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“It’s been full standing ovations,” Gardiner said. So far in the show’s first few weeks, audiences have been leaping to their feet. … It’s so cinematic and we have to go to so many places, so I thought it was a really clever, elegant, intelligent way … to take something that iconic and explode it out.” Another part of the wall opens up, and it’s the kitchen. “The wall opens up and it’s Billy’s bedroom. “If you’ve seen the movie, the iconic green and blue wallpaper that Billy is jumping in front of is something that the set designer blew up,” Gardiner said. The numbers unfold against a cinematic backdrop by set designer Jason Sherwood. “I’m more classically trained, so I had to learn and it was hard for me to pick that up, but it was really fun. “Tap is my hardest style of dance,” Radford said. “It’s really hard to get all the steps,” Tabaka said. “It’s not just showing what’s going on inside of Billy’s life, it’s also showing what’s going on outside of Billy’s life.”īoth agree that the most challenging number is the tap-heavy “Angry Dance.” “My favorite number in the show is ‘Solidarity,'” Tabaka said. … It’s just a really fun, jazzy number, and we use hula hoops in this production.” “It takes place with Billy in ballet class. “My favorite number is ‘Born to Boogie,'” Radford said. These themes of creative expression play out in the songbook by Lee Hall and Elton John. “I have amazing parents, and even though my mother is a big jock and played lots of sports … she said, ‘If we’re going to do this, you’re going to go to the best ballet school in the city,’ which was The Washington Ballet.” “When I was 6, 7, 8, all I would do is dance around the house and started telling my mom I wanted to take ballet classes,” Gardiner said. Gardiner himself relates, having been the only boy in an all-girls ballet class from ages 8-16. “I wanted to scream, but I had to keep calm. “I was at a ballet summer intensive on my phone at lunch break and I got an email,” Radford said. “I come down and, all of a sudden, there’s this cake that says, ‘Congratulations, Billy.’ I’m like, ‘Who’s Billy?’ They’re like, ‘You!’ I’m silent and frozen, almost in tears, I was so happy. “I came back from the pool,” Tabaka said. I started out with hip-hop and absolutely hated it, so I started the next year with more classical styles, like ballet, tap and jazz, and I just fell in love with it.”īoth young performers remember sheer excitement when they got the good news. “My mom was a dancer, and she led me into that world. “I actually started out with gymnastics and cheer,” Radford said. He splits the role with 12-year-old Liam Redford, of New Jersey. And for acting, I saw my first Broadway show ‘The Lion King’ and loved it and said, ‘I have to do this.'” My mom said, ‘Oh, well, maybe he can dance!’ So that’s when I really started going into dance. “As she grew up, I used to go to dance with her, and I loved to run around the studio and just be a little kid. “My sister used to dance when she was young,” Tabaka said. That talented local boy is 11-year-old Owen Tabaka. There was no intention necessarily to cast somebody from here.” I hadn’t even looked at their resume and ultimately found out that one of them lives in Alexandria, Virginia. “These two young gentlemen ended up being the final two. “We had auditions in New York City and had a casting director who sought out people from all over the country,” Gardiner said. Indeed, the role is so demanding that they had to cast two child actors to split the duties. It’s out of control what these kids have to do.” “These kids have to act, sing, dance, tap dance, ballet, jazz - they have to fly, they have to tumble. “If you can find a role more difficult than Billy Elliot, you’ll have to point it out to me because I don’t know what it is,” Gardiner said. When Billy falls in love with ballet, he brings the town together through the power of dance.
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“The film really focuses just on Billy the musical focuses on the community around him.”Īdapted by Lee Hall from his own movie screenplay, the show follows 11-year-old Billy Elliot, who lives in England, where his father and brothers are caught in the 1984-85 Miners’ Strike. “Even Stephen Daldry and the original creators of the film say they prefer the musical because they were able to tell the story they always wanted,” director Matthew Gardiner told WTOP. The acclaimed musical “Billy Elliot” dances its way into Signature Theatre, now through Jan. WASHINGTON - Three Oscar nominations, 10 Tony Awards and one unforgettable story. WTOP's Jason Fraley previews 'Billy Elliot' at Signature Theatre ( Jason Fraley)
