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Showing posts with label Professional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Professional. Show all posts

18 August 2014

THE CHERRY ORCHARD


The Cherry Orchard
Acting Gymnasium
Theatro Technis, London
Monday 18th August 2014

Chekhov's final work is given a contemporary twist in James O'Donnell's thought-provoking adaptation for the Acting Gymnasium's short rep season at Theatro Technis.

Tracing the decline of a wealthy landowner's fall into poverty and the auction of her estate, which includes a famed cherry orchard, the play is a political and social comment on a Russia that is going through a significant change in its class system and wealth hierarchy.  This adaptation brings the piece into a modern setting, in a society where the class system has a very different impact on society, giving a fresh look at this classic story.

The adaptation brings out the many comic qualities of the script, with references to modern culture - including the use of mobile phones and references to Twitter - included alongside the original text.  The performances work to maintain the humour throughout, embellishing the piece's tragi-comic intention without losing sight of the tragic juxtaposition of the protagonist's financial and emotional plight.  The shining performance in this production came from Shane Noone's energetic portrayal of the wealthy ex-surf Ermolai.  He achieved a layered depth to this complex and naturally unlikable character that drove the plot forward.  His intelligent characterisation showed an empathic side to the ambitious young man to which a modern audience could entirely relate.

Some intelligent choices of lighting, designed by Luis Alvares, and considered use of sound especially in the pre-show and interval, add another level of interest and comedy for the engrossed audience.  An unusual and enthusiastic take on this classic piece, performed with energy and flair. 


02 April 2014

BETTY BLUE EYES


Betty Blue Eyes
Made in Colchester
Mercury Theatre, Colchester
Saturday 29th March 2014
 
Betty Blue Eyes began life in the West End in 2011, starring Sarah Lancashire and Reece Sheersmith, in a short lived but dazzling production that won over the critics.  Arguably not suiting a West End audience, this very British story follows the fate of one chiropodist and his wife in a small North of England town in 1947 - while rationing was still in force and the young Princess Elizabeth planned her wedding to Philip Mountbatten.  Based on the film A Private Function, the musical version by Stiles and Drewe concentrates on the illegally reared pig that is to be the subject of the town council's celebration banquet for the royal wedding. 
 
With leading cast members straight out of the West End themselves, Haydn Oakley and Amy Booth-Steel are exemplary in their performances.  Beautiful voices and gently comic characterisations make their two characters, Gilbert and Joyce Chilvers, warm and lovable.  Joined by an ensemble filled with triple-threats, there is a surprising and very entertaining amount of dancing for the size of the production, which was all executed with excellence. 
 
The Made in Colchester team have built a reputation for their production values, and the set, costume and technical aspects of this production are ideal examples of this.  The lighting design is particularly effective, with some lovely use of colour and a beautifully lit "dream" sequence during "Nobody". 
 
Where the West End failed to maintain audiences for this charming celebration of Britishness, perhaps with its large percentage of tourist-based audiences, on a more local scale the show works brilliantly.  Set to embark upon a UK tour after this initial run in Colchester, the wit and style of this clever production will charm audiences around the country.

15 February 2014

DIAL M FOR MURDER


Dial M for Murder
Made in Colchester
Mercury Theatre, Colchester
Saturday 15th February 2014

The first play of 2014's Made in Colchester season tells the story of Tony, who is convinced his wife Sheila is having an affair. He decides to kill her in what he believes is the perfect murder....that is until it all goes terribly wrong.

The play is a murder mystery that asks more of a 'why' than a 'who' and with its twists and turns has audience members gasping.

It is hard to pick out any single performance when every cast member contributed towards a flawless production.  The struggle between Kelly Hotten's Sheila and Robert Perkins' Captain Lesgate was a particular highlight bringing Act 1 to a dramatic close.

The set, designed by Mike Britton, captures your attention as soon as you enter the auditorium, with red cloths draped from the rig and stairs leading far past the audience's sight lines to add a further dimension and realism to the space.

I always have faith in the Mercury Theatre to put on a good show.  This production did not disappoint.  A brilliant start to the season and I look forward to Betty Blue Eyes in March.

