Per Gessle and the creators about “Joyride – The Musical” on Swedish Radio P1 Kultur

Swedish Radio P1 Kultur did a reportage about Joyride – The Musical before its world premiere on 6th September. Besides the main characters, the director and the costume designer, they also talked to Per. Listen to it HERE!

The program starts with the introduction of Roxette, a Swedish duo that took the world by storm in the late ’80s. They formed their band in 1986, but the first time Marie Fredriksson and Per Gessle sang together on a record was five years earlier. Here they play Ingenting av vad du behöver, a Gyllene Tider song from 1981. Five years later they formed Roxette and became one of Sweden’s biggest pop exports.

Now their music has been revived in Joyride – The Musical at Malmö Opera, which has its world premiere on 6th September.

The program brings you behind the scenes, so you can take part in the preparations for the premiere. Before that, Jenny Teleman talks about good old MTV, her memories of those times and then Roxette’s history and heydays.

The script of the musical is based on English author Jane Fallon’s novel Got You Back, published in 2008. It’s a triangle drama that touches on topics such as infidelity and double life. So a lot of emotions are involved, which Roxette’s music fits perfectly. There are a few days left until the world premiere and you will get to accompany reporter Johanna Olofsson to take part in the preparations for Joyride – The Musical.

In one of the halls at Malmö Opera, rehearsals for Joyride – The Musical are in full swing. Jessica Marberger and Alexander Lycke, who play two of the main characters, are on stage and three child actors as well. The musical is not about Roxette itself, which Per Gessle is happy about.

Per says:

There has never been any discussion about writing a story about Roxette in particular. It’s not a documentary thing about Roxette. I think it’s more fun if it has an independent story and you use the music as the spice of this story.

The script is based on the novel Got You Back written by British author Jane Fallon. It has been reworked into a musical script by Klas Abrahamsson and then adjusted by director Guy Unsworth who wants to find a world where the music leads the drama.

Guy says:

This is my kind of adaptation of the piece, turning it into something that feels like it is a part of the music and related to the music. I wanted to find a world where the music would really lead the drama.

The story revolves around Stephanie who lives in London with Joe and their teenage daughter Stella. One day, Stephanie finds a note in Joe’s pocket that makes her suspect that he is cheating.

Jessica Marberger, who plays Stephanie, says:

I don’t want to reveal too much, but by accident, she discovers that her husband is in another relationship and everything she thought was very good was apparently not very good. So her world is turned a little upside down and then the whole story takes off.

When Stephanie contacts the note’s sender, Katie, it turns out that she is also in a relationship with Joe, who has been living a double life. The women then decide to join forces and take revenge on Joe played by Alexander Lycke.

Alexander says:

It’s basically infidelity, but I think it can hit quite a lot of people on how you feel in such a situation, also how you act, like these two women do. Roxette’s songs fit perfectly a story like this with broken heartache and such stuff. So it will be fun.

Guy says:

I think what’s amazing about Roxette’s music is particularly Per’s lyrics of a glimpse into the abstract world, or the non real world. The world of people’s minds. The music is expressing what people don’t say in real life. That’s really nice to have the dialogue representing the real world and then this music opening up that real world and exploring something more abstract and more magical inside.

Director Guy Unsworth believes that Per’s lyrics with their abstract qualities stand in good contrast to the dialogue in the musical that represents real life.

When Per Gessle is asked which songs will be included in the musical, the answer is:

It’s not that hard to guess, perhaps, but the big songs that are the sharpest in the musical world are of course our big ballads, Spending My Time, Listen To Your Heart, It Must Have Been Love,  Queen Of Rain, Fading Like A Flower. There are as many as you like. I write very melodic music and there are big gestures at times. It should fit in the musical world very well.

The music has been reworked by Per Gessle’s extended arms in Roxette, Clarence Öfwerman and Christoffer Lundquist in collaboration with Joakim Hallin, who is the conductor of the orchestra.

