Musical (2000)


Musique: Andrew Lloyd Webber
Paroles: Ben Elton
Livret: Andrew Lloyd Webber • Ben Elton

The plot, which is centred on a local football (soccer) team, focuses on the attempt to overcome religious intolerance and violence that has engulfed their community. The team is made up of Catholic and Protestant youths and the coach is a priest. The musical chronicles the ups and downs of the team players as the emerging political and religious violence overwhelms them. Some of the players become members of the IRA, one gets kneecapped.
The musical also chronicles the emotional change in the protagonist from political ambivalence to becoming an IRA terrorist. Highlights of the play include the dual singing of "God's Own Country" by two females, one Catholic, one Protestant; the rain-drenched funeral; the football match; the transformation of the football net into a prison.

Original production synopsis)
Acte I
Football is a part of everyday life in 1960s and 1970s Ireland, as the overture and opening number (The Beautiful Game) demonstrate. It's especially important for Father O'Donnell's team, who are having their first practice on the first day of the season. The star player, John, seems to be a little more interested in one of the girls on the sidelines than he is in the priest, and as a punishment is forced to stay behind and take care of the equipment (Clean the Kit). Meanwhile, Thomas, a fervent Irish Catholic nationalist leads a group of thugs to get another boy, Del, who's an atheist, to quit the team. There's no room for someone like him on a Catholic team.
Mary, the girl John had been noticing during the practice, comes to the locker room to talk to him. Although they initially fight their attraction (Don't Like You), they soon decide to give it a try.
Time passes. John and Mary are quite serious with each other now. She asks him one evening to join her in a march for Catholic rights, but he is more interested in going drinking with his friends. Left alone, Mary is unable to understand why anyone would not love Ireland and want to make it better. Her sentiments are echoed - almost - by a girl with the rival Protestant team. (God's Own Country). John changes his mind and returns to go to the march with Mary, because she is more important to him (God's Own Country Protestant March).
The team makes it to the final, but their celebration is cut short when a group of Protestants trash the locker room. Christine and Del emerge to find the wreckage - they had been making love in hiding during the raid. Surveying the mess, they both wish all the fighting would stop so they could get on with their lives. (Let Us Love in Peace)
It comes down to the final. After the other team tied the goal on a penalty shot, John scores the winning goal (The Final). The boys celebrate at a local pub (Off to the Party, The Craic). Del comes to see Christine, but Thomas and his friends quickly remind him that he isn't welcome. Rather than causing any more unpleasantness, he leaves. Meanwhile, Ginger has finally got up the nerve to speak to Bernadette, who returns his affection (Don't Like You Reprise). They have a first, small kiss, and then she has to go, and Ginger helps Daniel home. After seeing him to his door, Ginger is about to head home himself when he's confronted by a gang of Protestant thugs. His attempt to escape is useless
Christine and Mary are discussing the previous evening at Mary's house. Mary disapproves of the relationship with Del until Christine convinces her that love knows no boundaries (Our Kind of Love). They are interrupted by John who brings the horrible news - Ginger is dead. Thomas arrives and asks John to go with them to get revenge, but he refuses - more violence won't do any good. As they comfort each other and go to the funeral, they all long for an end to the division and for a chance to live a normal life (Let Us Love in Peace Reprise).
Acte II
John and Mary are getting married, and there are some nerves on all sides (The Happiest Day). When the time comes to make their vows though, there are no doubts (To Have and to Hold). Finally they are left alone in their hotel room for their first night together. Both are nervous, but together they work it out (The First Time).
In the middle of the night, the phone rings. It's Thomas, and he's in trouble. He asks for John's help. Mary doesn't want him to go, but John feels he owes it to his friend even though he doesn't agree with what he's doing. He finally finds Thomas and tells him it's the only time he'll ever do something like this. Thomas tries to explain to him why he has to do what he does (I'd Rather Die on My Feet Than Live on My Knees).
John is finally going to get his big break at the soccer trials. On her way to watch, Mary says goodbye to Christine and Del, who are moving to New York to escape the situation there. Mary figures she and John will go to England, and they talk about leaving their home (God's Own Country Reprise).
John makes a great impression and the coaches want him, but someone else wants him too - the police. Someone has tipped them off about how he helped Thomas, and he is taken to prison, before Mary even has a chance to tell him that she's pregnant (The Selection).
John is put with the other IRA prisoners. He tries to stay apart from them, but they work away at him and eventually he begins to think like them. Even Mary has trouble getting through to him. (Dead Zone)
She has her baby, a boy named Sean, and Daniel comes over to see them. While he's there, Thomas and two other IRA agents barge in and accuse Daniel of betraying John. They shoot him in the knee, crippling him. Mary is horrified and wonders if any good could possibly come out of all this violence (If This is What We're Fighting For).
John is finally released, and his first stop is to see Thomas, because he has realized that it was Thomas who turned him over to the police. After confronting him, John kills him.
Mary enters. She tries to find the man within John that she fell in love with, but he is buried too deep. John is going to England to work for the IRA. He leaves his soccer jersey and a picture of the championship team for his son (All the Love I Have).
As Father O'Donnell comes to collect Sean for the football practice, Mary hopes that the cycle of hate can be stopped with her son (Finale).

