|
|
Traces By Sue
Marks
Flying Music, Robert Jolley and Michael
Boersma present The Les 7
Doigts de la Main production of
Traces
Reviewed by
Sue Marks at Milton Keynes Theatre on Monday
8th February 2010.
The show
features five young people occupying a makeshift
shelter from an unspecified impending disaster
that lurks outside. In the belief that creativity
is the antidote to destruction, the characters
aim to make the most of what little time is left
by using various means of expression to leave
behind some traces of
themselves. They tell their stories through a
variety of genres which includes speech, music,
dancing and breath taking
acrobatics. As their
stories unfold the audience gains an insight into
the performers’ real lives.
The performers
are five young French-Canadian artistes; Antoine
Auger, Antoine Carabinier-Lepine, Genevieve
Morin, Philip Rosenberg and Jonathan Causaubon,
who were all students of Montreal’s National
Circus School. They have a wide range of
performing experience and skills honed in circus
schools and companies worldwide.
Featuring a
pulsating soundtrack throughout, which ranges
from rock ‘n’ roll to blues to hip hop, this
production mixes acrobatics with theatre, urban
and contemporary dance styles, skateboarding and
basketball.
The acrobatics
are amazing, they balance on each other’s heads,
leap up high poles without using their hands and
fly through hoops. I particularly enjoyed the
incredible performance of the acrobat using the
large metal hoop.
Early in the
show they introduce themselves individually by
name, using a suspended microphone, together with
three keywords which define them. This is
followed by an amusing sketch where they swing
the microphone calling out a name or keyword as
it passes. Later in the first half of the show
they take turns playing a piano which sounds
remarkably good, particularly since it has been
given the appearance of having been made from
scraps of wood roughly cobbled
together. An old box
serves as a piano stool. One of the group also
plays guitar and performs a song. There is some
basketball and skateboarding.
After the
interval the pace of the show speeds up with the
exhilarating acrobatics. Whilst I enjoyed the
show I think the first half could be improved by
being a little sharper in places. There were
times I found myself more interested in the
soundtrack than what was happening on stage.
However the second half was brilliant. This is an
innovative show that is worth seeing.
It
is perhaps a sign of the times that world class
acrobatics does not constitute a show in its own
right. This show has clearly taken circus skills
and made something more out of them but what
really excites me is the show this is going to be
in a few more years’ time because I believe it is
still evolving.
Traces plays
Milton Keynes Theatre from Monday
8th February to Wednesday
10th February 2010. Milton Keynes
Theatre Box Office 0844 871 7652 (bkg
fee).
The tour then
continues playing Alhambra Theatre Bradford from
Thursday 11th February to Saturday 13th
February.
www.miltonkeynestheatre.com www.flyingmusic.com
Reviewed by Sue Marks at Milton Keynes Theatre
on Monday 8th February 2010 on
behalf of Catherine
Brian.
FEB9th
By Carolin
Kopplin

The Rosemary Branch Theatre in Islington -
winner of „Best Theatre“ in the 2010 Fringe
Report Awards - presents a solo
performance by Judith Paris about the life
of Madame Tussaud. Although her name graces
one of the main tourist attractions in
London little is known about the life of
Marie Tussaud.
Aptly
directed by Ninon Jerome, Judith Paris
recounts the story of this remarkable woman
who was
arrested as a royalist during the horrors of
the French revolution and barely
escaped the
guillotine. Marie
Tussaud tells her younger son the story of
her life before the opening of her new show.
Now aged 72 she has been working hard since
she was a child to become
a gifted artist as well as
a successful business woman. She describes
how she was taught the art of waxwork by her
uncle Philippe Curtius against the explicit
wishes of her mother who saw her daughter in
a more traditional role. Marie eventually
married but left her husband and her younger
son to tour the towns of Britain with her wax
cabinet, fighting off competition against a
background of fire, riot, shipwreck, and
betrayal. Madame Tussaud became one of the
greatest showpeople along with P.T. Barnum -
which makes one wonder: How much of her story
is really
true?
Judith
Paris, who has also written the play, gives a
beautiful performance as the admirable Marie
Tussaud.
9 – 14
February 2010, Tue – Sat 7.30 pm, Sun 3
pm
Tickets: £
12 / £ 10 (concessions)
BOX
OFFICE: 020 7704
6665
The Rosemary Branch, 2
Shepperton Road, London N1
3DT
FEB9th
By kelly
potter
THE QUEEN'S THEATRE.
