Archive for category Tony Challis
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 31, 2011
King Lear XXXX
Edinburgh International Festival
Contemporary Legend Theatre, Taiwan.
This is a one-man Lear adapted and performed (in Mandarin with English surtitles) by Wu Hsing-kuo. This is highly original – actors do not usually take on the mammoth task of becoming Lear and all those around him. However, this is a triumphant achievement, which becomes more impressive and moving as it moves towards its close.
Wu Hsing-kuo appears as a traditional figure in a long white beard and long robes at first. But after a while these are thrown off, and I did feel that the unbearded performer, who was able to use his own body and features to move between characters, was more effective. Further costuming is used for the cruel daughters, and this transformation was impressive. The central section involving Lear’s Fool seemed to me to go on too long; the points being made had become apparent.
The best was saved for last, though – after nearly two hours of demanding solo performance. We come to the section where Edgar is with his blind father, Gloucester – whose folly has contributed to where Edgar now is. He could kill the father – but his filial devotion is not diverted, in a way any good Confucian would approve of. The placing of Gloucester on a high rock changed the feeling of this scene – he usually just falls forward – he has been quite deluded about the height.
From this point things gain real depth, and we have a soliloquy about self-hatred and the difficulty of accepting the true self when it is seen which could very well have come from Lear’s lips. The accompanying add much to the experience of this performance, and this becomes increasingly so in the latter part of the play. They deserve full marks for adding much drama and emotion to a solo performance that is deeply memorable and exceptional.
Edinburth International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 31, 2011
Edinburth International Festival. The Mokwha Repertory Company
King’s Theatre.
This is the European premiere, adapted and directed by Tae-Suk Oh, of a version of this late Shakespeare play, which follows much of the story of Shakespeare’s Tempest quite closely, but is re-focused through the prism of the fifth century Korean tale, The Chronicles of Three Kingdoms.
Thus we have a wonderfully dramatic storm, the (earlier than usual) meeting of Miranda and Ferdinand figures; a female Ariel who is more fun and gentler than is usual in Shakespeare, and less of a mere servant; a Caliban who is two-headed and who is separated into two quarrelling fools at the close by Prospero; and a chorus – delightful in various guises – who wish to end as rabbits who can burrow to the North. And one of the last things we see is them scampering off in that direction.
It was remarkable to encounter such a light, fun approach to the political situation in the two Koreas. But this was in keeping with the very warm and unaggressive feeling to the whole show, where the Prospero figure seemed to have less of a dark undercurrent than usual. This was a very warmly entertaining show, with exceptional ensemble acting. The Buddhist influence upon the story here seemed to serve to emphasise further the elements of understanding, reconciliation and forgiveness in the original, along with very welcome impish humour. A really splendid ninety minutes of theatre.
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 31, 2011
The Revenge of Prince Zi Dan
Edinburgh International Festival. Shanghai Peking Opera Troupe XXXX
Edinburgh Festival Theatre
Adapted from Zhu Sheng-Hao’s translation of Hamlet. Performed in Mandarin with English surtitles.
This is a performance that grew on me more and more as I watched it. Some things really should not have worked. A dwarf Polonius figure who rolls and gambols as he dies. The absence of the foreign (Norwegian) threat. Many things that at first are strange blend into the whole experience in due course.
At the interval I was wondering how things were to end with no Laertes figure – but he appeared and strongly as soon as we went back in. And we saw him observing his sister’s distress and despair. Ophelia’s costumes are ravishing at times, as is much of the cast’s apparel – the tall shoes, made, I’m told, from paper, and the amazing headdresses which make some of the cast look a little like Preying Mantis.
This is a different Hamlet, with some humour, but also with intensity, especially when Hamlet has the chance to kill his uncle at prayer, when he encounters Ophelia’s burial, and the elaborately ritualised final scene. This was a show that was visually sumptuous, with images that will remain long on the retina. It is also a new experience of Hamlet which will add new elements to what we expect when seeing this play.
