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The Four Seasons’ Frankie
Valli and Bob
Gaudio flew into London to attend today’s launch for the
London production of Jersey
Boys, the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical that
tells their life story against a backdrop of their greatest
hits. After meeting journalists – and introducing the
actors who will play them – at the West End’s Prince Edward
Theatre, where the musical opens on 18 March 2008 (previews
from 28 February), the stars headed to jazz club Ronnie
Scott’s to unveil the team to theatre industry guests.
Jersey
Boys follows four blue-collar boys – Valli, Gaudio and
their friends Tommy DeVito and Nick Massi – on their journey
from the wrong side of the tracks in New Jersey to
international success as an American pop music sensation. They
wrote their own songs, invented their own sounds and sold 175
million records worldwide – all before they were 30. Amongst
their many hits included in the show are “Sherry”, “Walk Like
a Man”, “December, 1963 (Oh What a Night)”, “Big Girls Don’t
Cry”, “Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You”, “Working My Way Back to
You” and “Who Loves You”.
The London company will star Ryan
Molloy (On the Town, Godspell, Eurobeat) as Frankie
Valli, Stephen
Ashfield (Taboo, Fame, Tomorrow Morning, Imagine
This) as Bob Gaudio,Glenn Carter (Jesus Christ Superstar, Whistle Down the Wind,
Chess, Cats) as Tommy DeVito and Philip
Bulcock (Golden Boy, TV’s upcoming Hanrahan
Investigates) as Nick Massi.
Speaking today, Rick
Elice said he was optimistic that the show would achieve
similar success on this side of the Atlantic. “It seems to me
that London loves great theatre and great theatre is about
great stories and this show has a great story.”
Gaudio agreed: “I like to think of it as a drama with music
rather than a straight musical because the story is that
strong.” The book includes details about the group’s
associations with the mafia. “You couldn’t have been from
southern New Jersey, blue-collar and first generation Italian
and not have been very close to the mob,” Elice explained,
adding that the boys were much more likely to have “ended up
in the trunk of somebody’s car” than to have become pop stars.
According to Valli, “The story was told with as much truth
as possible. I think that also had something to do with the
success of it. We were young kids who did get in trouble.”
When their careers took off, he remembered, “We kept our pasts
secret, kind of swept under the rug. When we decided to do
this, we talked about it a long time. We tried not to hurt
anybody, but as far as our own lives were concerned, we were
pretty upfront.”
The team is unworried about their story being too specific
to East Coast America or confusion over the title. Elice said:
“The reason the show works is because the idea of the Jersey
boy is not a geographical concept, it’s a psychological and
emotional concept.” Gaudio added: “It’s about four blue-collar
guys who work their way up – it could be anyone, anywhere.”
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