HORNCHURCH
Travels
with my Aunt
By Giles Havergal
Adapted from the novel by
Graham Greene
Directed by Liz Marsh
Designer: Rodney Ford
Lighting Designer: Chris
Howcroft
This production of
Havergal's adaptation of Graham
Greene's novel was fast moving, fast
speaking, action packed, but simply
staged. All elements that I found made it a
success.
As an audience member taking your seats,
you were mildly aware of a character,
sweeping and setting up a minimalistic
stage, lined with high cupboards and
drawers. Once the audience were seated,
this stage manager, played by Simon Jessop,
introduced us to Henry Pulling. Three
characters identically dressed in plain
grey suits entered the stage, all
introducing themselves as Henry Pulling, a
retired bank manager with hardly any
interests apart from growing
dahlias who, at his mother's
funeral, was reunited after many
years with his mother's sister, Aunt
Augusta. Each Henry
(Elliott Harper, Sam Pay and Marcus
Webb) took turns addressing the
audience. Full attention was
needed in order not to miss anything
from this story, narrated by the
character of Henry. Each character and
scenario was played out by him, with
the help of the stage hand who ran around
the stage opening draws to reveal beds,
graves, hotels suites, taxis and
trains. Henry relays the story
of his dreary life until meeting his
aunt after many years at his mother's
funeral. He forges a
new friendship with this relative and
follows her in her desire to revisit her
younger, more colourful years of travelling
the world surrounded by smugglers, war
criminals and con men. Each actor
plays numerous characters on a journey
that takes us from Brighton to Paris, the
Orient Express to Istanbul and a final trip
to Panama. Each time a new
character was introduced, one of the three
Henries would simply put on a hat or
different coloured shirt or hold a
prop. The mannerisms were
enough to be able to
visualise each character and
was powerful and effective. I
could actually empathise with each
character. One member of the
audience let out a gasp when the gruesome
fate of one of the characters was revealed,
we'd become that close to them, there were
almost tears at the
end.
The pure wordiness of the play and the
faultless performances of the cast,
switching characters with ease while
keeping the pace constant, made this
a thoroughly engaging
production. Witty, fast, timed to
perfection, especially Simon Jessop's
background antics as the stage manager
messing up his sound effects and costume
preparations, this was something I'd
see again.
Showing 5 -27 February
FEB8th
By Caroline
May
Shakespeare’s magical comedy A
Midsummer Night’s Dream is the
latest play in the Octagon season to be
directed by the Artistic Director, David
Thacker, who won a brace of Olivier Awards
for his RSC production
ofPericles twenty years
ago.
The Sergeant Pepper-influenced publicity
flags up a Swinging Sixties theme, so it’s
surprising to find the auditorium initially
awash with sombre army uniforms and Che
Guevara-style propaganda posters - a nod to
the very un-swinging military dictatorship
which seized power in Athens in
1967.
Rob Edwards (eponymous hero of that
1990 Pericles) doubles the
roles of Theseus, head of Athens’
repressive jackbooted regime, and Oberon,
the equally cruel despot of
fairyland. Paula
Jennings is Theseus’ black-veiled
spoil-of-war Hippolyta who becomes
translated into a white mini-dressed,
sexually liberated
Titania.
Designer Ashley Shairp’s acid-coloured
playground of a forest, teeming with
bouncing balls and magic lanterns, seems to
unleash the potential in every character,
including a quartet of mismatched lovers
fleeing from the city, and a weaver with a
thespian bent and an ass’s
head.
Vanessa Kirby’s heart-broken Helena sets
the stage alight with her passion, energy
and comic timing - no wonder Rob Edwards’
magisterial Oberon is so visibly taken by
her. Compassion for
the young mortal melts his hard heart and
leads to a sequence of reconciliations,
including his own with Paula Jennings’
luscious and uninhibited
Titania.
Kieran Hill makes an unusually good-looking
Bottom and is beautifully rigged out for
his Act V turn as Pyramus, but Russell
Dixon’s Peter Quince runs off with the
comedy honours for a spot on portrait of a
fruity old-school actor in a classic piece
of character acting.