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 31, 2011
Here was a living legend – someone many of us listened to in the 60s at the time when he was an inspiration to George Harrison and thus to the Beatles, and whom some of us have continued to listen to as he has done things like produce albums jointly with Japanese musicians. He is now 91 (or 92 – there seems to be some disagreement!) but, despite the fact that his wife is said to have expressed concern that she may have to go out and pick him up from the stage one night, he just loves performing. And judging by tonight’s standing ovation in a crowded Usher Hall many of us love hearing his music.
There was a variety of shorter and longer pieces, and the second main raga, allowing for some improvisation, was one I recognised as being on an old vinyl LP I still have from the 60s – thankfully others afterwards had the same connection.
There were seven on stage including a comely Japanese lad who helped Ravi onstage and tuned his guitar –one of his students, as was the guy from California with his cello. Very notable was Tanmoy Bose on tabla, who was excitingly vigorous when that was needed. Ravichandra Kulur on flute also added much depth and attractiveness to the music.
Even though the concert went on beyond the stated time it was a great pity that it had to come to an end. It is just extremely good that Ravi Shankar is still out there producing brilliant Indian classical music. Long may he continue to do so!
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 31, 2011
National Ballet of China. Directed by Feng Ying. XXXX Edinburgh International Festival. Edinburgh Festival Theatre.
This dance performance was visually stunning, with sets that could make one think one was visiting a contemporary art gallery. The large company of dancers was wonderfully fluid and synchronised. Du Liniang is a wealthy girl who dreams, and two alter egos appear as she wakes. She returns to her dream and there meets the handsome Liu Mengmei. She knows deep love in her dream.
Reality no longer satisfies her, and she asks one of her alter egos, the Flower Goddess, to take her back to her dream. Death appears with ghosts and she dies for love. She experiences hell, but Liu Mengmei remains true to the love he met in a dream, keeps her portrait with him, and the Infernal Judge in hell releases Liniang back to life – and then things look up! ( A gentler treatment of “sinners” than in Dante!)
The set pieces such as the scenes in hell and the wedding are ravishing – the performance ends with a real treat for the eyes. Wonderful as this show is, the group choreography is not very adventurous, and the pas de deux could have been more thrilling. The music blends many early 20th century western sources, and it was good to hear familiar bits of Debussy and Prokofiev, for example.
For anyone who loves a romantic dance spectacle this performance is to be recommended.
Time for the Good Looking Boy
Posted by Martin in Pleasance, Time For the Good Looking Boy, Tony Challis on August 27, 2011
THEATRE
****
Time for the Good Looking Boy
Pleasance Dome
Lloyd Thomas is a good-looking boy, but he also gives a more than good-looking performance here. His performance is quite compelling – you won’t easily find a better one-man show. He takes risks – including getting a member of the audience to act from her seat in the voice of his girlfriend – helping her with a few lines. It goes fine. He also brings us into the action by asking us a number of rhetorical questions.
He’s not a bad boy, as he says – all boys can be a bit wild – and we learn about his father’s departure, his girlfriend and sister, and how he comes to be outside the door, locked out – or does he? Are things as they seem? We are drawn into the kinds of fun he has with his friends, and the night out they have been having. Gradually, things darken, but not before you have got to feel real friendly with this character and have entered into his world. The final section is very moving, but this is maybe a bit long.
Michael Wicherek has written a very engaging script, which moves between scenes and characters very nimbly, and establishes situations with few words. The set is wonderfully compact and effective for the various locations.
You would in no way regret spending an hour in the company of this good bad boy, as you explore his life and hopes, up until it is time for him. Lloyd Thomas has complete control of the stage and the audience, and he could take us where ever he wanted. He is a masterly and subtle actor, and I am sure that more will be heard of him.
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 27, 2011
The first night of this two-evening show was electrifying. We began with the story of how King Shahrayar comes to distrust all women such that he takes a new wife each night only to execute her in the morning. And the coming of Shahrazad, who keeps him listening to her stories night after night… We then delve into the stories, especially that of The Porter and the Three Ladies, which leads into many other stories. We have here the “onion” system, whereby stories start in the middle of someone else’s story, and when you are wanting to know what happens next maybe four times over it is very difficult to walk away!