Review by Nicola Myers

07 February 2014

NOT I, FOOTFALLS, ROCKABY...


Not I, Footfalls, Rockaby
Royal Court Theatre Production
Duchess Theatre, London
Friday 7th February 2014

Starting with a front of house warning - the theatre is about to go dark, really dark, and if this makes you uncomfortable please make yourself known now - a strange tension is built before the show begins.  Then the theatre really does go as dark as the warning suggests, with just the lips of the wonderfully talented Lisa Dwan lit from up close so as not to leak any unnecessary extra light.  Not I is the first and most famous of this trilogy of Samuel Beckett mini-plays, and in a way is the most affecting.  Rattling through the random thoughts and feelings of one woman through her life of loneliness and fear, this stream of consciousness piece can less be listened to than absorbed.  Allowing the words to wash over the audience, one begins to pick out certain phrases and even stories deep with significance of the character's unhappiness, exemplified with the frequent use of "she" rather than "I", distancing herself from herself.  

A short break leads into the second piece, Footfalls, which sees the same actress pacing up and down outside her mother's sickroom.  With careful choices in both costuming and lighting the lonely woman resembles an unhappy ghost.  As she pauses between paces she reveals small details of her sad life, and we also hear excerpts from the unseen mother who pities her child, commiserating the many years of misery she has ahead of her.

Rockaby sees the final minutes of a woman, rocking herself constantly in a rocking chair until her eventual and welcomed death.  She is another sad and lonely character, seeking "another living soul" and seeming to have never been satisfied with her lot.  She finally rocks herself to death, leaving us with a phrase that seems to sum up the feeling she has been describing; "Fuck Life".  

The evening is lifted from this seemingly horrific gloom however, by the beauty of Liz Dwan's powerhouse performance.  Such concentration in this one-woman show, exploring these frustratingly fragmented characters and bringing them to spooky, gloomy life, must be an exhausting challenge which this excellent actress lives up to with flair.  Rather than leaving the theatre depressed, ones thoughts are provoked and interest is piqued.  An exhilarating evening.  


31 January 2014

OCEAN OF LONELINESS


Ocean of Loneliness
Etcetera Theatre, Camden
Friday 31st January 2014

Aaron Anthony Wallace's sharply paced exploration of the differing effects of loneliness is revived in an intimate new production, directed by James O'Donnell at Camden's Etcetera Theatre this weekend. Told through three intertwined monologues, each of the neighbouring characters addresses the audience as though answering interview questions, gradually revealing the idiosyncrasies of their personalities and the effects of their isolation.  

The volley of short, choppy, overlapping lines that make up the opening scene start to introduce the traits of each character.  Requiring a daunting pace to maintain the flow of the piece, the feeling of emptiness and solitude that is later suggested in the lives of the three individuals is compromised a little in this bustling opening scene, instead perhaps suggesting the hubbub of the city they live above.  It isn't until further into the piece, when longer portions of monologue are revealed at once, that the three characters' individual threads start to take shape.

The style of the piece requires a real team approach from the small cast, whose concentration levels must be acutely focused in the close, intimidating space.  Listening to one another, ensuring an awareness and generosity with fellow performers, is essential to allow each of the stories the space they need to grow.  Tightly directed, the success of this was impressive for an opening night, although further familiarisation with the environment will only improve the smoothness across the weekend.

An intimidatingly small space in which to perform any piece, especially one in which the entire discourse is conducted towards the very nearby audience, performances were generally well achieved.  Alex Barclay's poet, with both delusions of grandeur and crippling writer's block, proves the inaccuracy of his comparisons to Shakespeare and Milton when beginning to write about his neighbour.  The character with the most depth, the affects of his solitary situation are clear in this darkly comic interpretation.  The comparative insanity portrayed by Helen Bang sits as an uncomfortable juxtaposition, with the initial humour of her eccentricity making way for genuine flashes of mental illness.  The distractions of Shian Denovan's character, body image concerns familiar to so many in our appearance obsessed society, have become irrational obsessions through her seclusion.  

