Ken Mandelbaum famously wrote a searingly honest book about 40 years of Broadway flops called Not Since Carrie. If it’s updated then Diana The Musical has earned pride of place, in my view.
Many people’s advance fears that it was too soon to tell the story were combined with equal fears that the result would be a tacky, tasteless farrago that makes The Crown look like War and Peace. Well they are mostly right. I feared all the way through watching it – and it took me two nights and some gin to get through it- that we would get a death scene.
So if the show is unproven, why on earth would you rush into a Netflix extravaganza, filmed onstage without an audience ? God alone knows.
The dialogue is uninspiring, but the lyrics get a full set of turkey awards. They are trite, with childish internal and external rhymes and constant repetition of words to fill out the metre – as in “ a pretty pretty girl in a pretty, pretty dress” or the worst example “ a feckity, feckity, feckity, feckity feck-off dress” started off by an overweight, bearded caricature of valet/confidant Paul Burrell.
There are some promising moments – I like Diana’s first song: You’re underestimated , and Judy Kate’s Queen has an elegiac look back at her youth in An Officer’s Wife.
What I sincerely hope is that this doesn’t put theatre-makers off streaming which can work well, and that it doesn’t put audiences off going to see some of the more innovative pieces of theatre that are still being made. The vulture photographers tell Diana to “ dare to look away”, and maybe that’s good advice about this show too.
Diana The Musical is on Netflix and re-opens on Broadway in November