"A camp, all singing, all dancing evocation of a culture that the western world has been demonising for years."
It doesn't take long into the opening number of Aladdin before the discomfort settles in. Here, on stage at the Capitol, in a tableau of brightly coloured harem pants and woven carpets is a camp, all singing, all dancing evocation of a culture that the western world has been demonising for years.
Aladdin's home of Agrabah may be a fictional place, but the bad hummus and tabouli puns and Tom, Dick and Hussein jokes ring a little hollow in the wake of this week's real-life news stories about the way we treat people from that part of the world who seek sanctuary.
Once you get past the glaring lack of self-awareness there are dazzling theatre tricks, a set that stuns and a larger-than-life performance from Michael James Scott as the cheeky, mischievous Genie. The show's highlight, Friend Like Me, when Genie introduces himself to his new master — Ainsley Melham's dreamy Aladdin — is a masterful display of theatre design and performance, from the dazzling gold cave and the pyrotechnics to Scott's quips and rather impressive dancing.
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Unfortunately, Arielle Jacobs — a bejewelled Jasmine — gets very little to do, much like all the female members of the chorus, who spend most of the show prancing around in costumes seemingly straight from Vegas Showgirls-R-Us.
Disney has long been under scrutiny for the way they co-opt and depict women and other cultures. This show is a jarring reminder that they still have a long way to go.