The acting was exuberant, touching, and, especially in the second half of the first night, very funny. The King of China’s Favourite Hunchback was splendidly realised. There are here no magic carpets or Ali Baba, as we are dealing with stories from the earliest tenth century manuscripts, not French additions from centuries later.
It is not the magic of wishes granted here as the much more difficult magic of relationships: the complexity of relationships between men and women, and especially the problems women have with men. The problems caused by male assumptions of power were the cause of much pain and hilarity on the first night; however, on the second night things seemed to become more predictable, and it seemed as though the same points were being made over, and the humour was increasingly obvious.
Thus, whilst the first night was a great time of exuberant enjoyment, the second night it seemed as though that could not be maintained; the temperature seemed lower, the material thinner, the acting less committed – even in the final reconciliation, which was a real pity. Thus the above rating is really an amalgam – of five stars for the first night and three for the second. However, the first night was sheer magic!
Snap, Catch, Slam
Posted by Martin in Pleasance, Snap Catch Slam, Tony Challis on August 27, 2011
THEATRE
***
Snap, Catch, Slam
Pleasance Courtyard
This show comprises three short plays by Emma Jowett, one for each of the verbs in the title.
The first one involves a young woman teacher who is provoked by a male pupil till she strikes out – having snapped. The dreamlike unreality of the “snapping” is vividly conveyed – the actor narrates her experience. There is a long background build up to the event –this is marginally the longest story – and, having spent most of my working life in either teaching or counselling, I felt almost as though I was sitting and counselling a troubled colleague. And there is much I might have said to her.
The climax of this story was very well conveyed, and the descent to the end very effective. But I failed to see what was added by having the other members of the cast sitting beside her – unless it was felt that the awkwardness of having them enter later would have spoiled the moment. The performance may have been more commanding alone. I did feel this would work very well on radio.
The second story involves a guy walking home and finding a house fire, and catching a baby thrown to him. Apart from the fact that the baby would not just have nestled into his arms – unless it was handed to him at ground level it would most likely have caused him to fall and have at least a broken arm, which would not have left him strolling casually home – other group members join in here in a way which seems to distract from the monologue.
The final section involves a woman being attacked by an ex-partner at her home. A violent and devastating ending, which seemed in keeping with the tendency to melodrama. This was an intense and memorable hour of drama, but I failed to see unity between the three parts or to see what, apart from sympathy with people in traumatic situations, I was meant to take from it.
Dostoevsky’s Dream of a Ridiculous Man
Posted by Martin in Dream of a Ridiculous Man, Spotlites, Tony Challis on August 27, 2011
THEATRE
***
Dostoevsky’s Dream of a Ridiculous Man
Spotlites @ The Merchants’ Hall
Dostoevsky’s work on the page is intense and grabs you by the throat, pouring the author’s own wisdom and characters’ insights down your gullet whilst you are thus held. George Dillon does a very good job of taking on this mode, transfixing the audience in his role as the would-be suicide “Ridiculous Man”, reviled by others and almost despairing of understanding himself or life. We are taken on his dream of paradise and of an alternative humanity. He creates the picture of this other world quite vividly.
It is not all full throttle, and there is a gentler mode in the incident of the little girl which causes him to feel shame and to have an insight into himself. I would have preferred if he had lowered the volume somewhat in his final message, and drawn the audience in more seductively. There could have been more variety of tone and delivery, but maybe George Dillon sees this man almost as the kind of street preacher who doesn’t do subtlety, and so he has to stay true to this character.
This was a most gripping and involving performance, and it was a pity that the audience was relatively small at the show I saw.
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 27, 2011
This is classical Indian dance, involving the praise of Sri, the mother goddess, and celebrating the love of Radha and Krishna. The Great Govind, the romantic ballad telling of the love of Radha for her immortal love and husband Krishna is very beautiful.
The dancing is extremely captivating and fluid. The costumes are gorgeous, and the lighting does them justice. The music is dynamic and uplifting.
There are five sections to the programme, and the final, Vibhakta, involves Shiva, the male principle, singing his adoration of his female other half, and Shivah, the female aspect, describing the glory of her counterpart. The dance underlines the beauty of the affections described.
