BWW Interviews: ROCKY HORROR's Oliver Thornton and Roxanne Pallett
Back to the Articleby Carrie Dunn
Roxanne Pallett's on her way back to her dressing room after a mad dash for coffee before the shops shut. "Me and Ben [Ben Forster] always make sure we find our coffee shop when we get to a new town," she says. "Ben's like my husband now. "I don't know what I'm going to do when he leaves to go and play Jesus again. If you see a woman crawling onto the stage at the O2 Arena and pulling Jesus down from the cross, that'll be me..." So you're in your second town of a year-long UK tour of the 40th anniversary production of The Rocky Horror Show... Yes, we're in Torquay after opening in Brighton before Christmas. They really embraced it, they kept us on our toes. The audience are as big a part of it as we are; you need a vibrant audience, you need them to get on their feet. Now we're on the road, and we're loving it, it's absolutely hysterical. You realise just why we're celebrating this show's 40th anniversary. Absolutely - it doesn't feel like a show that's forty years old. And you always have to be on your toes as well as staying in character. Were you a fan of the show before? I'd never seen the show or the movie. I knew the Timewarp, along with other parThty songs, that'd always get people up on the dance floor, and I knew the show and movie existed but hadn't seen either of them. I really don't know where I was, because this has had the biggest reaction out of anything I've done, when I tell people I'm playing Janet in The Rocky Horror Show, from the hairdresser to the man in the baker's to my mum's friend. After I got the part I made the conscious decision not to see the film. Actors are like sponges, it's easy to soak up someone else's portrayal and interpret it, but I wanted to give my own interpretation. That's why I wanted to be blonde for this as well - usually I'm dark and feisty, but being blonde helps me look like that all-American girl, and it helps the audience.
That's just as well - you're all together for a long time... [laughs] That's true, we're together for a year! How have you found yourself getting on with playing such an iconic role as Frank N Furter? The biggest thing has been the expectation that comes with the role. I have been nervous, I have felt the pressure - I'm stepping into the shoes of so many great Franks, and that's scary. The great thing is that the director is wonderful, and he stopped it being scary. How did you approach reinventing the role? I knew the film well, I watched it a lot as a teenager. After I got the role, I decided not to look at it - I was the same when I got the part in Priscilla. The important thing is to look at the script and the music and the lyrics, and that's what we did; I approached it like any other role. Richard O'Brien was around too, he came into the rehearsal room, so had there been anything off the mark, he would have said. So that was a safe environment. It was only really when we went in front of the audience that I felt the pressure again! As Frank, you have the leeway to use a sharply-raised eyebrow, though, in the right circumstances... Roxanne Pallett and Oliver Thornton star in the 40th anniversary production of The Rocky Horror Show, currently on a UK tour. |