Thursday, 28 October 2010
Review: Dolly, Lakeside Arts Centre...plus other bits
The sleepy village of Roslin, just south of Edinburgh, had coped without any Dollies yet suddenly finds itself with two: one Scotland’s only Dolly Parton tribute act and the other the world’s only living clone! This is the territory of playwright Andy Barrett’s latest offering which charms its way through two hours of Country classics and complex science. Country mad Bettina dreams of a real band, a get-away from karaoke down the Oak, and sees the arrival of PR whizz Leo as her ticket. Convinced that becoming a Dolly Parton tribute act is the way to go, Bettina begins to gain bookings and acclaim until another arrives on the scene but this Dolly is more woolly than western.
It’s a show with a lot of heart but the scripting in the first half felt light and laden with dialogue that didn’t ring true and was over expository. This said there are some great jokes including when John Elkington’s Neil remarks that much of his best work was ‘done with pig semen’ but some parts are little laboured, especially between Christopher Redmond’s Leo and Bettina, who was regardless played with real sass by Miriam Elwell-Sutton. The music, all Parton stables, is performed well and the cast are a hugely multi-talented bunch seemingly picking up and playing anything with strings.
However, the show’s star is undoubtedly Dolly herself, the puppet sheep steals the whole second half and is ultimately the character that generates the most interest, arresting the audience’s imagination and drawing the eye. Whilst Bettina’s romance with Leo, her home-life and the fraught relationship between research scientist Neil and his wife are important strands, it is the sheep and the music which keeps the audience’s attention. Indeed elements of these other stories can become lost especially true of Neil, the scientist who can seemingly get a sheep pregnant with an impossible baby but not come to terms with the loss of his own child.
With Dolly New Perspectives, the company that was behind two personal favourites from the last year: Those Magnificent Men and the inventive The Falling Sky, have engineered a wonderful evening’s entertainment where Country & Western and gene splicing collide – if they can clone this then there is far more to come!
Dolly: ***
Gareth also saw: a reading of The Ashes by Michael Pinchbeck, which, as a cricket fan, combined two of my great loves and reminded me that good writing stands out even at a first (or in this case second) airing. Michael Pinchbeck has a real gift with language as there is a reverence and revelry in his use of words, they are not merely perfunctory vehicles of plot but they have an interest of their own. Too often we hear worn out slogans of words on stage masquerading as real-life, increasingly I find there are fewer writers who enjoy and celebrate the role of wordsmith in their stage work: Michael Pinchbeck is, for me (along with small group of others: Billy Ivory, DC Moore, Lauras Wade & Lomas, James Graham), one of those writers.
He also saw The Thrill of it All by Forced Entertainment but found it really hard to review - much to Tiger's dislike. However, loved it especially Small Things, the manic distortion of the voices over their microphones and Tom’s notion that rhubarb was a ‘funny fruit’. Forced Entertainment have a real way of playfully undercutting games with a disturbing undercurrent in a way no other company can.
Images courtesy of Robert Day and Forced Entertainment
Friday, 15 October 2010
Review: The Rivals, Theatre Royal
Sir Peter Hall’s most recent foray from his company’s summer home has the definite feel of their adoptive base: Bath. The show, Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s The Rivals, is set in the regency west-country town and, in this accomplished rendition, Sir Peter’s craft as a director shines through. Whilst taking a traditional approach to the text, the director has firmly focused on the physical comedy in the piece and it is this decision which breathes a freshness into the production.
The farce opens with the rakish Captain Jack Absolute wooing the rich Lydia Languish under the pretended name of Ensign Beverly, she unwilling to marry a man set upon gaining her money and they plan to elope. Lydia and Beverly’s tryst is orchestrated by Lucy the maid, their go-between, but she betrays their love to Lydia’s aunt Mrs Malaprop who forbids their engagement. This is further confused by the arrival of Jack’s father, Sir Anthony Absolute, proposing Jack as a husband for Lydia. Thus, the ‘rival’ is created – as Jack says ‘my father wants to force me to marry the very girl I am plotting to run away with!’ To this Sheridan adds another pair of quarrelsome lovers in Julia and Faulkland, an aristocratic Irish debtor Sir Lucius O’Trigger and the foolish Bob Acres, a country gentleman also in pursuit of Lydia’s hand. These lively players create a flurry of comic moments that climax in a nervously hilarious duel between Acres and Jack swiftly followed by the lovers forgiving their better halves.