The space of the Etcetera Theatre allows for limited staging options, yet the staging was designed with smart creativity.  Each character's space was kept personal and separate with a careful choice of furniture complimenting each individual.  Encounters in the lift - the only communal space in which the neighbours share periods of socially awkward discomfort - are tightly staged, with the imagined liaisons between Man and Woman 2 thoughtfully lit (Lighting Design by Luis Alvarez) to suggest a dreamlike quality.  The use of original music, by Damon Burrows and Orpheus Papafilippou, is also an important choice in generating the required atmosphere.

A thought-provoking evening of exploratory theatre, that proves the value of London's fringe venues to the development of new and experimental writing.



29 January 2014

THE WEIR


The Weir
Donmar Warehouse Production
Wyndham's Theatre, London
Wednesday 29th January 2015

Conor McPherson's lauded Irish drama won widespread critical acclaim when it first premiered in 1997. Josie Rourke's new production for the Donmar has brought together a stellar cast in a stunning revival, now beginning a twelve week West End transfer.

Set in a rural pub in Ireland's quiet countryside, the play on the surface is very simple - a small group of locals drinking heavily and telling one another ghost stories. It is McPherson's captivating writing talent however, to explore the minutiae of a situation and extract an enthralling dramatic tension, that elevates this play to an exciting piece of must-see theatre. Each of the small group of characters are individually developed as stories are gradually revealed, maintaining a dramatically steady pace throughout.  Tiny, carefully chosen phrases are richly steeped with meaning, and pregnant pauses sing out with dramatic significance.

This production brings together a wealth of Irish acting talent, but it is Brian Cox as Jack who most enthrals the audience with his effortless charm and intelligent wit. His final speech of lost love is heartbreakingly delivered, offering a beautiful emotional intensity while retaining a relaxed realism. Ardal O'Hanlan is also delightful as the simple Jim and Risteard Cooper's Finbar is ideally pitched as the local-boy-made-good entrepreneur.

Is this production commenting on Ireland's collective distraction by the supernatural? Or merely using the ghost stories to examine the loss and loneliness displayed by each of the intricately characterised locals? Delicately directed, it is left open for to the audience to decide, and made all the more intriguing for the open ended resolution.

A thought provoking piece with some superb performances - a must-see for lovers of tension-filled, character-based drama. Booking at the Wyndham's Theatre until 19th April.


21 January 2014

TWELVE ANGRY MEN

 
Twelve Angry Men
New West End Production
Garrick Theatre, London
Tuesday 21st January 2014

Reginald Rose's 1950s drama depicting the deliberations of an all-male jury on a murder case was most famously brought to audiences via the 1957 Henry Fonda film.  Originally written for television, the stage version was first seen in 1954 and has been faithfully revived in this new production at the Garrick, starring Martin Shaw. 

The jury room set is intricately realised with the open walls to the bathrooms allowing constant view of the tense hours of decision making.  With little other furniture, the twelve-seater table clearly dominates the space, but an ingenious revolve - rotating so slowly the eye can barely see the movement - gives both a practical solution to the potential blocking hazard and a creative visual interest for the audience. 

One of the joys of this piece for the audience are the deliberate gaps in detail about the twelve jurors.  Gradually we get to know their professions, some very minor details are revealed regarding home life, but we don't even find out their names.  It is a testament to the quality of the writing therefore, that each of these men are given individual, distinct and absorbing opportunities to develop, allowing the audience to discover each personality.  The success of this style however depends upon the skill of the actors to convey this gradual character development with enough control to maintain a consistent tension throughout.  This cast, led by Martin Shaw, has no weak link, with each actor portraying a true and intricate understanding of his own character in a plethora of intelligent performances.

As deliberations descend into arguments, facts about the trial are slowly revealed, and interpretations and opinions debated, each juror comes to understand more and more about himself as much as the importance of the term "reasonable doubt" which underpins the entire judicial system.  A fascinating piece that delves into the depths of human nature and displays both the power of the legal system and in doing so its inevitable weaknesses.  Tense, exciting theatre with some captivating performances - well worth catching.

16 January 2014

CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY

 
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Original West End Production
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London
Wednesday 15th January 2014
 
A second Golden Ticket to Sam Mendes' triumphant production of the Roald Dahl classic after my original visit to the final preview back in June. 
 
