Guangzhou Opera House 10 November 2023 - The Last Five Years | GoComGo.com

The Last Five Years

Guangzhou Opera House, Opera Hall, Guangzhou, China
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7:30 PM

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Important Info
Type: Musical
City: Guangzhou, China
Starts at: 19:30

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Overview

One of the most classic two-person musical masterpieces in history, dedicated by the West End’s resident musical actors.

The musical "The Last Five Years" won the Drama Critics Award for Best Musical Songwriting and was named one of the "Top Ten Theater Shows of the Year" by Time magazine that year. In the 16 years since the work was born, "The Last Five Years" has become one of the most rehearsed musicals in North America and around the world. This critically acclaimed classic two-person musical will officially land in China this year for its first international tour. The London West End creators and the West End musical's resident actors will present a version of the show at the Garrick Theater in London's West End.
 
Three-time Tony Award winner Jason Robert Brown re-arranged the classic music for this new version, with the melody traveling back and forth across time. The West District stage show made its first domestic offline appearance, presenting a sincere work and an audio-visual feast to the domestic audience.
 
The play uses different narrative angles to tell this love story from New York in an alternative and novel way. The male protagonist narrates the entangled process of the two people from falling in love to getting married to breaking up in a forward narrative, while the heroine uses flashbacks to interpret the bitterness and sweetness of going from breakup to forbearance and back to passionate love. The only time they met was the most critical moment when they decided to get married. The intersection of time and space also brought the entangled plot to a climax.
 
The West End's resident musical actors, who are good at singing and dancing, will also make their debut in many cities in China this year. In this version, the two actors played the piano on the revolving stage to accompany themselves throughout the whole process, and there was also a four-piece band on site. The rich musicality and high-level singing performance also added a new viewing dimension to the story.
 
Plot:
The play tells the twists and turns of the love story between the male and female protagonists over five years. Jamie is a writer. He was recognized by the industry shortly after graduation and his career has been rapidly rising. It was also at this time that he met Casey, who was well-known in the field of musical theater. They overcame many obstacles and finally came together. But after marriage, Cathy encountered a bottleneck in her musical career, and gradually couldn't find her place in Jamie's life circle. Losing her sense of security, she became more sensitive and worried, and over time the gap between the two began to appear. Jamie decided to end their five-year marriage after leaving a goodbye letter to Kathy.

History
Premiere of this production: 21 May 2001, Northlight Theatre, Chicago

The Last Five Years is a musical written by Jason Robert Brown. It premiered at Chicago's Northlight Theatre in 2001 and was then produced Off-Broadway in March 2002. Since then it has had numerous productions both in the United States and internationally.

Synopsis

Cathy is sitting alone lamenting the end of her marriage ("Still Hurting"). We shift to meet Jamie. It is five years earlier and he has just met Cathy. Jamie is overjoyed to be dating outside his Jewish heritage ("Shiksa Goddess").

Cathy and Jamie are in Ohio. It is her birthday and he has come to visit her as she works in a show there ("See I'm Smiling"). She is anxious to fix any problems in their marriage but she becomes angry when Jamie tells her he has to go back early to New York. During breaks in the music, we see a younger Jamie, talking to a literary agent about his book.

Jamie is moving in with Cathy. He comments on how lucky he is that everything is going right for him; his book is being published and his life with Cathy seems too good to be true ("Moving Too Fast"). Elsewhere an older Cathy is making a call to her agent: it seems her career isn't going the way she planned it.

Cathy is attending Jamie's book party. She sings about how he ignores her for his writing but she will always be in love with him ("I'm a Part of That").

Jamie and Cathy celebrate their second Christmas. He tells her a new story he has written about an old tailor named Schmuel and he gives her a Christmas present: a watch, promising to support her as she follows her dreams of acting. ("The Schmuel Song").

Cathy is in Ohio and writing to Jamie. She describes to Jamie her disappointing life in Ohio among her eccentric colleagues ("A Summer in Ohio").

Jamie is sitting with Cathy in Central Park. Jamie proposes to her and, for the first time in the musical, they sing together ("The Next Ten Minutes"). They get married, exchanging vows to stay together forever.

Jamie is facing temptation from other women, especially now his career as a writer has escalated ("A Miracle Would Happen"). Cathy, meanwhile, is auditioning for a role ("When You Come Home to Me"). She is getting down about the rejection she faces as an actress and complains to Jamie ("Climbing Uphill").

Jamie speaks to Cathy on the phone, trying to convince her that there is nothing going on with him and his editor, Elise. He wants to celebrate a book review but Cathy refuses to go out.

Jamie is fighting with Cathy, trying to get her to listen to him. He accuses her of being unsupportive of his career just because hers is failing. Though his words are harsh, he promises her that he believes in her ("If I Didn't Believe in You").

A younger Cathy is in the car with Jamie, who is going to meet her parents. She tells him about her past relationships and hopes not to end up in a small town life like her friend from high school ("I Can Do Better Than That"). She asks Jamie to move in with her.

Near the end of the relationship Jamie wakes up beside another woman ("Nobody Needs to Know"). He tries to defend his actions and blames Cathy for destroying his privacy and their relationship. Jamie promises not to lie to this woman and tells her that "I could be in love with someone like you," just as he does to Cathy in "Shiksa Goddess."

Cathy is ecstatic after her first date with Jamie. She sings goodbye ("Goodbye Until Tomorrow"). She proclaims that she has been waiting for Jamie her whole life. Simultaneously but five years forward, Jamie sits in their shared apartment writing laments over the relationship ("I Could Never Rescue You"). As Cathy waves Jamie "goodbye until tomorrow", Jamie wishes Cathy simply "goodbye".

Venue Info

Guangzhou Opera House - Guangzhou
Location   No.1 Zhujiang West Road, Zhujiang New Town, Tianhe District

Guangzhou Opera House is a Chinese opera house in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, People's Republic of China. Designed by Zaha Hadid, it opened on the 9th of May in 2010.

In April 2002 an international architectural competition attracted Coop Himmelb(l)au, Rem Koolhaas and Zaha Hadid – each producing detailed designs. In November 2002, Zaha Hadid's "double pebble" was announced the winner and the groundbreaking ceremony was held early in 2005.

The theatre has become the biggest performing centre in southern China and is one of the three biggest theatres in the nation alongside Beijing's National Centre for the Performing Arts and Shanghai's Shanghai Grand Theatre. May 2010 saw American filmmaker Shahar Stroh direct the premiere production of the opera house: Puccini's opera Turandot which had in previous years been a controversial opera in China.

The structure was designed by Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid. It is conceived as two rocks washed away by the Pearl River. Its freestanding concrete auditorium set within an exposed granite and glass-clad steel frame took over five years to build, and was praised upon opening by architectural critic Jonathan Glancey in The Guardian, who called it "at once highly theatrical and insistently subtle."

Important Info
Type: Musical
City: Guangzhou, China
Starts at: 19:30
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