Archive for the ‘Theatre’ Category

Creators: Daphna Attias and Terry O’Donovan       Writer: Chris Goode      Director: Daphna Attias 

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Firstly, this show is not found at the Traverse Theatre itself, rather it is at the Jeelie Piece Café, a modern corner coffee bar about ten minutes walk away. The show is site-specific and immersive; lattes and muffins are optional and come at extra cost.

The show asks a simple question: when someone dies, what happens to their digital property? Should someone have the right to delete that person’s e-mails, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter accounts, etc or should they be left forever to float around cyberspace. We are all familiar with the role of executors for real property, but the concept of digital executors is new to the 21st Century. Daphna Attias and Terry O’Donovan, along with writer Chris Goode, have created for Dante or Die productions this exploration of the role of a digital executor and they take us on a surprising and unexpectedly emotional journey.

Supplied with headphones and mobile phones, we sit quietly observing the anonymous faces around us. The soft tones of Nora Jones provide a mellow ambience and this could be 11.00 on any morning in any coffee bar. We can be forgiven for not noticing the solitary figure of Terry (Terry O’Donovan), sitting quietly in a corner, until he speaks and gives us his observations on us. And then his phone buzzes and we share the images; a dozen or so text messages appear, all expressing shock and offering condolences. Terry’s former partner of 10 years has died suddenly. The phone buzzes again and it is an e-mail from a law firm, informing him that he has been nominated to become the deceased’s digital executor.

The production has been thought through brilliantly and it is executed with absolute precision. As Terry trawls through shared memories, seen from a different perspective and uncovers previously unknown secrets, he leads us, as if through cyberspace itself and the combination of technology, heartbreaking narration and O’Donovan’s understated but deeply emotional performance generates an ethereal experience of astonishing power.

When the journey is complete, an obvious truth has been affirmed. What matters most in the digital age is what has always mattered most – family, friends and relationships.

Performance date: 5 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Class (Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh)

Posted: August 12, 2018 in Theatre

Writers and directors: Iseukt Golden and David Horan

⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

Who would be a teacher? Walking through the modern minefield of rigid rules and political correctness, young Mr McCafferty asks himself just that question in this 85-minute one-act play first seen at the Dublin Theatre Festival.

There are sharp edges beneath the surface of Iseult Golden and David Horan’s bubbling comedy. As Mr McCafferty, Will O’Connell shows a delightful mix of eagerness and anxiety. He would prefer to tackle a problem and bungle it rather than stand by and do nothing. When one of his students, 8-year-old Jayden, starts lagging behind his classmates and becomes disruptive, the teacher decides to call in his parents.

The father, Brian (Stephen Jones) is the first to arrive, doing so like a bull in a china shop, in denial that he and his wife Donna (Sarah Morris) are now separated. They sit in the classroom on child-sized chairs and behave like the small people that they were made for. And then, appropriately, the pair become children – Jayden and Kaylie, daughter of a junkie who is also receiving extra tuition. The writers’ aim, to show the future adults in children and the childishness of adults is achieved cleverly and amusingly.

As a lightweight account of the dysfunction of modern education, the play has much to say. The frustrated, well-meaning teacher, the father undergoing anger management therapy and the mother reaching out for a life of her own all ring true. All want to put the interests of the child before everything else, but life gets in their way. For the most part, the writers keep the issues simple, lapsing slightly with a final plot twist that the play does not need. For those of us who have forgotten what it is like to be or to have children, this is an education.

Performance date: 5 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Writer and director: David Leddy

⭐️⭐️⭐️

Having little to do with Shakespeare’s bloody tale of Roman power politics, David Leddy’s new intimate  70-minute monologue is a mournful poem about love, loss and human connections.

The central character is Chris, who talks philosophically about his relationships with his parents, his wife, their adopted young son and also with his gay lover Paul. “I’m trying to be happy, but it’s just out of reach. Always has been” bemoans Chris, setting the tone for a piece that is defiantly cheerless, with touches of existentialism.