I stand by that original review, with the only exception that the show is now slicker, more confident and even more sugary-sweet than in those early days.
 
Worth a visit for the spectacular sets alone, Douglas Hodge is also fantastically charming as the creepy Wonka. 
 
A hot ticket to a fabulous show that can be enjoyed by the entire family.  Tickets booking until November 2014... 

13 January 2014

HENRY V

 
Henry V
Michael Grandage Company
Noel Coward Theatre, London
Monday 13th January 2014

This final jewel in the richly laden crown of the inestimable Grandage season at the Noël Coward sees the run of five productions play out with a bang. Having been privileged enough to see all five star-studded shows over the last year, it is clear that Grandage's directorial vision and careful choices of clarity and design have matched up to the expectations delivered by his A-lister leads.

There is little doubt that the majority of the audience have been drawn to this production not for the opportunity to see a play by the world's most celebrated playwright, acted in the city in which he worked, about one of the country's most successful soldier-monarchs. Instead the draw for this sell-out winter production is Hollywood heartthrob Jude Law, playing the war-hungry and charismatic King Harry. Law's Shakespearean credits most notably include his 2009 Hamlet at the Donmar, transferring to the West End and then for a week in Denmark's Elsinore Castle itself before enjoying an additional Broadway run. His characterisation of Henry V is compelling, drawing out the proclaimed ordinariness of the soldier, a monarch more accustomed to the battleground than to courtly splendour. His passionate "Once more unto the breach" speech makes convincing work of rousing the troops, bettered only by the carefully directed "Band of Brothers" scene bringing a patriotic lump to the throat on the eve of St Crispin's day. His playful wooing of the French Princess in Act 2, regally played by a beautiful and poised Jessie Buckley, adds another dimension to the grounded King and Law once more achieves a convincingly charismatic performance.

The supporting cast hold some equally captivating characterisations, with several of note, although none achieving less than an entertaining and convincing portrayal. Ashley Zhangazha as the explanatory Chorus maintains immaculate clarity that displays a true depth of understanding, and his impassioned delivery is absorbing and extremely entertaining to watch. Matt Ryan's Fluellen is also excellently played, displaying a careful comic timing without the need to play for laughs, relishing his leek scene with the deliciously unpleasant Pistol, played by Ron Cook.

This is a Henry V well-pitched for first timers; there are cuts aplenty to which the relatively early finish time will attest, and which may not satisfy the Shakespeare purists, but it helps to keep the pace and intensity manageable for all.  No prior knowledge of the true history of the period is assumed, this was generations earlier than Shakespeare's original audience would have known too, yet the precision and understanding of the entire cast gives an easy clarity to this historical piece. Grandage's ability to make the potential challenges of the Bard's verse easily accessible to a modern, unaccustomed audience is absolutely key to this production's success and his hand can be strongly felt throughout.

A wonderfully entertaining and successful finale to what has been an exciting season from Michael Grandage.  He seems to have achieved his aim, to attract new, younger audiences to West End plays through both head-turning casting and affordable ticket pricing.  Long may this attitude remain.
 

14 December 2013

CINDERELLA


Cinderella
Chelmsford City Council & One from the Heart
Civic Theatre, Chelmsford
Saturday 14th December 2013

This year's seasonal offering from the proven team at One from the Heart, in collaboration with Chelmsford City Theatres, brings the magic of Cinderella once again to the Civic stage.  One of pantomime's most popular stories, the tale of poor put-upon Cinders, her hapless best friend Buttons, her grotesque pair of stepsisters and her charming Prince are as warmly familiar at Christmas time as mince pies and mulled wine.

Chelmsford have put together a fabulous cast for this year's offering led by the beautiful Sophie Camble in the title role with her strong singing voice and constantly graceful stage presence.  Her hilariously mismatched step-sisters are brought to fabulous life by Neal Wright and Richard Foster-King; comic timing pitched perfectly, and donning some truly scene-stealing frocks, they make a memorable team.  Their wicked matriarch is played with cackling flair by Suzie Chard, boos and hisses a-plenty but carefully directed this year to minimise the nightmare inducing scares - rewarded by the lack of crying children that so often accompany the baddie scenes.  A welcome return to the Civic for the charismatic Lewis Barnard, this year giving us his Buttons, who lights up the stage at every entrance in an utterly engaging performance.  Cinders' handsome love interest is strongly played by Tom Parsons, and Rhys Rice as his manservant Dandini brings a spectacular energy to both his comedic sketches and his musical numbers.