Altogether a very satisfying evening, which transports you from the bustle of this frantic Festival city to another kind of world, where beauty, grace and love are paramount.
Belarus Free Theatre
Posted by Martin in Belarus Free Theatre, Pleasance, Tony Challis on August 25, 2011
THEATRE
****
Belarus Free Theatre
Pleasance Courtyard
This outstanding company present two pieces – Minsk 2011 and Discover Love.
The first piece presents a picture of life in the city they feel so much for and which they cannot now see – Minsk, capital of their homeland, Belarus, the only remaining dictatorship in Europe.
These are extremely skilful actors. They take us to many different places and moods in the course of the show, and the speed with which they establish a new scene and new characters is very impressive. They are able to change mood and take the audience where they want them to be in seconds. We see many ways in which people’s lives are harassed and interfered with by authority, the many ways of finding it difficult to be true to yourself, and various kinds of underworld – from nightclubs to channelled rivers.
The problems of having a Pride march, and the struggle to live as LGBT are also covered very effectively. The problems of having any coherent sex life, and the way a dictatorship corrodes all aspects of life, is clearly shown. There are also emotional moments when officialdom shows no respect for family feelings.
We see how authority stains the skin of the dissident – of the citizen – in order to control – maybe staining the whole of the citizen. This is a particularly stunning scene. In the midst of this, there is humour and a wide range of emotions. And of course there is also the desire for the redemption of the homeland, and feelings of deep attachment.
This is a show to be seen not because of a political situation, but because these are some of the most professional, versatile and captivating actors you will see on the Fringe this year.
Discover Love is a more intimate show than the Minsk 2011 show that Belarus Free Theatre are also showing. However, the show is book-ended by on-screen statements about the fate of The Disappeared and the need to ensure that civil rights are acknowledged worldwide so that it is impossible for citizens to be deprived of their liberty anonymously and held without trial. This would be an excellent situation, but we are far from it in many places.
The play tells the story of one woman from childhood, her lack of a father, her first loves, and then her meeting with the teacher who was to become her husband – with whom she had two daughters and lived for many years. These were years in which they were active in many areas, including democracy campaigns, until the day her husband went to the sauna with a friend and never returned. We learn of her campaigning since this happened in 1999. The story is based on the life of a real person in Belarus.
The acting, plus movement and dancing, here is extremely good, and the emotions of the characters are conveyed with much subtlety. The three person cast of Marina Yurevich, Oleg Sidorchik and Pavel Gorodnitski are very dynamic and resourceful. However, the story did not grab me emotionally in the way I thought it might – it was very moving, but not to a great depth. One reason for this may have been the great volume of words involved – we are given a great deal of detail about the early life of the central character and all this has to be read on the screens, so that we are almost caught between reading a story and watching a play. Maybe the dialogue could be trimmed a little, and time left to show relationships in action.
The whole drama is also done chronologically. Maybe starting some way through – at a point where difficulties occur, and then using flashback and flashforward, would wind the observer into the action more easily.
That said, this was a brilliantly executed, superbly acted piece, which fully deserved its standing ovation. These brilliant performers, exiles from their own unfree land, deserve every kind of support they can be given.
The Captain of Köpenick
Posted by Martin in Captain of Köpenick, theSpaces, Tony Challis on August 25, 2011
THEATRE
***
The Captain of Köpenick
The Spaces @ Surgeons Hall
This is a scathing satire of life in imperial Germany just before the First World War. Essentially, the uniform is more important than the man. Status is all.
Wilhelm Voigt is unemployed, has been in prison, and desperately wants a passport to return to the place of his birth. As it is, he is in effect a non-person.
The performance takes a while to warm up, and one or two of the cast seem somewhat on the surface. But I did feel for the escaped soldier who is recaptured – his eyes should take him far!
The most successful part of the show was the final three scenes, where things seem really to take off. The denouement was very enjoyable. The variations in class accents were also valuable. The relatively small stage does not make large-scale military actions easy to convey, but they did very well here with gusto.
David Fairs as Voigt was convincing and enjoyable, but he could usefully have been more of a rogue and more elaborately devious. With a farce like this exaggeration can pay dividends – some of the cast did play to this, but Voigt could have been more colourful.