The production is staged on a raised circular platform, with an old-fashioned wooden desk and chair. Leddy has himself performed the role of Chris, but, here, it falls to Irene Allan, gender blind casting that has advantages and disadvantages, Her soft tones and natural warmth highlight Chris’s vulnerability and confusion, but she cannot be fully the character that the play is describing and a work that is already enigmatic becomes even more so.

Short scenes follow-each other non-sequentially, making what narrative the play has feel irrelevant. Muddying the waters further, Leddy throws in views about the United Kingdom’s ambiguous relationship with Saudi Arabia. It always feels as if the the writer is more concerned with ambiguity than with clarity or purpose and, too often, what we hear comes across as random, disconnected thoughts, beautifully written and spoken, but difficult to engage with.

Performance date: 5 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Writer: Martin Zimmerman       Director: Christopher Haydon

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Take a deep breath. Martin Zimmerman’s 70-minute monologue takes us on a suspenseful ride through modern urban paranoias that we hope belong to a distant land and then realise maybe not.

Director Christopher Haydon had a big hit in this same studio space at the 2013 Festival with Grounded, the story of a female drone pilot who who saw faraway violence drawing closer. On that occasion, the lone character was confined to a glass cage and here she is trapped in a maze of threatening metal rods, Haydon’s taut, gripping style evident from the very beginning.

The character is a teacher at an America High School, a single mother by choice who scoffs at attempts by friends to pair her up. She interviews an aggressive male student, fearful that he may be carrying a gun, feels embarrassed when offloading her anxieties to her therapist and questions why it should ever be necessary for anyone to display a sign indicating that guns are not welcome. What follows is dark, stark and disturbing.

Polly Frame shows us a woman who is rational, efficient and in complete control until, suddenly, she isn’t. She never speaks of herself in the first person, as if distancing herself from her own actions and emotions, thereby also distancing herself also from the audience. It is difficult to connect with this woman emotionally, but Zimmerman’s spare writing does not require us to do so, only to listen to her story and to understand her reactions when gun violence strikes at her own community. Contemplating retaliation, she is taught, chillingly, to breathe deeply and, on the exhale, pull the trigger.

Much of Zimmerman’s play is targeted at American law makers and the NRA, but, performed in a country that still feels the pain of Dunblane, no comfort gan be gained from thinking that its concerns are only distant ones.

Performance date: 5 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

 

 

Entropy
Edinburgh Fringe 2018
©The Other Richard

Writer: Jennifer Roslyn Wingate      Director: Laura Clifford

⭐️⭐️⭐️

However far we roam, most of us can take with us the comfort of knowing that we have a home to return to. Not so 19-year-old Sam, the central character in this short debut play by Jennifer Roslyn Wingate, which is receiving its premiere here. Sam arrives at the door of his childhood home and all that he can hear from inside is a voice telling him to go away.

Entropy is a taut and visceral suspense thriller which plays on our fears of not belonging anywhere. The sole occupant of the house at which Sam arrives is his widowed stepmother, Barbara. When she finally opens the door to Sam, she alludes to his disgusting behaviour as a teenager; he retaliates by claiming horrific abuse as a seven-year-old to which Barbara turned a blind eye. She still disbelieves him. Their alienation seems total, but we sense that they have a need for each other and, beneath the surface, suggestions of sexual attraction are strong.

The quality of the acting transcends implausibilities in the plotting. Lewis Bruniges’ agitated, unpredictable Sam could be damaged or simply dangerous. Katharine Drury’s nervous Barbara could be guilty or simply terrified. Their relationship could be avenger/victim, son/mother, or they could be past or future lovers. Roslyn Wingate’s writing thrives on ambiguities to build and sustain tension and she only goes off track with an ending which does not seem to fit with the play’s key themes.