The handling of the verse is uniformly
excellent, and David Thacker’s inspired use
of the entire auditorium really brings the
show alive, ably assisted by music director
Carol Sloman’s trippy score and Wayne
Dowdeswell’s hallucinogenic
lighting.
The production could benefit from being
played at a much faster pace as its current
running time is more akin
to Hamlet than a comedy
which I once saw performed in ninety
minutes
flat. Nevertheless
this is a colourful, energetic and lucid
production of the original
rom-com.
A
Midsummer Night’s
Dream is
on at Bolton Octagon until Saturday 6 March
2010
Tickets: from £9.00
Eves: Mon-Sat @ 7.30
Matinees: Friday 5, Saturday 6, Monday 8,
Wednesday 17 and Sat 27 Feb @
2pm
Box Office: 01204 520661
www.octagonbolton.co.uk
FEB6th
By Steve
Burbridge

The Machine
Gunners
The Customs
House, South
Shields
The themes of love, loss, loyalty,
friendship, childhood and warfare are
skilfully interwoven into a musical that
tells the tale of a group of teenagers
growing up on Tyneside during the
Blitz.
Robert Westall’s The Machine
Gunners was published in 1975 and
won the Carnegie Medal for Children’s
Literature, became a set text in schools, a
million seller and a classic BBC TV series.
This musical adaptation, written by Ken
Reay and Tom Kelly with music by John
Miles, was first staged at The Customs
House in 1998 and then spent a month at the
Edinburgh Fringe Festival where it received
rave reviews. It returns to The Customs
House, with a stellar cast, as part of the
venue’s fifteenth anniversary
season.
Fourteen-year-old Chaz McGill (played by
James Baxter) is an avid collector of
shrapnel and other forms of wartime
memorabilia, which he finds amongst the
debris of the bombsites in his home town,
Garmouth. One day, he stumbles across the
tail-end of a German fighter, its machine
gun and its pilot.
Together with his gang of mates, Chaz
decides to keep the German airman as a
prisoner of war and he is secreted in a
disused garden shed. Soon, though, the
teenagers grow fond of Rudi and a set of
unlikely friendships are
formed.
The Machine
Gunners is a piece of theatre
that succeeds on every level. As dramatic
as it is comedic, you cannot help but get
caught up in the adventures of the
youngsters, whilst also empathising with
the fears and concerns of the
adults.
Director Gareth Hunter has gathered
together a cast comprising much of the best
of North East talent. James Baxter’s
portrayal of Chaz is carefully crafted and
utterly believable. The relationship
between Chaz and the other members of his
gang, played by Tom Booth (Cem), Steven
Stobbs (Clogger), Jamie Hannon (Nicky) and
Rachel Teate (Audrey) is extremely
convincing. Wayne Miller and Charlie
Richmond also deliver great performances as
Bodser the bully and John,
respectively.
Neil Armstrong and Tracy Gillman strike up
a great rapport as Chaz’s parents, whilst
Annie Orwin maximises the comedy in her
role as nosey-parker Mrs Spalding. Jamie
Brown as Rudi, the German air-gunner, puts
in a fine performance, as does Louis
Roberts in the slightly limited role of
Sergeant Green. Donald McBride and Tony
Neilson complete the line-up as members of
the Garmouth Home Guard.
Some of the songs stand up better than
others, with ‘Gossip’, ‘F.R.I.E.N.D.S’ and
‘He Will Need You’ being the showstoppers.
However, it is the story that completely
sweeps you up and makes The
Machine Gunners memorable for all
the right reasons.
Steve
Burbridge.
The Machine
Gunners runs
until Saturday
13th February
2010.
FEB5th
By Caroline
May
Fiona Peek’s new
play Salt was co-winner
of the Royal Exchange’s Bruntwood
Playwriting Competition in November 2008,
and the premiere of this sophisticated
social comedy has been eagerly
anticipated.
The action takes place between July 2007
and March 2008 during the course of five
dinner parties in Simon and Amy’s beautiful
basement
kitchen. Simon’s
stable law firm salary and Amy’s chic
little gallery job provide them and their
children with a lifestyle straight out of a
weekend colour
supplement. However
their two child-free friends Rachel and
Nick (Amy’s old flame from college days)
are struggling with debt now that his
freelance journalism commissions are drying
up and RSI has ended her orchestral
career.
