Sparkly, silly and very camp – this is one for the Celine Dion true believers

Sparkly, silly and very camp – this is one for the Celine Dion true believers

Titanique
The Grand Electric, September 22 until November 3
Reviewed by CHANTAL NGUYEN
★★★½

I didn’t even have to see Titanique the musical to start chuckling. The marketing taglines alone were hysterical: “Nothing on earth could come between Jack and Rose. Except Céline Dion.”

Marney McQueen (centre) plays Céline Dion, the diva who comes between Jack (Drew Weston) and Rose (Georgina Hopson) in the camp fever dream, Titanique.Credit: Daniel Boud

If that sounds like an excuse for a camp fever dream, you are right. Do not attend this musical if you are stressed by flashing lights, sequins, and illuminated staircases. Do attend if you are a Titanic film tragic, a Céline Dion superfan, or – ideally – both.

Titanique, created by Marla Mindelle, Constance Rousouli and Tye Blue, comes to Sydney from off-Broadway. It begins with pop superstar Céline Dion (Marney McQueen) dramatically revealing she, too, was a Titanic passenger.

The rest of the musical is her increasingly unreliable flashback. It lovingly follows the outline of James Cameron’s film Titanic – but more camp, and with Céline Dion shamelessly using every plot development to burst into song.

McQueen is hilarious as Céline Dion. The signature quirks are all affectionately parodied: the slightly nasal French-Canadian accent, the non-sequiturs, the widened eyes and surprised grimace, the fist-pumping, hand-raising, and chest-hitting (known to fans as “the Céline Salute”). McQueen’s singing voice is gorgeously clear and powerful enough to pull it off.

The rest of the ensemble portray a larger-than-life cast of characters zanily transposed from the film. There’s sweet-voiced Rose (Georgina Hopson), bullied by her rich, space gun-wielding fiancé Cal (a slick Keane Sheppard-Fletcher) and her narcissistic, toxic mother Ruth.

The charismatic Stephen Anderson as Ruth delivers lines with flawless comic timing and more dryness than a desert in drought. “You walking yeast infection!” Ruth hisses as insult.

Drew Weston as Jack leads the Australian company of Titanique.

Drew Weston as Jack leads the Australian company of Titanique.Credit: Daniel Boud