Laura Clifford directs an edgy production, which showcases the work of an interesting young writer who seems to have a promising future.

Performance date: 9 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Writer: Henry Filloux-Bennett      Director and choreographer: Jonnie Riordan

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Back in the days when Michelin stars were a thing of the future for the UK and Fanny Craddock was teaching the nation to cook, a 12-year-old Nigel Slater was learning his craft by helping his Mum to make jam tarts and mince pies in her Wolverhampton kitchen. Now a famed food writer, Slater’s autobiography of his adolescent years has already been adapted for television, but, if the ingredients here are familiar, the art comes in mixing them afresh to serve up a tasty treat that is distinctively theatrical.

Sam Newton is a marvel as Nigel, holding centre stage for almost 90 minutes, as his character finds that the end of childhood is a time of fun and discovery, but also of pain and loss, his experiences all linked to the aromas and tastes of the kitchen. Nigel would have been a near contemporary of Adrian Mole and he shows similar traits to that fictional character, possessing both innocence and youthful wisdom as he makes casual observations directly to the audience while he goes about his daily life. 

“It’s impossible not to love someone who makes good toast” declares Nigel and his doting Mum (Lizzie Muncie) makes good toast. However, at Christmas, she dies shortly after incurring Nigel’s wrath by leaving the mincemeat off her shopping list and Nigel is left with his bad-tempered Telegraph-reading Dad (Mark Fleischmann), whose only contribution to the culinary arts is a disastrous attempt at spaghetti Bolognese.

Things get worse for Nigel when Dad takes up with the cleaner, Joan, played by Marie Lawrence as a vulgar woman with a thick Black Country accent. War breaks out, but Joan has the advantage of being an ace cook. Writer Henry Filloux-Bennett throws a fair amount of sharp wit into the mixing bowl and Newton’s excellent comic timing does the rest. The production credits include a Food Director (James Thompson), presumably responsible for the nibbles that are handed around the audience in addition to Walnut Whips, which, we are instructed, can only be consumed on the command of Slater senior.

Director Jonnie Riordan strikes a good balance between comedy, sadness and 1970s nostalgia. He adds zest with several choreographed routines, performed to pop tracks of the era. There are darker elements in Slater’s story, but Riordan wraps them in a glow of warmth and rarely lets his production be anything other than good fun.

Performance date: 8 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Writer: Nick Cassenbaum

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Nick Cassenbaum charmed the 2016 Edinburgh Festival with Bubble Schmeisis his love letter to a traditional Jewish bath house in the East End of London, not too far from the Bermondsey birthplace of Michael Barrymore, the subject of this new hour-long show.

Cassenbaum’s blend of affection, sentimentality and humorous storytelling are as distinctive as before and just as irresistible. His memory for trivial detail enriches his stories and, when this extends to remembering the names of audience members, his shows become intimate group conversations. This show is as much a tribute to his late Nana Sylvie as to the TV star whose rise and fall has been reported to excess in the tabloid press. It was Nana Sylvie who gave 6-year-old Nick a VHS compilation of Barrymore clips as a Christmas gift and it was she who mentored the promising young entertainer of the family, encouraging him to tell risqué jokes to a group of aunts.

The show understands that childhood heroes remain heroes forever. Eric Morecambe topped an audience poll at this performance, but, for Cassenbaum, the presenter of ITV shows such as Strike It Lucky and My Kind of People has no competition. Using audience participation extensively, Barrymore’s career is charted largely through his appearance on This Is Your Life and we get the picture of a man who was as much a showman in his private life as in public, a purveyor of anarchy, mayhem and chaos in both.

Revelations about Barrymore’s sexuality did not seems to dent his popularity with the British public, but the tragedy which occurred at his home in 2001 triggered what Cassenbaum describes as “homophobia in the media” and toppled him from his pinnacle.

