The Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre’s big summer musical is a new version of ‘101 Dalmations’ (2024)

Kate Fleetwood steals the show as an influencer Cruella de Vil in this uneven new family musical

Adapted direct from Dodie Smith’s 1956 kids’ book – ie, absolute not a Disney production – ‘101 Dalmatians’ is a scrappy affair. It’s the first ever original musical from the Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre, and it boasts charming puppetry, big-name writers and a scream of a turn from Kate Fleetwood as the evil Cruella de Vil. But by the towering standards of the OAT –known for its revelatory musical revivals –it’s pretty uneven.

If you just view it as a fun kids’ show, you’d be more forgiving. In fact, I was pretty forgiving: I skipped press night and took my children the following afternoon. However, I wouldn’t say it’s really been pushed as a show for youngsters: historically the OAT’s musicals are aimed at an adult audience, the evening finish is certainly too late for my children, and the foregrounding of Fleetwood’s villainous Cruella de Vil in the publicity recalls Disney’s more adult-orientated spin-off film of last year(‘Cruella’).

Anyway: my kids had fun at Timothy Sheader’s production. I mean, it starts with a protracted bottom-sniffing scene, for crying out loud, as grown-up dalmatians Pongo (Danny Collins and Ben Thompson) and Perdi (Emma Lucia and Yana Penrose) meet for the first time, give each other a good honk up the backside, fall in love and nudge their bookish, introverted human ownersDominic (Eric Stroud) and Danielle (Karen Fishwick) into starting a relationship. Skip forward a bit and humans andhounds have moved in together, and the latter have produced 15 babies.

Uber puppet designer and director Toby Olié’s spotty pooches are proper showstoppers: Pongo and Perdi have large, mobile forebodies operated by a puppeteer and hind legs shared with the human actor who speaks their lines: Emma Lucia is particularly charming as a compassionate, north-eastern Perdi. The innumerable puppies are generally just represented by their heads… and they’re jolly sweet, too.

In JohnnyMcKnight’s stage adaptation of Zinnie Harris’s contemporary update, the canine idyll is punctured by the arrival of Fleetwood’s De Vil, a psychopathic influencer who is, by and large, extremely funny as she self-pityingly inveigles her way into our heroes’ lives, then persuades herself she absolutely must have – and deserves – a dalmatian-puppy-skin coat. With a succession of increasingly frightening fright wigs, her forever remarkable cheekbones, and some full-on panto-villain vibes, Fleetwood is an absolute joy.She’s also the focal point of the most visually imaginative moments of Sheader’s production: a spirited, cartoon-style attempt to use puppetry to look like her hair and arms have popped out after she swallows a dodgy potion; and most impressively, a tableau at the end of the first half where the dancers line up in formation behind her to form the giant puppyskin coat of her fantasies (there’s deliciously lurid costume design from Katrina Lindsay).

Lots of positives, then, but as a whole, it feels pretty all over the shop. Much as Harris has updated the story, neither she nor McKnight have solved its problems: the abrupt second-half switch of focus to a group of child actors playing a quartet of escaped puppies is tonally disorientating and lays an awful lot of pressure on some very young performers. Even taking that on the chin as a necessity of the story, therewere too many momentswhen I struggled to work out exactly what was going on (Cruella’s initial capture of Pongo and Perdi, for instance, was baffling – she seemingly only managed to abduct them from their home because a scene change happened around them).

There’s also simply a dearth of memorable characters beyond Cruella: Perdi is lovely, but her aside it’s hard to feel especially invested in the bland good guys (beyond the obvious fact that skinning puppies is bad). And while stage legend Douglas Hodge’s wordy, string-and-brass-heavy songs are pleasant and good at keeping the story ticking along, there’s a lack of killer tunes that might have compensated for other shortcomings – although the joyous finale ‘One Hundred and One’ is a keeper.

My kids didn’t care about any of this: they enjoyed two hours of a lighthearted good vs evil yarn with some cool puppets and a boo-hissable villain. They didn’t worry about the merits of ‘101 Dalmatians’ as a musical for the ages. And if you can take the same attitude, you’ll have a blast, or at least you’ll have a blast in the good bits. But ultimately the Open Air Theatre is one of the best musical theatre venues in London, and by its own extremely lofty standards, ‘101 Dalmatians’ is a bit of a dog’s dinner.

The Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre’s big summer musical is a new version of ‘101 Dalmations’ (2024)

FAQs

What is the 101 Dalmatians musical about? ›

Based on the 1956 children's novel The Hundred and One Dalmatians written by Dodie Smith, the musical follows a pair of Dalmatian dogs as they search through London in search of their litter of fifteen puppies, which were stolen by Cruella DeVil to make dog skin fur coats.

Is 101 Dalmatians the musical good? ›

The show certainly improves as it goes along, and it works best as a children's show: my two young nieces stayed hooked throughout on press night. So, perhaps a crowd-pleaser for the kids but one which may leave some parents wanting to go walkies. 101 Dalmatians is at Regent's Park theatre, London, until 28 August.

Which park was 101 Dalmatians? ›

While Regents Park is used in One Hundred and One Dalmatians, as well as where the original novel is set, in the live-action remake, the park used is St. James, near Buckingham Palace.

What musical is Cruella de Ville in? ›

Cruella De Vil (Rachel York) is the main villainess in the 2009 Broadway Musical "The 101 Dalmatians Musical". In London in 1957, a pair of Dalmatian dogs, Pongo (James Ludwig) and Missus (Catia Ojeda), live with their human owners, the Dearlys, and enjoy a happy life.

Who is the main dog in 101 Dalmatians? ›

Plot. In 1958, aspiring songwriter Roger Radcliffe lives in a bachelor flat near Regent's Park in London with his pet Dalmatian, Pongo. Deciding both of them need a "mate", Pongo watches women and their dogs in the street.

Why doesn t Cruella like Dalmatians? ›

Cruella saw dalmations the same as a cash crop. She Intended to slaughter them to harvest their fur. What infuriated her about the dogs is that they were clever enough to manuever escapes and cause destruction in the areas they were being held. That meant more work for her and her henchmen.

Is 101 Dalmatians a kids movie? ›

However, One Hundred and One Dalmatians contains references to animal cruelty, slapstick violence, and one of Disney's scariest and most iconic villains. It's therefore not suitable for children under 4 years and we recommend parental guidance for children aged 4-5 and/or a sensitive audience.

What reading level is 101 Dalmatians? ›

101 Dalmatians | Smith, Dodie | Lexile & Reading Level: 830.

Are the dogs in 101 Dalmatians real? ›

230 Dalmatian puppies and 20 adult Dalmatians were used during filming. Jeff Daniels (Roger) says that on more than one occasion, he heard an authoritative voice on the dog-strewn set shout "Sit!" and immediately plopped himself into a chair only to be told, "Not you, Jeff."

Are the dogs in 102 Dalmatians real? ›

In this movie, all 102 dalmatians are puppies and the dog star is an all-white, 8- to 10-week-old dalmatian pup named, appropriately, Oddball. Visual effects, which for the most part involved spot removal and digital dogs, were created by Disney's The Secret Lab.

What is the old dog in 101 Dalmatians? ›

The Colonel is an Old English Sheepdog from One Hundred and One Dalmatians. He is an ally to Pongo and Perdita, as he assists in the rescue of the Dalmatian Puppies.

How did Cruella become evil? ›

She finally snapped and turned evil in her teens, when her parents led her to believe they would be home for Christmas with her dream puppy, and then sent cardboard cutouts of themselves and a puppy instead. Her hair also turned half-white at this time.

How does Cruella end? ›

Cruella and her henchmen go on a hunt to try to find them, but Anita and Roger figure out what happened and eventually Cruella, Horace, and Jasper are all arrested and the puppies are returned home safely. Anita and Roger end up with all 101 dogs.

How old is Cruella? ›

In Disney's original animated “101 Dalmatians” from 1961, Cruella de Vil is an evil woman in her sixties whose goal is to kill and skin the Dalmatians for their fur as a new fashion statement.

What is the plot of 102 Dalmatians? ›

What was the purpose of Dalmatians? ›

Dalmatians have been used throughout history for serious work. They have been sentinels on the borders of their homeland of Dalmatia and Croatia during wars. They worked as shepherds, as draft dogs, as hound dogs, as hunting dogs, as retrievers and as performing dogs.

Is 101 Dalmatians based on anything? ›

There's Dodie Smith's 1956 children's novel that 101 Dalmatians is based on, as well as the real-life women that the creative team behind the 1961 movie were inspired by when developing the character.

What happens in 102 Dalmatians? ›

Cruella survives, then she and LePelt are both arrested. Chloe and Kevin, exonerated from the theft accusation, return to London and are personally awarded the remnants of Cruella's fortune by Alonzo himself. Oddball's coat finally develops a few small spots, much to everyone's surprise.

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