The Rivals: ****
Image courtesy of Nobby Clark
Thursday, 14 October 2010
Review: Hatch: it's about time, Embrace Arts
Hatch is back and in pastures new, Embrace Arts at the RA Centre in
Kristy Guest’s almost painfully sad Welcome All Time Travellers! has real scope, a great soundtrack and will be one to watch when the event travels up the A46 to
Hetain Patel’s straddling of the conceptual, visual art world and the self-deprecating stand-up humour he delivers with a telling authenticity is a real highlight; his anecdotes are skilfully and insightfully chosen to illustrate his investigations into self, identity and belonging in a uniquely humorous way. Since seeing his previous work, Ten, he has become an artist I'm increasingly interested in and this was only reinforced by his performance here.
Chris Dobrowolski rambling performance lecture captivated its audience way beyond its time slot. In Landscape, Seascape, Skyscape, Escape Chris showed his inventive approach to art and transport whilst regaling us with stories of his growing up, choppy super-8 footage of previous projects and one of the oddest musical contraptions ever seen.
The night was rounded off by the chaotic Oyster Eyes and, as I said in
Hatch: it’s about time is in
Image courtesy of Oyster Eyes.
Review: Twelfth Night, Nottingham Playhouse
Monday, 4 October 2010
Under the Covers – The Post Show Party Show, Lakeside Arts Centre
The role of a mother is a driving force in the piece and developed through the use of both the audience as tool for interaction and cardboard cut-outs of their partners, flat dads. The latter alter from mere shapes to become a clever metaphor and are emblematic of the presence or absence of a father, most notably at the birth of their children, whilst serving to illustrate how true friendship lasts no matter. In this the Thelma and Louise decision suddenly comes starkly into focus.
The message of friendship through difficult events does work, if a little stretched to compare the actors’ real lives to Thelma and Louise’s position, but it is the depth of self reference and confession given by the performers which is most revealing and interesting. It is a show filled with comparisons and juxtapositions to consider, the technical wizardry of live projection under-cut by the actors spraying their faces with a water pistol to mimic tears. Equally with the show structured around interaction and meta-theatre the roles of performer and observer were strained and their designation switched from audience to the actors and back again. In the last section of the piece the audience are left listening to one of their number reading baby Charlie’s favourite book whilst the performers simply slip away: there is no heroic flight into an
This evening is a truly family affair, with three generations of Pinchbecks appearing. Dylan is one of the sleeping children in Under the Covers, the son of Zoo Indigo’s Rosie Garton and Michael Pinchbeck – who also appears in 2D form as a cardboard dad. The rest of the family appear in the second half of the night, The Post Show Party Show where Michael and Tony Pinchbeck, his father, investigate how the latter met the former’s mother Vivienne, also appearing as their prompt, at a post show party in 1970.
With the original show having been The Sound of Music it is only right that this performance is also shaped around the same soundtrack; Rodgers and Hammerstein’s songs unerringly camp and kitsch with many phrases commonplace are wittily used by the actors – Indeed, how do you solve a problem like Maria? Even the form of the songs is well known and this is expertly subverted in Do-Re-Mi where the performing von Trapps’ rounds of song are transformed into a motif about Tony Pinchbeck’s tongue-tiedness when asking Vivienne whether she needed a lift home. This cleverness pervades the whole event: the Shloer, presented to each entering audience member with a careful insistence that it was sparkling grape juice, is wonderfully observed, encouraging those watching into fully partaking in the pseudo-post show. The man-made mountain too, complete with snow storm, is a lo-tech gem and evokes the same flurry of flakes created in a tourist knick-knack. The presentation of artefacts from both then and now again is a wonderful device to give both worlds a physicality, the simple difference of showing an LP and a CD demonstrates forty years passing very skilfully.
This is a show with great personal depth but is overly complex in its dealings with some of the past-present relationships. The mapping of the
In these two shows, which beautifully consider the relationships we have with all those close to us, it is wonderful to see them performed by these small ‘family’ ensembles and even better to watch them together as double-bill. Whilst both do well as stand alone pieces, as a pair they combine to create a special evening which allows you to consider what friends and family have done or will do for you and more personally what you would do for them.
Under the Covers - The Post Show Party Show: ****
Images courtesy of Zoo Indigo & Michael Pinchbeck