Children of Eden (2001)

Children of Eden logoMusic and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz
Book by John Caird
28st - 31st March 2001 (five performances)
Dovehouse Theatre, Solihull

This was the first time SMASH moved its performances from its “home” at Solihull Methodist Church. We decided to take advantage of the larger stage (with its much easier access from the wings for a cast of over 45!) and excellent raked seating for the audience at the new Dovehouse Theatre, at Langley School, Solihull. In fact, we were one of the first amateur groups to use the new facilities.

Children of Eden is based loosely on the first nine chapters of the bible. Ever since Eve tasted the Fruit of Knowledge in the Garden of Eden, all humans have been faced with choices; choices which signify our freedom, yet choices which lead to pain. This was the theme highlighted by the musical, ‘Children of Eden’, first staged professionally in 1991.

The end of March 2001 saw its Midlands amateur premiere, at the splendid Dovehouse Theatre at Langley School, presented by SMASH. The complex vocal arrangement provided a major challenge, but the skilled musical direction by Peter Farndon, and overall direction by Sheila Tallon, proved more than equal to it.

This vibrant and moving musical retold the familiar Genesis accounts of the Creation, the Fall, Cain and Abel, and Noah’s Ark. But this production was no ‘tea-towels on head’ affair. SMASH dispensed with conventional costumes, scenery and props, using instead minimal staging, and maximising the cast’s talent in conveying the images of the story through movement and gesture. The narrative, consisting of almost continuous music, flowed seamlessly, linked by recurring themes and motifs. The story is told by the chorus, the ‘generations of Adam’.

The generations of Adam

A strong group of principals emerged from and then blended back into the group of story-tellers as the tale progressed. ‘Children of Eden’ includes traditionally heart-warming moments – younger cast members running onstage as animals at the Creation, joy at the end of the flood, but also raises moving and unusual questions on a well-known and traditional story, such as Adam’s choice of Eve over God and Noah’s difficulty in leaving friends to die when he boarded his ark. The audience were captivated by moments such as the serpent’s slippery dance, delighted by the animals, and then close to tears at the death of Eve.

Adam and Eve must leave the garden

‘Children of Eden’, with its beautiful, memorable music, and complex and joyful moments was highly successful and thank you to everyone who supported us.

And father breathed life into his children, And the cleverest of the animals was the snake, Adam and Eve, you must leave the garden:

And father breathed life into his childrenAnd the cleverest of the animals was the snakeAdam and Eve, you must leave the garden

Adam and his sons, Cain and Abel, Eve and the Children of Eden, the generations of Adam:

Adam and his sons, Cain and AbelEve and the Children of EdenThe generations of Adam

The animals prepare to enter the ark, Yonah and Japeth in whatever time we have, Noah and Family:

The animals prepare to enter the arkYonah and Japeth in whatever time we haveNoah and Family – For such a time as this

Sailor of the skies: Yonah and the dove, ain’t it good to see the sun again, the promise:

Sailor of the skies: Yonah and the doveAin’t it good to see the sun again!The promise