http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1104705&pageid=2

LONDON: AR Rahman was one of the stars at last night's premiere of 'The Lord
of the Rings,'the most expensive musical spectacle produced here that earned
mixed reviews from critics on Wednesday, but most of them lavished praise on
its music.

Rahman, who produced the musical score for the 12.5 pounds mega-musical
stage adaptation of the JRR Tolkien trilogy with Finnish folk group Varttina
and Christopher Nightingale, was accorded a red carpet welcome as he arrived
for the three-hour show at the packed Theatre Royal here.
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*The Times* on Monday wrote that it took three years, and many more
millions, to bring this production to the stage.

After getting a lukewarm reception in its initial six-month run in Toronto,
the producers shaved 45 minutes off the running time, recast key roles,
beefed up the relationship between the hobbits Sam and Frodo,
re-orchestrated the music, re-choreographed the battle scenes and injected
more spectacle into the climactic tussle for the ring.

"The result is the most expensive production in West End history," the paper
said.
It remains to be seen whether the one million pounds revolving stage,
weighing 40 tonnes, and its cast of Hobbits, Orcs, Men, Ents and Elves, with
504 costumes, supported by 50 actors, 19 musicians, and a 60-strong
backstage crew, will be enough to beat well-known composer Andrew Lloyd
Webber's new musical 'Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat', which
has already been heavily promoted on television.


Rahman, hailed by The Time Magazine as the 'Mozart of Madras' received
laurels from critics here, though the production itself evoked mixed
reaction from them, with some describing it as brilliant and some calling it
a 'flop'.

"The music also never, or hardly ever, impedes the narrative flow," wrote
the Guardian, adding that two dominant elements of the score -- "the hearty,
rustic numbers" and the "romantic ballads" -- "fulfils the basic function of
reinforcing atmosphere".

The Times said, "the music, airy and earthy by turns, carries and
intensifies the story's swell of feelings."

The world of musicals is not new for Rahman, who, according to a BBC
estimate, has sold more than 100 million albums of his works, comprising
music from over 50 movies.

In 2001, Andrew Lloyd Webber invited Rahman to compose for the musical
'Bombay Dreams', the first musical he would produce that he had not
composed.

'Bombay Dreams' opened to packed houses in London's West End. The show had
an unprecedented run for two years and later premiered on Broadway in New
York.

The 'Bombay' Theme, composed by Rahman for the Mani Ratnam-directed movie
'Bombay', featured recently in the film 'Lord of War' starring Nicholas
Cage.

The track, 'Chaiyya Chaiyya' from the movie 'Dil Se' has found its way into
the new Spike Lee movie, 'Inside Man', starring Oscar winner Denzel
Washington.

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