The boys in the photograph synopsis
Acte I
“The boys in the photograph” begins with Mary, Christine and Bernadette singing the titular number (The boys in the photograph) in front of a monochrome photograph of the Belfast soccer team that is the focus of the play. After this the majority of the casts join in a number about the importance of soccer or foot ball in the lives of the young people of Belfast, Ireland which is currently on the brink of a cultural war. After this Father O’Donnell begins the roll call for the foot ball team including: John Kelly the teams’ star player who is more interested in showing off in front of girls than practicing seriously, Thomas Malloy John’s best friend who is more goal driven, a fervent Irish Catholic and wears glasses (which need to be taped to his head while playing and are referred to multiple times during the play), Del Copeland the only Protestant on the team (though he claims that he is, in fact, an atheist), Daniel Gillen who has a reputation of stealing radios from cars (though he argues that with so many riots taking place it only makes sense to steal the radios before the cars are burnt) and Ginger O’Shaughnessy who wishes for the conflicts between the Irish and Protestants to cease and to be called by his real name, Gregory. We also meet the three Heroines of the play: Mary a bright out-spoken young woman who believes that the conflicts in Ireland can be resolved through peaceful protests, Bernadette a very religious and prudent girl who has been in love with Ginger since they were children and Christine who defies her Catholic up-bringing not only by going with several boys but also by the man she marries later on.
After the practice Father O’Donnell gives each member of the team a copy of the team photograph along with the lecture to “…Never forget the promise of your youth. This picture is who you are, who you become is up to you” he also puts John on equipment cleaning duty, much to John’s annoyance (Cleaning Kit). While John is imagining his future as the star player for a national team Mary walks in and tells him that he’ll never make a national team since he spends too much time chasing girls. Father O’Donnell then enters the locker room and tells John that the reason he’s harder on him is because he believes that John could be great if he focuses on his game and that there will be plenty of time for girls once he’s famous and can have any kind of girl he wants (to the disgust of Mary, who is hiding near -by due to the rule that girls aren’t allowed in the locker room). John and Mary further argue with each other (Don’t Like You) and eventually grow close and fall in love. Meanwhile Thomas, along with a couple of nameless team mates, threaten Del with violence if he comes to practice again. Thomas having no tolerance for Protestants after one beat up his sister the other day (this also provides a hint of things to come). Eventually Mary and John are in a steady relationship with one another and although at first he does not want to join her in petitioning for Irish rights, being more interested in having fun with his team mates leaving Mary disappointed not only with John but with her neighbours defeatist attitude (God’s Own Country/God’s Own Country- Protestant March). However John eventually comes around and decides that he at least should be there for Mary. Meanwhile Christine and Del have had their own romantic encounter having both taken shelter in an abandoned car during a raid and discovering that despite their different backgrounds that they have a lot in common (Born In Belfast).
Eventually the final game of the season comes and the team has a chance to win the championship (The Final) and despite Thomas being caught by the referee for tripping a member of the other team giving them a penalty kick, John manages to score the winning goal. After their victory the team and their supporters go celebrate at the local pub (Off To The Party/ The Craic). Del and Christine also go to the party though Thomas makes it clear that they aren’t welcome while John wonders where he’s been all season and despite Christine’s insistence that Del has as much of a right to be there as any other member of the team, Del insists that they should leave to avoid causing any trouble. At the same time Ginger and Bernadette begin to realize their feelings for each other, their shared wishes for peace and kiss for the first time (Let Us Love In Peace). However after the party Ginger helps Daniel home and on the way back to his own home, is attacked by a gang of young Protestants and is unable to get away. Meanwhile, the girls are gathered at one of their homes and discussing the evening and their relationships when they receive news that Ginger has been killed and was found miles away from where he went missing. At the funeral Thomas wants to go get revenge for Ginger’s death but is talked out of it when he is reminded that he does not know which Protestant boys are to blame and that if he were to attack some random boys that he would be no better than they are.