Technically the show impresses, with beautiful lighting design, sparkling sets and dazzling costumes.  The musical numbers are all delivered with style and skill, with the whole cast getting individual opportunities to shine.  Some of the song choices are particularly obscure this year and, as can often be the case with Cinderella, slightly too much of the narrative is taken over by slushy love story that tends to allow the less attentive children's focus to slip.  The transformation scene lives up to the audience's magical expectations completely, with oohs and ahhs emanating from the adults and children alike, culminating in the delightful white Shetland ponies live on stage as Cinderella leaves for the ball.

A stylish, professional pantomime to set families up delightfully for the festive season.  

23 November 2013

THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE


The Beauty Queen of Leenane
Made in Colchester
Mercury Theatre, Colchester
Saturday 23rd November 2013
 
Martin McDonagh's 1996 black comedy, which follows the relationship between 40-year-old virgin Maureen and her wily mother in Ireland's County Galway, marks the second partnership between the Mercury and Curve Leicester after the success of The Hired Man earlier this year.   
 
The Irish scene is set from the very start, the stage being showered with a torrent of rain; an impressive effect on the thrust stage.  The lighting plot throughout is perfectly pitched - as is so regularly the case at the Mercury - to suggest the shifts in time and atmosphere, with intricate detail right down to both the hearth and stove fires adding a realism to the farmhouse kitchen. 
 
The success of this piece rests in the central performances, and the relationship built between the two lead actresses is exemplary.  Michele Moran plays Maureen with an unspecified edge from the outset, which is so expertly developed by the time the character's back story is revealed that we can utterly believe her continued demise.  Her devious and unlikable mother Mags is played with a delicate menace by Nora Connolly, and the rapport built between them is built with a careful mix of familiarity and spark to create the depth of hatred required.  The comedy is unarguably black, although there are moments of genuine humour and even warmth through the first act that by the final climax have developed into a chilling darkness. 
 
An accomplished and entertaining production, brought expertly to life by the talented team of professionals at the Mercury and a cast who excel in their ideally cast roles. 
 

22 November 2013

STRANGE CASE OF DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE


Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Brother Wolf
Tara Theatre, Earlsfield, London
Friday 22nd November 2013

The intimate space of the Tara Theatre is the ideal venue for James Hyland's latest one-man adaptation of this classic of British literature.  Opening with Dr Jekyll addressing the Royal Society of Surgeons, the audience become his contemporaries as we watch him divulge his theories into the psyche of human consciousness.  As the description of Jekyll's latest experiment unfolds, this versatile and utterly engaging performer seamlessly becomes each of the characters he meets.  

Phil Lowe's direction is intricately and skilfully achieved, with expertly accurate changes in vocals and physicality integrated smoothly within the flow of the piece.  Hyland's captivating performance style is ideally suited to the simplicity of the staging, with his absorbing storytelling ability uncluttered by unnecessary set or props.  The wooden lectern doubles as bar, bench, bed, adding spacial interest but leaving plenty of room for this exciting artist to fill the space with his performance.  The lighting design is too bright at times, with moments calling out for some dramatic shifts to complement the changes in characterisation on stage, although the shadowy final design works well.

Another jewel in the Brother Wolf crown, this exciting and dramatic piece of theatre is a compelling hour that leaves the hearts of the audience racing.  Along with A Christmas Carol as told by Jacob Marley (Deceased) and Fagin's Last Hour, Brother Wolf's current repertoire is a list of exciting, unmissable theatre for lovers of thrilling storytelling.  


30 October 2013

LOVE STORY


Love Story
Language Laid Bare Productions
The Jack Studio Theatre, Brockley, London
Wednesday 30th October 2013

Erich Segal's original 1970 film version of Love Story is considered one of the most romantic of all time, and with his bestselling novel released alongside and the success of the instantly recognisable song from the film, this tragic tale is a wide-reaching classic.  Stephen Clark and Howard Goodall's musical adaptation opened as part of the 2010 Chichester Festival season to critical acclaim and was succeeded by a 10 week West End run.