Fiona Peek’s debut play, with its skilfully
interwoven themes of debt, fertility,
work/life balance and food porn, thoroughly
nails the late-noughties
zeitgeist. The
other unacknowledged but ever-present
problem plaguing the middle-classes is
excessive recreational drinking - a vice
which does more than its fair share to
inflame the situation here.
Even if external circumstances didn’t play
a part, the chemistry between Amy and Nick
and their uninhibited flirting has
“slow-motion car crash” written all over
it. Beth
Cordingly’s smug Amy is still proprietorial
of her ex, constantly reminding Rachel (and
Simon) of how long they’ve known each other
and therefore how much better she
understands him than his wife
does.
Simon Chadwick plays her husband as an
uptight conformist pretending to be a laid
back peacemaker. He
tries to remain aloof from the emotional
maelstrom but this diplomacy only masks his
diffidence towards the other
couple. You form
the impression that if he and Amy were to
divorce, she would get Rachel and Nick in
the settlement.
Kevin Harvey’s slightly-scouse and immature
Nick, one of those nightmare guests who
can’t distinguish between a dinner party
debate and a stand-up row, is stuck in the
laddish culture of the 1990s, and Esther
Hall’s brittle Rachel is as highly strung
as her own violin when confronted with the
dilemma of treating her immature husband as
a child or making him face up to his
responsibilities.
Ben Stones’ sleek set is like watching the
window display in a designer furniture shop
coming alive, and Jo Coombs’ fluid and
fast-paced production captures the
authentic tone of entitlement of the
(apparently) affluent professional
classes.
My only quibble is that the bombshell
dropped in the dying moments is treated
with such brevity and underplaying as to be
almost subliminal - if this was on DVD
you’d frantically rewind it trying to work
out exactly what
happened. But even
without a freeze-frame facility the
first-night audience was highly
appreciative of this witty and clever new
play.
Salt is
on until Saturday 20 February
2010
Prices: £4 (conc)-£9.50
Evenings: Mon-Sat @ 7.30
Matinees: Wed & Sat @
2.30
Box Office: 0161 833 9833
www.royalexchange.co.uk
FEB4th
By Steve
Burbridge

Never Forget
The Tyne
Theatre & Opera
House
IT seems that the future of musical theatre
is heading in the direction of the
‘juke-box’ musical. With a plethora of
productions based on the back catalogue of
groups such as ABBA, Queen and Boney M, it
was a sure bet that one featuring the music
of Take That would pop up.
‘Never Forget’ tells the story of five
young men who enter a talent competition to
form a Take That tribute band. Along the
way, they discover that fame comes at a
price but friendships last
forever.
The ladies were out in full force, no doubt
attracted as much by the physique of
former Brookside and Hollyoaks star,
Philip Olivier, as the hits penned by Gary
Barlow. There was a huge scream upon his
first appearance, followed by wolf-whistles
and calls of ‘Get your kit
off!’
The show isn’t exactly Ibsen or Chekhov –
nor does it claim to be. It’s as camp as a
row of pink tents and as cheesy as a Quatro
Formaggi pizza, but the songs are fabulous
and the choreography is breathtaking and
the special effects are impressive,
too.
‘Never Forget’ is an uplifting show that
positively exudes the feel-good factor and
makes for a great evening’s entertainment.
Well worth a visit.
Steve
Burbridge.
Runs until Saturday
6th February
2010.
FEB4th
By Cameron
Lowe
Have
you heard the story of the Johnstone twins?
If not, you have missed what has become a
classic of British musical theatre and now
is your chance to hear the tale! Willy
Russell’s Blood Brothers is on tour -
follow a trail of tears and snotty
handkerchiefs all the way to the King’s
Theatre, Glasgow until 13 February
2010.
Glasgow-born songstress, Vivienne Carlyle,
stars as Mrs. Johnstone, a 1960s
Liverpudlian mother of seven who is just
about making ends meet, until her husband
leaves and the twins arrive. Reluctantly
she makes a deal with Mrs. Lyons (Tracy
Spencer), her well-to-do employer, to give
one of her twins away. And so, irresistible
and tragic wheels are set in motion as the
twins are destined to be born and then to
die on the self same day.