Acte II
The second act begins with John and Mary’s wedding day and both are nervous about committing to marry (The Happiest Day Of Our Lives) but manage to get through the ceremony. Later the two are alone and spending their first night alone together in a hotel and looking back on their relationship so far (All The Love I Have/Don’t Like You-reprise) and are nervous to be having their first intercourse ,but eventually do manage to overcome the feelings of awkwardness (The First Time). Later that night they receive a phone call from Thomas who is wanted due to his work for the IRA and while trying to reach a safe house has lost his glasses. Even though Mary protests that he could be arrested too for helping Thomas or even killed, John insists that he can’t leave his friend and that this will be the only time he does this. John eventually finds Tom and drives him to the safe house while the two make it clear to the other that they don’t understand their stance on the issue (I’d Rather Die On My Feet Than Live On My Knees).
Some time later John is finally getting the chance to try out for a national team and is making a great impression on the team scouts. Meanwhile Mary is saying good bye to Christine, Del and their baby son Hendrix who are moving overseas (God’s Own Country-Reprise) and reveals to Christine that she is going to have a child of her own soon, but is waiting until after John’s tryouts to tell him. Unfortunately she doesn’t get the chance to tell him until much later as he’s arrested after the tryouts for helping Thomas escape John is then sent to prison, after the other IRA prisoners act as if he were one of them he explains that he is not an IRA agent and was only arrested because he tried to help a friend while the other agents tell him the only friends he has now are his prison mates. However as John adjusts to prison life while waiting to be released he becomes more and more frustrated with the world that has failed him and nobody can get through to him (The Dead Zone). Eventually Mary has her child, her son Sean, but one night Thomas (who Mary recognises immediately because of his glasses) enters her home with a few other IRA workers and tells her that Daniel, who is sitting in the living room, is the one that reported John to the authorities. Daniel argues that he would never do such a thing but despite his support by Mary and Bernadette is still taken outside and kneecapped (If This Is What We’re Fighting For). Eventually John is released from prison, but has been changed by his experience and wants to go to England to help the IRA, while Mary is disappointed that the man she loves no longer seems to exist. After John gives her his football jersey for their son Mary gives John a copy of the team photograph telling him that before he goes to England to remember that his true self was his first victim. Although he still goes to “take care of some business” John does remember what Father O’Donnell said when he gave them the photo but still tracks down Thomas having noticed while in jail how suspicious it was that Tom was never arrested. Thomas then reveals that he has managed to stay out of jail by reporting others and that he no longer cares if he dies or not since the cycle of violence is endless and he has more than replaced himself with angry men (It Will Never End). John is poised to shoot Thomas but in the end he takes Mary’s comment to heart and puts his gun away telling Tom “I could shoot the man you’ve become, but I can’t shoot the man you were” and leaves while Tom bids his last farewell to John, knowing that he has angered so many people he probably won’t live to see the next day. As John leaves a gunshot is heard off stage. Meanwhile Mary is sitting at home, looking at her copy of the team photograph and looking back on the fates of most of the boys, when John arrives having remembered who he really is (All The Love I Have). Then the finale begins (Finale- The Beautiful Game) and the screen that had been used through-out the play to show historical new footage reveals the bright futures that awaited everyone including that John, despite not making the national team he did become the coach of the school’s team, Sean grew-up hating Football and went into fine arts while his younger sister did make a national team and that the division did eventually end after 30 years

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