Language Laid Bare have revived this one act musical in a stripped back production at the modest space of The Jack Studio Theatre, directed by Joseph C Walsh.  The small space reflects the beautiful and intense intimacy of the story and the unapologetically simple staging compliments the clarity of the plot.  Some well thought out design accomplishes the potentially problematic integration of a grand piano into the set without taking over the space, breaking up into multiple tables to wheel independently around the stage.  This also gives mobility to the piano itself, with actor-musicians Ian Southgate and Jennifer Lucy Cook handling their roles as interchangeable Musical Directors and ensemble cast members with constant smoothness. 

The role of Oliver Barrett IV is performed with sincerity by Jonny Muir.  His accomplished singing voice shines and he convinces as the arrogant law student.  Although he could go further emotionally towards the tragic climax of the play, his more restrained style suggests a controlled truth and avoids any unnecessary additional sentimentality in an already tear-jerking plot.  This is an almost two handed piece and the central role of Oliver's wife Jenny is given an exemplary interpretation by Caroline Keating.  Her assured performance is entirely captivating, impressing musically as both a pianist and singer as well as engaging dramatically in a believable portrayal of the fiery Radcliffe student.  

Emotionally poignant without feeling cheesy and with utterly charming music throughout this show is a treat for musical theatre fans.  Language Laid Bare's production and The Jack Studio Theatre align to create a delicate gem worth venturing out of the West End to find.  


26 October 2013

THE OPINION MAKERS


The Opinion Makers
Made in Colchester
Mercury Theatre, Colchester
Saturday 26th October 2013

2013 has been an excellent year for the Made in Colchester team with a string of successes that have made huge strides to put the Mercury on the map as a top quality producing house - the Intimate Exchanges series, The History Boys, The Butterfly Lion and most notably the wonderful The Hired Man.  Despite a pre-show announcement that one cast member was unable to perform due to injury, on paper The Opinion Makers ticks all of the boxes to continue this accomplished series; directed by the Mercury's own Daniel Buckroyd and starring a cast of recognisable West End and comedy talents.  

Market Research in the 1960s is not the most obvious topic for a new musical, following as we do the plights of 'Fernsby Market Research' as they take on a re-branding research project for Dr Campbell's Lotion.  FMR's lazy staff fabricate their piles of questionnaire responses and simply tell their inept boss and crazed clients the result that they wish to hear.  

Justin Edwards takes on the bumbling company owner, warming into the role after a shaky start.  His reactions during the metaphor number were particularly well done making the most of the unlikely scenario.  The Great British Bake Off's Mel Giedroyc plays his fawning long-term employee with a pretty singing voice and a sincere characterisation in a funny and hard-working performance. Proven musical theatre stars Daniel Boys and Julie Atherton sing with unsurprising style and finesse, with Atherton's lullaby one of the highlights, although neither are given numbers to make true use of their talents.  

This is true of the writing throughout, with the show never living up to it's "hilarious" billing despite a hard working and talented cast.  The plot is thin to the point of tedium with the hints of surrealism never going far enough to add anything but confusion.  The musical numbers, despite being played expertly by a consummate band and sung mostly successfully by the various singing talents on stage, rarely remain in the memory and often manage to delay rather than tell the story.

There is so much potential in this group of talents who have been brought together both on and off the stage, but unfortunately it is not potential we see fulfilled in this new musical.  



12 October 2013

THE GOOD PERSON OF SICHUAN

 
The Good Person of Sichuan
Made in Colchester
Mercury Theatre, Colchester
Saturday 12th October 2013
 
Playing in the Mercury's main house, Brecht's intriguing interpretation of what it takes to be a good person amid a corrupt society shouts it's epic theatre style over a much smaller, yet somewhat harder hitting piece, in the Mercury Studio.  Both plays are inspired by the same events, leading to an interesting and unique opportunity to compare and contrast such differing styles of text, direction and performance.
 
