

By the time Rosa Parks and Anne Frank start singing a ballad about changing the world, I was wondering if it could get any more silly. (Bear in mind, this is after Jane Austen was played with a Welsh accent.)

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But then the finale delivered the pinnacle of unintentional hilarity – when the letters of great are rearranged to spell ‘Greta’ timed to a lyric about the environment.

Not even Mr G from Summer Heights High could dream this stuff up.

That being said, all of these qualities I’m criticising point to what would probably make it a brilliant show for kids.

It’s educational, energetic, and the actor playing Jade did a fantastic job of carrying the show, landing some big laughs.

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And while it wasn’t for me – nor a couple in the front row, who left after about 20 minutes – it clearly had won over many of the audience judging by the spattering of standing ovations at the end.

Yes, it made me feel old, but at least I now know which woman first swam the English Channel… and we were spared Malala doing a tap routine.

Until January 16.

A message from the Editor, Mark Waldron

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