 The entertainer, whose catchphrase was “awight” (ie “all right”) is alive and, according to reports, well following addiction problems. Apparently, he has not yet seen this tribute, which is a pity, as it is very likely that he would find it his kind of show.

Performance date: 6 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Book: Fiona English      Music and lyrics: David Eaton      Director: Benji Sperring

⭐️⭐️

Lin Manuel Miranda’s smash hit Broadway musical Hamilton has already been followed across the Atlantic by the off-Broadway parody Spamilton and now, within a matter of weeks, comes this new variation, based loosely on the life and career of Britain’s World Formula 1 champion. What next we wonder, Hamilton (Neil and Christine)?

Standing behind a row of toy cars, boy and girl racers (two of each) begin with a string of disclaimers, presumably to dodge writs from Miranda, Hamilton and others, but the most significant one is to prime the audience not to expect too much rap (“it took years to write Hamilton”). This is a disappointment, because Miranda demonstrated how rap can advance story-telling and give a musical an unstoppable rhythm. With so little rap, the show often stalls and all that we get are David Eaton’s very ordinary songs linked together by tired jokes and too much talk.

What Fiona English’s book tells us is that, in common with so many sporting superstars before him, Lewis is not very interesting. He is portrayed here by Letitia Hector as a naive young man who has zero personality, mentored by his team boss (Jamie Barwood). He contrasts with a red-cloaked, pantomime villain  Fernando Alonso (Louis Mackrodt). “You can’t be a winner just by driving fast” Alonso advises the novice, pointing him in the direction of branding and high profile girlfriends. Enter Pussycat Dolls singer Nicole Scherzinger (Liberty Buckland), whose involvement with Lewis is seen here as more of a publicity stunt than a romance.

Director Benji Sperring harnesses the energy of the four performers well, but he is hampered by a stage that is too big and the whole feel is of a show being poorly thought-through and quickly thrown together. There is clear scope for improvement and it should all become slicker during its run. In the meantime, good humour is not enough to carry it and it is good only in patches, as chequered as the flag that our hero wants so much to pass first.

Performance date: 4 August 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Pity (Royal Court Theatre)

Posted: July 20, 2018 in Theatre

Writer: Rory Mullarkey      Director: Sam Pritchard

⭐⭐⭐⭐

In 1960, Orson Welles’ production of Eugene Ionesco’s Rhinoceros appeared at the Royal Court. In the 58 years of innovative theatre that have followed, apart from a 2007 revival of the same play, it is doubtful if the famous venue has seen anything quite so utterly bonkers as Rory Mullarkey’s absurdist, anarchic, apocalyptic new comedy.  Yes, Caryl Churchill’s 2016 play, Escaped Alone, works on similar themes, contrasting the calm of traditional England with the chaotic, disintegrating world outside it, but even that does not come close.

The setting is an English market town that has no coffee bar, but boasts a multitude of ice-cream sellers. The audience walks in across the green-carpeted stage, greeted by a brass band playing the likes of Colonel Bogey and Floral Dance. A professor arrives with his daughter, complains about the awful town and is promptly struck dead by fork lightning. Daughter survives, she and a stranger assure each other, for the first of many times, “I’m alright” and the pair marry. All goes well for a few minutes until the department store in which daughter works is flattened in an explosion. Disaster then follows disaster, all in a single day.

“The plan is to keep bombing until it gets better” a warlord informs us. Characters drop like flies, but the actors, all of equal merit, get re-cycled to play other roles. They are: Paul Bentall, Sandy Grierson, Helena Lymbery, Sophia Di Martino, Siobhán McSweenet, Francesca Mills, Abraham Popoola, Paul G Raymond and Dorian Simpson. A female Prime Minister arrives at the disaster scene to dispense familiar platitudes, a famous actor drops by, only to be devoured by cannibals (“It’s true what they say, famous people really do taste better”) and hungry refugees from elsewhere seek help before being sent on their way.