Nikolai Foster;s production brings The Good Person of Sichuan bang up to date, while also maintaining all of the epic theatre influences and intentions so key to Brecht's work.  Tanya Foster is compelling as the title character, embracing the detached nature required of her characterisation, yet also maintaining an absorbing natural stage presence throughout.  There are some strong performances too from the supporting cast, notably Jake Davies as Wang the water seller and Gary Shelford as the pilot love interest.
 
The intention of Brecht's work is to make the audience think about the central topic address in the play, and to strip back much of the traditional theatricality to constantly bring the audience back to the reality of the play text.  Fourth walls are broken down and actors often play multiple roles to remove any naturalism that may detract from the message being portrayed.  Foster's direction achieves these aims admirably, getting the audience contemplating their place in society and to what extent their lives can be considered "good".
 

09 October 2013

BETRAYAL

 
Betrayal
London Classic Theatre
Civic Theatre, Chelmsford
Wednesday 9th October 2013
 
Following a history of successes, including excellent productions of The Importance of Being Earnest and Equus, London Classic Theatre return to Chelmsford again this season with their taut production of Harold Pinter's Betrayal.  Directed by Michael Cabot, the slick, elegant performances are played out among Bek Palmer's stylised set.  Fragments of once inhabited locations that the characters, ghost-like, slip through and around, their lives reflected in the decrepit, broken down remnants of the walls.
 
Pinter's use of reverse chronology slowly reveals details of Emma's affair with Jerry, her husband Robert's best friend, with the audience first witnessing the pair two years after the break up of their liaison.  As we work backwards through the seventies we see changes in not only the fashions worn by the initially gloomy characters - brightening gradually from dreary browns and greys through to a bright red number on the almost decade younger Emma at the initiation of the relationship - but also in the fluidity of the text as Pinter's naturalistic half-finished sentences and disjointed conversation points make way for more fluid and relaxed excitement.  The timeframe allows the audience to have a constant sense of the future, and through the revelation of the past to piece together events and revel in the details - hearing the same half-remembered anecdotes repeated with varying levels of accuracy and revealing the depth of the relationships between all of the involved parties. 
 
Rebecca Pownall achieves a wonderful depth of character as Emma, portraying the uptight worries of the woman we see at the play's opening covered with a false mask of smiles, gradually shedding years and cares as we witness a youthful, energetic Emma in the honeymoon period of her illicit relationship.  The scene in Venice is particularly revealing, with Emma's stony faced reaction to Robert's knowledge of her affair - affectingly performed by Pete Collis - disclosing the emotional disconnection from her husband.  This is not a detachment shared by partner Jerry, whose regular references to his wife and family prove that despite his betrayal he is loyal to them at his heart.  A softer, needier character than Emma, he is given an intelligent portrayal by Steven Clarke.
 
Produced to the high quality for which London Classic Theatre are now known, this is a fast paced, revealing and thought-provoking production of an entertaining Pinter, which retains an exciting dramatic tension throughout.
 
 
 

07 October 2013

MAN TO MAN


Man to Man
Made in Colchester
Mercury Theatre, Colchester
Monday 7th October 2013

The latest venture from the Made in Colchester stable this week with a double bill of productions in both the main house and the Mercury Studio.  With both pieces taking inspiration from the same remarkable tale, this inextricable link adds an exciting, dramatic layer to the Mercury's choice to stage them simultaneously.
 
Man to Man follows the life of German woman Ella Gericke, who upon her husband Max' death decides her only option for survival is to assume his identity and live her life as a man.  With direct and indirect comment on what it is to be a woman in a 1930s German society dominated by men, her thought-provoking story is made all the more poignant when Hitler rises to power and the reality of war looms.  Surviving against the odds through years of challenges that Ella could never have considered in the moment it took to make this utterly life changing decision, we follow this confused life for many years of conflict.  The final climax at the joy and release of the fall of the Berlin Wall is juxtaposed with the turmoil of discovering the destruction of the grave of her husband, harrowingly marked with her own name. 
 
This one woman play is performed by Tricia Kelly in what can only be described as a tour de force.  Her depth of understanding of this involved text is evident, as is the strong hand of director Tilly Branson.  Simply but intricately staged, changes of time and place are shown beautifully through an excellently designed lighting plot that truly makes the most of the flexible studio space.
 