The play itself does take rather a while to get where it is going, but the journey was definitely worth while.
Book Festival
Posted by Martin in International Book Festival, Tony Challis on August 23, 2011
Book Festival
Adam Zagajewski 17th Aug 12 noon.
Adam Zagajewski is regarded as the greatest of contemporary Polish poets. He was one of the leading poets of the Polish New Wave, known as the “Generation of ‘68” He is well known in his own country for “Try to Praise the Wounded World”, published in the new Yorker after 9/11. He has lectured in America for more than twenty years. He gave a reading of poems from different parts of his life, which took us to many unexpected places – including exploring the Baltic coast with his father as a boy.(He had to become an émigré at a very early age).
His poetry covers a very wide range of thought, ideas and experiences. Maybe his name will be mentioned in the same breath as a Nobel before too long.
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 23, 2011
This was ninety minutes of very varied experiences – a kaleidoscope of different dance styles was used, from traditional Korean dance to modern western with even some breakdance. A relatively small company of dancers and singers contrived to sweep us into a magical, legendary world where we never knew what would happen next.
We begin with a traditional scene, the birth of Princess Bari, who is the seventh daughter of a Korean king in ancient time. Frustrated that still he does not have a male heir, the king casts her to the sea, and delivers to an elderly couple. But she has a troubled life – we see robbings and the underworld , before she is married off and has six sons herself – eventually she returns to her father, and either saves him and brings her sons with her, or finds him slain. There are many versions of the legend, and this company have been imaginative with the story.
There are sumptuous costumes at some points – and very skimpy ones at others – and the sets are ravishing to the eye. We gradually become aware of the band behind the action, until they are partially seen behind a gold screen, whereupon the action is suffused in a kind of rose light. The dancers show extreme agility, and there are numerous surprises – even a motor cycle on stage at times.
This is a most exhilarating show, which does play fast and loose with the story at times, but we just enjoy the spectacle. Eun-MeAhn’s friendship with Pina Bausch is sometimes suggested – but all the better for that. This show is a treat for all the senses.
Llwyth (Tribe)
Posted by Martin in Llwyth (Tribe), St George's West, Tony Challis on August 22, 2011
THEATRE
****
Llwyth (Tribe)
St George’s West
This is a show which will sweep you up with its energy from the start. You will find it surprising perhaps that most of the dialogue is in Welsh – though the cast keep swapping languages so you may find your self reading the subtitles when you don’t need to – I did! And there is a lot of dialogue quickly early on, and it can be difficult to read and watch at the same time – I am well used to subtitles but I found this trying.
It tells the story of a group of gay boys who are also rugby supporters. It is Welsh International night in Cardiff and Wales have lost – but the boys are still determined to have a good night out. They lubricate with alcohol at home, they go to a club, some of them end at a viewing point – the very good set serves for all.
The really original aspect of this for me was the use of the Welsh language; the situations the characters found themselves in, the exploration of their inner demons, their relationship problems, the way the gay life takes them further from their families than they wish, and the relations between generations have all been covered before.
But the big thing here is the enthusiasm, with which the cast belt along, and the singing and the national pride. Simon Watts as Aneurin is very strong and makes us feel for him in his family situation. Danny Grehan as Dada is a rounded character who eases difficult moments. Joshua Price as Gavin, the schoolboy who does not make his age clear and is invited back, is very effective and sings well.
This is a moving and involving show, which will carry you along – the time will pass quickly and thrillingly.
The Adventures of Wound Man and Shirley
Posted by Martin in Adventures/Wound Man & Shirley, Pleasance, Tony Challis on August 22, 2011
THEATRE
****
The Adventures of Wound Man and Shirley
Pleasance Courtyard
Written and performed by Chris Goode, this is the story of a skinny fourteen year old boy named Shirley – not a helpful name for a boy at the average school. Shirley has certain things on his mind – some he hates to think of. One of these is another fourteen year old boy at school who he feels is sadly wholly unattainable. But he has the night sky on his ceiling, and that gives him a lift every morning.