Much of this is played in the form of trivial nonsense, but the effort (and seeming expense) that goes into Sam Pritchard’s astonishing production guides us towards realising that it is a lot more than just that. Literally, Pritchard throws everything into it from all directions – bombs, bullets, debris, armoured tanks (of the Hamleys variety) and an earthquake all strike. A graphic sequence, performed comically to throbbing club music with a neon-lit red “Atrocities!” sign hovering above the stage, gives a haunting vision of the catastrophes that always follow catastrophes.

Goon-like comedy can inevitably flag if it is not supported by a sturdier structure than Miullarkey builds here and, although the production’s pyrotechnics paper over many weaknesses, the loss of a few of the play’s 100 minutes could perhaps have made it all a little sharper. Amid the almost constant bombardment of verbal and visual gags, there is a risk that the writer’s serious messages, exposing the fragility of our cosy lifestyles and telling us to be less blinkered when viewing our wide world, could melt from the mind like one of the play’s many ice creams. If this were to happen, it would be the real pity.

Performance date: 19 July 2018

Photo: Helen Murray

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com

Alkaline (Park Theatre)

Posted: July 14, 2018 in Theatre

Writer: Stephanie Martin      Director: Sarah Meadows

⭐⭐

There are some parties where it is preferable to be a fly on the wall rather than an invited guest. Such is the case in Stephanie Martin’s new one-act play, in which Sophie throws a drinks party in an attempt to rekindle her fading friendship with Sarah. However, there is an elephant in the room in that Sarah is wearing a hijab. following her recent conversion to Islam.

Martin sets up an intriguing and potentially provocative scenario for examining modern inter-faith tensions. She sets it up and then does hardly anything with it, opting instead for a routine comedy of embarrassment. EJ Martin’s Sophie is highly-strung, bossy and has a  talent for finding a faux pas to fit every situation; she is the hostess from Hell, who could be modelling herself on Beverley in Mike Leigh’s Abigail’s Party. Her ineffectual fiancé Nick (Alan Mahon) snorts coke and cowers on the open staircase when he has performed what seems to be his sole duty – riling his partner – too well.

A beaming Sarah (Claire Cartwright) arrives with her new fiancé in tow, Ali (Nitin Kundra), a Geordie Moslem who is separated from his wife and three children. Ali swigs from beer bottles and indulges in locker room banter with Nick as Martin seems at pains to show that he is just an ordinary bloke notwithstanding his faith. However, there are more than a few hints of gender stereotyping in her grouping of angst-ridden women and laid back men.

Sarah explains her decision to convert in vague and dreamy terms, announcing that it makes her feel “alkaline”. Her reasons for wearing the hijab are even less clear, but we have to assume that it is not at the insistence of Ali, when his estranged wife Aleesha (Reena Lalbihari) appears, not similarly attired. Sophie finds reassurance from knowing that Christianity and Islam are both “Abramovich” religions (a malapropism that followers of Chelsea FC may appreciate). “You look nice in it (the hijab)” she whimpers sheepishly with a faint smile, following up with the useful information that M&S now stocks burkinis.

By using the lightweight character of Sophie to give voice to the prejudices and misconceptions that she seeks to highlight. the writer adds a comic touch to the play’s most serious moments. Ali’s long rebuttal of Sophie’s biggest gaffe is the most searching speech in her script, but its fire is also eventually doused by flippancy. Sadly, such focussed exchanges are rare and Martin, seemingly having run out of things to say on her core theme, allows the play to drift off at two tangents and become about relationship troubles and family break-up.

Director Sarah Meadows’ production brings out the brittle humour well, exploiting the claustrophobic feel of Georgia de Grey’s cramped orange and green set. After 75 minutes, the party fizzles out and the play with it. This little comedy is amiable enough, but it is entirely toothless and the opportunities which Martin gives herself to say something meaningful are mostly wasted.

Performance date: 13 July 2018

This review was originally written for The Reviews Hub: http://www.thereviewshub.com