Per says:

I haven’t had any direct wishes or opinions about how it should be other than that I think it should be very much Roxette. I think the worst that can happen is that it sounds like a Roxette cover band playing this. You want it to sound like the soul of Roxette is present in some way. It sounds fuzzy, but I’m a little fuzzy sometimes.

To the question what the hardest part of the process has been so far, Per replies:

For me it’s getting used to the fact that you leave things to other people who decide. I’m quite used to doing what I want. When working with Malmö Opera and directors and orchestras, there are a lot of people involved. It’s a different way of working than I’m normally used to.

The program brings you to Malmö Opera’s costume studio. Costume designer Torbjörn Bergström says:

This is where all the costumes are made and now we are inside the actual tailoring. Here are all the tailors sitting, working feverishly on the Joyride costumes now.

300 costumes will be used in the show and half of them will be made from scratch with designs by Torbjörn Bergström.

Torbjörn continues:

Roxette for me is very colorful. Therefore, I immediately felt that it is important that there are a lot of colors in the performance. It’s 1994, but you can say that everything between 1989 and 1994 is part of this performance.

It was also in the ’90s when Roxette had its heydays, after they broke through in the US in 1989 with The Look. Today they have sold more than 80 million albums with a string of chart-topping hits.

In the costume studio, the work continues and the tailors ask Torbjörn for help in making a decision. This is how they work. It’s part of the job, Torbjörn says.

You have to make a lot of decisions all the time. Much of what you decide, you cannot change on stage, because once something is cut, it’s cut. And as a costume designer, you also design masks and wigs. If there is one thing that’s very definitive, it’s cutting a wig. It doesn’t grow back. Haha.

At the moment, ten costume designers and four tailors are working on costumes for the Joyride musical. Johanna talks to one of them, who test sews a T-shirt for one of the actors. She says it’s common to test sew things, especially when you are a little uncertain about the fabric and its characteristics. Test sewing makes you feel safe. She thinks it’s super fun working on the Joyride costumes, because they are very varied. All are individual costumes.

Torbjörn says:

It is very grateful that the set is in a world of fashion. That’s a very, very big advantage of this show. It would be difficult to bring in so much color and shape in other contexts. This way there is no limit to how much fashion and high fashion you can get into the show.

During the course of the musical, Stephanie’s character goes from working as a stylist to working as a designer, so the sewing room is filled with her half-finished costumes. Costume designer Torbjörn Bergström is standing at a workbench, flipping through his many sketches of models in colorful, pattern-softening creations.

Here you can see all the intricate patterns and then accessories on top of that. It must not be messy. It is very important. When I make a sketch, that’s why I often copy it down so that it’s quite small and I can see how it looks from a distance. You must remember that it is a very large theatre with many seats and many sit very far away. It is important that even those who sit very far away can take part in everything.

The reporter mentions that Roxette will go on tour and Per brings Lena Philipsson as the singer. Marie Fredriksson passed away in 2019, but Per thinks she would have liked that Roxette’s music now becomes a musical.

I think she would have thought it was amazing. She was much more interested in musicals than I really was from the beginning. So I think she would have thought this was really cool. I’ve never been a huge musical fan myself. It’s a new chapter in the book of my life and it’s exciting to step into it.

The first request to make Roxette into a musical came back in 2016.

There were different versions by several people. They have written scripts and they have even showcased it to me and performed eight songs with dancers and an orchestra in London. I have turned it down, because I didn’t like the script. So Malmö Opera was not the first one on it, but it became Malmö Opera, because it is a fantastic organization and it has a very fine and large orchestra. I was there at one of the previous orchestra rehearsals and it’s really cool to sit in the middle and hear a big orchestra play your music. It will be a completely different trip than two guitars and drums and bass that I’m used to in the rehearsal room.

To the question how important it is to him that Roxette’s music becomes a musical, Per replies:

It’s a big thing and it’s exciting. It feels great and I have a good feeling about it in every way. I hope this musical will be a success, so that it can go on around the planet, just like Roxette did once upon a time.