One morning he wakes early and hears a strange clunking noise outside. This is his introduction to Wound Man, who is a kind of 16th century medical diagram, with weapons sticking out at all angles. This strange creature proves to be a very different kind of superhero, and extremely useful.
This is a completely delightful and engaging – and really moving – one-man show. It really is necessary to capture and charm the audience in about the first twenty seconds for this to work, and Chris Goode does that brilliantly. Repeatedly I was aware of how much the audience were with him, and who can blame them. As he took us into this problem-ridden but magical world I was fascinated, and he could have gone on longer happily – but the piece is very well-structured, and takes us just far enough for just long enough. The audience will be well able to fill in things that are only hinted at.
This is a warm and gentle show that conveys valuable insights and makes us question assumptions.
There is humour and there is heartache, and you leave feeling that you have spent time in the company of a wise man who has strengthened your zest for living.
Edinburgh International Festival
Posted by Martin in International Festival, Tony Challis on August 22, 2011
This is a staged recreation of Haruki Murakami’s novel. Murukami is known to be reluctant to have his novels adapted, but Stephen Earnhart managed to make him enthusiastic about this project.
The performance takes you into a world of action and dream. Both live acting and film is involved, but the drama flows very well despite. The drama takes you into the world of a man who finds it difficult to control events and his own life, and some very malevolent forces are at large.
A man’s wife and his cat have both disappeared. Which is he more concerned about? His brother in law is on T V – he is running for high political office, and is very nationalistic and traditional. What is his relationship with his sister? She has always seemed strangely “not there” sexually for her husband. He wonders if it is ever possible really to know another and if he knows his wife. A girl next door who is off school after an accident helps find the cat – and traps him down a well – where he can concentrate! A gift is brought by an old man with war memories.
This is a complex story, but it rewards attention and is technically enthralling. It is one to place high on your list if you like your drama strange but compelling and thought-provoking.
Sodom
Posted by Martin in Sodom, Tony Challis, Zoo on August 22, 2011
THEATRE
**
Sodom
Zoo
This show involves a very large cast in a small space. This does help you to feel more intimate with them. However, the volume remains turned up high and as every third word is fuck, cock or cunt it can all seem a bit over the top.
This is a version of the Earl of Rochester’s play which satirises the 17th century royal court. His majesty is into every form of sexual adventure, and his unfortunate courtiers have to comply…
This comes over in effect as a series of linked sexual sketches, all in rhyming verse – and shouted at you by the cast. The men are in grey suits and red ties and look very like aspiring New Labour MPs.
It was fun to a degree, but hardly got anywhere and did seem very adolescent. We got the idea that they were enjoying being naughty in language and action early on, and of course there had to be a kind of redemption.
Great if you like four letter words being shouted at you over a period of time.
Bones
Posted by Martin in Bones, Tony Challis, Zoo on August 19, 2011
THEATRE
****
Bones
The Zoo
This is a stunning piece of theatre that will have you glued to your seat. It concerns 19 year old Mark who lives on an estate in Nottingham. He is taken up with the care of his mum, who had him at 16, and her new baby. Excessively taken up, to the point where he wants to kill the baby.
In a brilliant and captivating one-man performance, Joe Doherty makes us see his early life, the problems with Grandad, the stumbling in on Mum and her latest, her addictions, his trouble with the law, the trip to Skegness: never have I been more concerned about the balance of a tub of salt…
Amongst the attitudes that Joe’s brutal life have instilled in him we do see his essential humanity. There may be many issues here, maybe a glut of them, and having taught in a number of Nottingham schools I can say that Mark-alikes are quite imaginable, but mercifully rare. The writing is very tight and keeps the tension high, and Joe Doherty’s performance does not lapse for a moment.
The show was sold out when I saw it – if you can get a ticket you will be in for a really special and memorable experience.
Anton’s Uncles
Posted by Martin in Anton’s Uncles, Bedlam Theatre, Tony Challis on August 19, 2011
THEATRE
****
Anton’s Uncles
Bedlam Theatre
This is drama mixed with physical theatre, plus some dance and music, and is a take on a classic Russian drama. Do not let that put you off! You are very quickly caught up in a magical world, where four guys, (sort of plus two…) engage your attention completely, and make you feel at home in a comfortable past one moment, then stir you with the unexpected and surreal the next. Acting and movement is brilliantly precise and fluid. This show has great charm and simultaneously the sharpest of edges.
