I love the shows! As I said, not Shakespeare but classy, skilled, heaps of work in development. I can feel the role of the musos, primarily the bassist. The Resident band comprises a rhythm section and horns, all capable readers. They back the shows and various visiting artists with their charts, historically stained and edited, but now probably neat and digital. They also perform occasionally as the local jazz band. They back the big shows, with dancers, singers, costumes, lights, the whole caboodle. The first nights were comedian Wayne Deakin and singer county-cum-pop singer Chantelle Delaney. WD offered a risque gig later in the cruise at another venue, but I missed that. CD was strongly voiced and chatty with the backing band, introducing her boys left at home, her role as backing for Slim Dusty as a 12-yo (?), her studio contact with Adele and how Olivia Newton-John liked best her take on Jeff Buckley Hallelujah. All interesting background to a decent belter-strong voice and pleasant presence. Then day 3 and the first real show. This was Viva la Musica, mostly latin and Flamenco tunes with filmic arrangements and massive lights and costumes and dance numbers. Forty-five minutes of outgoing excitement. Love this stuff. I can easily conceive of the work of the musos with their charts, but the dancers (6 female, 5 male) and solo singers (2 male, 2 female) and classy PA audio and complex lighting and fast-change costumes, presumably held together with velcro, were not so obvious. I ran into one of the dancers a day or so later and she confirmed there's no written script for the dancing: they'd learnt it in 10 days. Brilliant stuff and the best of on-board life in my estimation, at least amongst the entertainment.
Wayne Deakin (comedian) performed solo and Chantelle Delaney (vocals) performed with the Resident band. The first big show was Viva la Musica featuring the Resident band with 4 singers and 9 dancers. All in the Princess Theater (sic) on Discovery Princess.




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