Jake Brunger and Pippa Cleary

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Jake Brunger and Pippa Cleary are a London-based musical theatre writing partnership. They met at Bristol University, where they were studying Drama and Music respectively.

Musicals

Their first musical Jet Set Go! ran at the 2008 Edinburgh Fringe Festival at George Square Theatre. Following the Festival it played a short sell-out season at the acclaimed Theatre 503 in London. A new production in April 2009 ran at Jermyn Street Theatre with a cast including Mark Evans and Tim Driesen. Jet Set Go! is published and licensed by Josef Weinbeger Ltd. The amateur premiere took place at Cambridge University in February 2011, a production which subsequently opened at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2011.

Their second musical The Great British Soap Opera ran at the 2009 Edinburgh Fringe Festival - again at George Square Theatre - and subsequently transferred for a two-week run at Jermyn Street Theatre in September 2009. The cast included Philippa Buxton and Leon Kay featuring the voice of Lynda Bellingham.

In 2010, Brunger and Cleary were commissioned to write the stage adaptation of Enid Blyton’s Malory Towers series, which received a workshop at St Paul's Girls' School in Hammersmith, and in August 2011 they wrote a new musical for Youth Music Theatre: UK (YMT) called The Lost and Found Office, which was directed by Gemma Farlie.

In March 2012 they wrote a new song for A Song Cycle for Soho at Soho Theatre, starring Claire Moore, Michael Cantwell, Niamh Perry and James Gillan. It was released on CD in May 2012 by SimG Records.

In November 2013, their new stage adaptation of Little Red Riding Hood opened at Singapore Repertory Theatre directed by Kate Golledge and choreographed by Ashley Nottingham, where it ran for 6 weeks. It is licensed worldwide by Rodgers and Hammerstein Theatricals.[1]

In December 2013, The Snow Gorilla - featuring the voice of Brian Blessed - opened for a five week run at the Rose Theatre, Kingston, for which they wrote music and lyrics.[2]

Their new stage musical adaptation of Sue Townsend's The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Aged 13¾ opened at Leicester's Curve Theatre in March 2015.[3] Their original new musical Prodigy, commissioned by National Youth Music Theatre, ran at the St James Theatre in August 2015.[4]

Their new stage musical adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island opens at Singapore Repertory Theatre on October 30, 2015 for a six week run,[5] and the UK premiere of Red Riding Hood will open at the Pleasance Theatre in December 2015.[6]

Awards

Brunger and Cleary were nominated for the 2010 Stiles and Drewe Prize for Best Song, which was judged at a ceremony at the Queen’s Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue. Prior to that, Cleary was nominated for the Notes for the Stage competition, and was also a finalist for the 2011 Tim Williams Award. She won the 2009 Music Theatre Matters Award in recognition of her composition for both Jet Set Go! and The Great British Soap Opera. In January 2013 Cleary won the Arts Foundation Composition for Musical Theatre Fellowship.[7] They were also nominated for the 2013 Stiles and Drewe Prize.

In September 2015, their adaptation of The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole was nominated for Best Show for Children and Young People at Theatre Awards UK.[8]

Critical Acclaim

Jet Set Go! received rave reviews both in Edinburgh and London. Dominic Cavendish in the Daily Telegraph described it as ‘a delightful, inventive and witty new musical’[9] and Jay Richardson in The Scotsman wrote that “Jet Set Go! is one of those rare, unexpected delights”.[10] The 2009 production at Jermyn Street Theatre received Time Out Critics’ Choice.

The Great British Soap Opera was likewise well received by critics. Sally Stott in The Scotsman wrote ‘there's a sophisticated structure underpinning the story in which "real" life and TV fiction run as parallels... it's all great fun, surprisingly clever and just like a real soap you'll find yourself getting drawn in despite yourself’.[11] In London, Nina Caplan in Time Out described the musical as “more welcome than any profound examination of these putrid times”[12]

The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole at Leicester's Curve Theatre received 4 stars from The Telegraph, The Times and The Guardian. Lyn Gardner in The Guardian wrote that Mole was 'a home-grown hit for the Curve... a show constantly paying neat homage to previous British musicals and the traditions of the TV sitcom, and yet always staying distinctive and true to its source material... a quaint, unassuming little charmer."[13] Dominic Cavendish in The Telegraph wrote that "this all-singing, all-dancing Mole comes up trumps; in fact, it’s so good it could burrow its way to the West End... the evening does that rare thing: it makes you laugh, tugs at your heart-strings and honours the spirit of the original while being playfully inventive... this fresh, funny, stirring spin on a Thatcher-era classic may be around for a long time to come."[14] Dominic Maxwell in The Times wrote 'it’s no small achievement to make this first musical version such a lively, evocative pleasure... amusing and affecting enough to leave you glowing... a thoroughly charming evening: faithful to the book but with a tenderness of its own.'[15]

External links

References

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