You become more aware of the urges of each individual, and the way that their apparent enjoyment of the present does not mean they are not dissatisfied with that. A gun appears and a shot is fired, and there is the shame of the attempted crime….. A woman is very important to the men, and women in the audience may feel the warmth of their affections…. It doesn’t matter if you do not know Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya” – the man sitting next to me knew nothing of Chekhov, but said it was “all plain sailing.” But knowing the play will add some resonances.
The show is selling out, so grab a ticket if you can and be taken up into a delicious and deeply imagined world in the hands of a company of extremely able and assured actors.
Belt Up’s Twenty Minutes to Nine
Posted by Martin in Belt Up’s Twenty Minutes to Nine, C Venues, Tony Challis on August 17, 2011
THEATRE
***
Belt Up’s Twenty Minutes to Nine
C Soco
This one-person show, performed by Lucy Farrett, involves audience participation and contribution. Unfortunately, the time I went to see it the audience was small and this may have reduced the overall experience (as can happen with the most conventional theatre – weird is the experience of being part of an audience that consists only of a small handful of reviewers! But that was not the case here.)
The figure in Victorian garb at her dressing table with her back to us asks us to sit and be comfortable. She then engages us in conversation, trying to see what will stir us, what will make us tut…but we British are so reserved, and we don’t want to annoy a performer. Then she takes us into the world of her life and her memories, and we experience how different things can be when seen from the inside as opposed to the inside.
It is inevitable that this character will be seen as a “Havisham”, although the performer suggests she is not that one at one point. And I’m sure we all see Havisham as a character of great steeliness and determination, amongst other things, and not as weak in any way.
This is an intimate experience which gains from interaction between those present; it is not as intense as some Belt Up shows, but it is memorable, and what it is likely to leave you with most are images that you have seen in your head rather than ones that have been presented to you. Which is a particular kind of achievement.
The Bald Prima Donna
Posted by Martin in Bald Prima Donna, C Venues, Tony Challis on August 17, 2011
THEATRE
***
The Bald Prima Donna
C eca
This is a challenging play to bring off successfully. It contains much absurdity, and reflects the fact that the Roumanian Ionesco was teaching English, and used an English phrasebook for some of his lines, to reflect on both language and behaviour.
Mr and Mrs Smith are waiting for the arrival of their friends the Martins and the Captain of the Fire Brigade – who will explain everything…. He does indeed manfully tell many stories, of little or no connection to each other.
This was their first performance, and whilst it began a little hesitantly it built considerably in pace and intensity. The final ten minutes really took of in the mad way that is necessary. This play is said to have influenced much later comedy, including Monty Python.
The time constraints of the Fringe can cause people to think of time when on stage, and I have even seen cast members looking at their watches. I’m not sure if this affected these performers, but there were times when they effectively swallowed phrases – this applied especially to Charlotte Rouse as Mrs Smith and to Emily Aucutt as Mary. Words are very important here, and it is better to relish them, let them appear as crazy treasures, rather than rush through them. The attempt at “posh” English accents of the period was a good idea, though only intermittently achieved.
All of the cast made a very good stab at this difficult work, Daniel Wye as Mr Smith perhaps especially; Olivia Battle-Welch as Mrs Martin was very clear and forceful; Rob Tressler as her husband was effective but could have been more expressive; Toby Stevens as the Captain was very smooth and enjoyable in performance.
It is very good to see a youthful cast performing this play, and I am sure it will improve with each performance.
The Mourning Party
Posted by Martin in C Venues, Mourning Party, Tony Challis on August 17, 2011
THEATRE
**
The Mourning Party
C Soco
Three characters are seen separately in succession. An aspiring actor who fluffs his audition. An accountant who is making a presentation. A housewife whose identity is subsumed in taking care of her family of husband and three sons. There is some overlap, and the accountant is seen being sucked off. Presumably by a guy.