A deeply felt, dramatically theatrical event that the Made in Colchester team are heightening through direct alignment with Brecht's The Good Person of Sichuan in the main house, which I will be visiting later this week.

02 October 2013

THE COMMITMENTS


The Commitments
World Premiere
Palace Theatre, London
Wednesday 2nd October 2013


Roddy Doyle's original self-published novel of the late 1980s became a cult hit, telling the down to earth story of a group of unemployed Irish youths filling their time in the Dublin streets by creating a band.  The life-affirming tale of Jimmy Rabbitte and his ragtag group of amateur musicians captured the imagination of a society who recognised the characters and their plight all too well.  The success of the novel gave rise to a hit film in 1991 and is now being revisited as a brand new musical written by Doyle himself.

The opening flies by understandably swiftly, opening as it does without the band assembled, and after a hasty couple of scenes as the group gather the party can really get started.  Party being the operative word - this show is like on big Irish craic all the way through, hugely fun and unarguably feel-good.

This is truly an ensemble show and the members of the band work excellently together with relationships shining through.  They generate a camaraderie that is entirely infectious and reaches out to include the whole audience as part of the gang.  There is however an absolute standout individual performance from the spine-tingling Killian Donnelly as lead singer Deco.  The unpredictable ego of the group, his performance is at times hilarious, charming and touching in equal measure and his voice is total rock perfection.

A funny, entertaining, life-affirming show that leaves your toe-tapping and a smile on your face - what more can be asked for…


See below for an interview with Killian Donnelly and Denis Grindel by officialtheatre.com ... 


30 September 2013

A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM

 
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Shakespeare's Globe
Globe Theatre, London
Monday 30th September 2013
 
The atmosphere at the Globe is always a delight and a visit, no matter what the show, makes for an entertaining evening in it's own right.  One of London's most iconic theatrical venues, the experience is entirely worth the discomfort of the traditional seating.
 
This season's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream is being promoted with the tag line "Show us your Bottom", and it is absolutely right that this character is singled out.  Pearce Quigley's interpretation of Bottom is one of the most engaging I have seen.  Relaxed, off-hand and slightly camp, yet also full of the ambitious self-promotion that makes Bottom such a target for ridicule, he is utterly hilarious and the highlight of the production. 
 
The farcical confusion of the four lovers is excellently realised with a particularly enjoyable performance of a frustrated Helena, played by Sarah Macrae.  The fairies are styled as woodland nymphs, in furs, leather and antlers, in a raw and slightly unnerving interpretation.  John Light's Oberon is energetic and masculine, although his accent is fairly random and at times difficult to understand, and paired with Michelle Terry's feisty Titania they make strong, slightly intimidating, fairy royalty.  Matthew Tennyson's rubbery physicality brings a coy youth to Puck in an audience-winning performance.
 

25 September 2013

TOP HAT

 
Top Hat
West End Production
Aldwych Theatre, London
Wednesday 25th September 2013
 
 
As this slick production draws to a close, the sparkle and glamour haven't faded and it continues to delight it's traditionalist audiences with some old fashioned love, laughs, dances and costumes.  The quick changes of elaborate set pieces are impressively executed in it's relatively small West End home, and make the production the high value feast for the eyes that it unarguably is.
 
In line with other musicals of the period the story is pretty thin, incorporating a lead character who just happens to be a dancer for a living, some cheesy jokes, a beautiful love interest and very little action.  It barely matters however, as the frequent musical numbers and elaborate dance routines are entirely engaging and impressively performed with all of the style and elegance one associates with the upper class of the 1920s and 30s.
 
Since I saw this production on it's pre-West End tour the cast has inevitably been refreshed, and the exhausting lead role of Jerry has had a wonderful take over by the supremely talented all-rounder Gavin Lee.  With charm oozing from every pore his sparkling smile and endless energy sell every number, and with excellent support from Kristen Beth Williams as Dale they form a glorious dancing partnership. 
 
Old fashioned musical theatre at it's best, this production well deserved it's trio of awards last year and will be a much missed corner of glamour in the West End when it finishes at the end of October.