The story is largely light hearted and
entertaining despite the tear-streaked
faces that have famously been leaving
performances of this musical all over the
world. It follows the growth of the boys
from childhood to adulthood and the script
is bursting with the gritty Liverpool
humour that made the writer famous. The
humour is also observational and sucks the
audience into a real bond with the
characters as we sympathise with their
poverty and remember schoolboy fun that
helped to lighten the mood in difficult
times. The tragedy, when it falls, feels
very personal. The musical score, in
isolation, seems almost unremarkable but
together with the on-stage drama it adds
great depth to the contrasts of mood that
are the bedrock of this musical’s success.
The audience can even take a few tunes home
with them “My Child”, “Easy Terms” and
“Tell Me It’s Not True” being eminently
hummable.
The production has changed very little over
the years, but the talented cast add their
personal nuances to the timeless
story. Vivienne
Carlyle took the role of Mrs. Johnstone
(previously played by such well known
actresses as Stephanie Lawrence, Kiki Dee,
Lyn Paul and four of the Nolan sisters) in
her stride, never over dramatising, never
over cooking the
accent. She took a
nightmare narrative and made it
real. The
combination of Sean Jones and Paul Davies
as the twins, Mickey and Eddie, was the
perfect mix. I’ve
had the pleasure of being entertained by
Sean Jones in a previous tour and he is
definitely my favourite
Mickey. His
transformation from carefree seven-year-old
to drug-dependant adult is heartbreaking in
itself. Chemistry
with his on-stage sibling as well as his
childhood sweetheart (Linda, played by
Kelly-Anne Gower) was
wonderful. Finally,
Robbie Scotcher’s menacing portrayal of the
Narrator was the ideal balance of singing
talent and threatening demeanour.
No other musical can take you through the
entire spectrum of human emotion like
this. Book your ticket
today.
Listings
Info:
Blood Brothers
King’s Theatre,
Glasgow
Tue 2 – Sat 13
Feb
Mon – Sat eves
7.30pm
Wed & Sat mats
2.30pm
Thu 4 Feb mat
2.30pm
Audio described performance 11 Feb
7.30pm
Signed performance 12
Mar 7.30pm
Tickets: £11.50 -
£30
Box Office 0844 8717
648 (Bkg fee)
www.ambassadortickets.com/glasgow (bkg
fee)
FEB4th
By Nicola
Hollinshead
WHAT IF...is a
stunning new piece of work by artist, theatre
maker and SHUNT director Layla Rosa &
company. There is a simplicity of imagery
from the opening that is compelling and is
enhanced by a hypnotic soundscape, setting
the atmosphere of the journey to come.
A lone rope
hangs down at one end of the stage and on the
other, a pair of glittery, silver high-heel
shoes are bathed in light. TV screens on
either side display looped images of women in
veils and images of hands veiling and
unveiling different women's
heads.
The figure
swathed in black and veiled who sits and on
a high stool and sings to us is enigmatic
and mysterious. Because of the veiling and
complete covering of the body our focus
goes to the expressive movements of her
hands and feet in order to try to
understand the feeling and meaning of the
song. In fact, there is a strong emphasis
throughout the show on hands and feet, as
if the extremities are the only 'free'
parts available to really express
themselves until the final 'reveal' at the
end, where it appears a transformation has
taken place for the main protagonist of the
piece.
The
semi-autobiographical journey is never
over-stated or explained, but instead we are
left to make up our own minds about what the
piece of work is saying and what we each take
from it.
The aerial work
in itself is simply outstanding. The fact
that the performer is blindfolded makes the
routines even more impressive how she
literally 'feels' her way up the rope with
her feet and lets herself drop back down from
held positions to within inches of the
floor.
Beautiful
images remain long afterwards in your mind;
the swing sequence is both exhilarating and
poetic, and the mirroring dance with the
'Western' counterpart is inspired.
Imaginative,
haunting and expertly constructed, it is a
unique combination of disciplines that
results in an independent and innovative
voice, WHAT IF is one of a number or
performances at Jacksons Lane coming up this
season to celebrate these art forms.
For further
information on future tour dates of WHAT IF
:
www.cryingoutloud.com
Jacksons Lane
theatre in Highgate has also just launched
a brand new website www.jacksonslane.org.uk which
is now live and means that Jacksons Lane’s
audience can now book tickets online
directly through the box office system at a
reduced booking fee of only £2.
|
|
|
0 Comments
Click here to sign up now.