These three then meet by chance in a bar at the time that the death of President Kennedy is announced. So it is November 1963. The actor is drinking Jack Daniels: “Jack, of course.” All speak reverentially of the late Jack, and of how he made them feel new things were possible. What they say of him is pretty vague; I recall where I was on the Friday evening that news came through, and the things we talked about that weekend don’t get a mention in this play.
There is a reference to the next J. F. K. by the accountant – “…maybe he is being born in Honolulu around now.” Yuk!
The standard of acting by Euan Forsyth as the actor, George Ronayne as the accountant and Abby Gorton as the housewife (first, second and third mourners) is uniformly good, and they bring to life strongly the characters and the lines that they are given.
But, this trio just maunder on in a melancholy, maudlin way, seemingly as keen on alcohol as on J F K. The accountant is sufficiently distracted from his “loss” that he makes a pass at the apparently straight actor. He arranges for them all to meet a month later in the city centre – convenient for him and his work.
They don’t turn up – why should they? They have not made a significant connection with each other. Maybe this is to be seen as a tragedy of the failure of the unfocussed life. But I was genuinely surprised when the play ended.
There was no reason for them to gather again – and I see little reason for people to gather to watch this brief play.
Book Festival
Posted by Martin in International Book Festival, Tony Challis on August 17, 2011
Book Festival
Bettany Hughes. The Hemlock Cup. Socrates, Athens and the Search for the Good Life.
Vintage Press £9.99
Saturday 13th August. 15.30
Bettany Hughes is a writer who conveys a great sense of energy and enthusiasm – in her presence and in her writing. She makes repeated reference to recent archaeological discoveries and what they show us about the world that Socrates lived in. Whether this refers to the Agora, to footwear, to the Athenian liking for fish up from the port of Piraeus – hence a quite familiar liking for fish suppers – or to Socrates’ experience of war as a young man – all these details help bring the world of 2,500 years ago alive and seem immediate.
She spoke of how Socrates was accused of dishonouring the local gods and of corrupting youth. This was pretty inevitable given that he questioned everything – that was his method of thinking. Thus he even questioned democracy when the resulting crowd tended to vote for war every other year. He also – perhaps given his own experiences – was given to ask hunky young warriors if they really wanted to risk their lives in war. Not popular. He was also not above chatting up young men in the gymnasia – so we were told.
Perhaps inevitably, someone asked if Bettany Hughes saw any connection between Socrates and Jesus. She replied that a connection lay perhaps in an emphasis on love – not necessarily, in Socrates case, sexual love or spiritual love, but a love of life that made you want to get up in the morning and explore the world and live life intensely. I’m sure Bettany Hughes has this approach to life – she is most certainly a dynamic and inspiring academic, and she surely made all present want to learn more about her subject. There could not have been more present – the tent was packed, and I could barely find a space in a corner.
Her book is fascinating and enlightening, and I hope it receives a very wide readership.
Three Sisters by Anton Chekov
Posted by Martin in Gilded Baloon, Three Sisters by Anton Chekov, Tony Challis on August 17, 2011
THEATRE
****
Three Sisters by Anton Chekov
Gilded Balloon
Presenting a major classic drama at midday at the Fringe is a challenge; this is usually seen of an evening over 3 hours, not 90 minutes straight off. However, the size of the audience for this show and the applause says what needs to be said about the quality of the production.
The atmosphere is quickly established as we see the various desires and yearnings of the sisters. Amy Melissa Bentley as Olga, Aline O’Connor as Irina and Samantha Tuozzolo as Masha all inhabit their characters with a satisfying depth of commitment. John Stegmaier as Andrey gave a very convincing performance as a man who knew things were not going as ideally planned but who was determined to forge ahead without openly acknowledging this, and continuing to demand respect no matter how things may fall apart.
Conor Daniel Bartram was a thoroughly ominous and unsettling Chebutikin; Andrew Hendrick as Kulygin carried off a senior part to excellent effect, and Anthony John Mendoza was a very charming Tuzenbach.
It was impossible not to become engrossed in this production, no matter how many other “Three Sisters” one had seen before. If this company returns to the Fringe I shall certainly look out for them. They can clearly be relied on to provide quality and thought-provoking entertainment.











