Boys, LOST Theatre

By guest critic Martin Pettitt

Boys, Ella Hickson’s play, alludes to a teenage girl patronisingly rolling her eyes at the clumsy and emotionally immature endeavours of her male school mates. It is a title that belies the complexity of the play while at the same time signalling its rather linear representation of gender roles.

The show takes place during a sanitation strike in an Edinburgh flat share which is slowly piling up with detritus and rubbish bags. The inhabitants of the flat, several students days away from leaving for home and a waiter on the verge of his 30s, are trapped inside the walls as the tensions between them slowly rise and reveal themselves. It is a simple concept but one done well and rich with symbolism.

The set is a whole kitchen inside a flat, as if it had been picked up and dropped wholesale from a student abode in the Victorian house around the corner. It is so well observed that one is tempted to get onstage and make a cup of tea or join in with the shenanigans. The staging is that authentic the only thing missing is the smell which one imagines would be somewhere between stale water and rotting vegetables.

The mise en scene, being so scarily familiar, gives an oddly voyeuristic verve to proceedings, it almost feels too real. On many occasions there is the danger of projectiles hitting audience members, reinforcing this closeness. This is what theatre should be; we are not in the cinema here, this danger is what makes theatre unique.

The dialogue and pacing is punchy and slick and, as with the set, very keenly observed. There are plenty of the normal tropes – student cleanliness, wonderment at the future, poor diet, the bawdy stories involving naive freshers – but there is more going on here. Each character is a human first and foremost and this is the strength of the script. The characterisation, as well as the acting, is so good that it makes the absence at the centre of the play, a dead friend/brother who committed suicide, seem erroneous. It doesn’t seem needed, but merely an addition by the playwright to make things more dramatic – as if she is afraid her characters can’t do the job. They totally can, and with gusto. 

As much as this play brings to the slightly wonky and stained table, there is a naïveté to the script. One particular example is Benny’s revelation (to the audience) of his brother’s suicide – shouted hysterically, and then cuts to black – it feels very amateurish. The roles of the men and women in the piece are also sadly trite. Despite the amazing characterisation, the women are left to look on, doe-eyed, as the foolish men cheat on them and hide their ‘true’ sensitive natures behind bolshie facades. The women are forced to stoically endure the drama, awaiting their fate like the women from Troy. This seemed quite conspicuous in a contemporary world of plurality and fluidity.

Boys is now closed. 
 
The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

The Unmarried, Camden People’s Theatre

Luna is a proper East London geezer. Busy with one-night stands, spitting rhymes and doing shots, she’s also a mum in a long term relationship on the prowl for fleeting moments that remind her she’s still young and alive. Backed up by Kate Donnachie and Nate Forderstaple from Battersea Arts Centre’s Beatbox Academy, actor/writer Lauren Gauge’s spoken word piece celebrates rebellion against society’s expectations of young women with old school tunes, comedy and uncensored attitude. The Unmarried, though there’s plenty of room for development, is rough, raw, sassy and full of fight.

Beat boxing and 90s tunes underscore Gauge’s spoken word text, the soundtrack to Luna’s monologue on motherhood, mortgages and not marrying her fella. She longs to unleash herself from obligation and routine with moving rhymes and in-yer-face aggression that occasionally gives way to vulnerability. These moments are wonderfully poignant; they give the character depth and humanity.

The script tos and fros a bit, and Gauge’s pace is pretty relentless. It certainly works for the character, but a long day and a late start time leaves me a bit slow on the uptake. The climactic end comes suddenly with little build up, though it’s a satisfying rallying cry of independence. The Unmarried would work well in a club or non-traditional theatre space where the audience can dance and move, and the energy would feed the performers’ energy – this is certainly a piece that would work in the communal, night club atmosphere.

Gauge’s fiery presence and versatility make this a hugely watchable performance. Though also the writer, she wisely brings in director Niall Phillips to shape the piece. Phillips’ work with verse playwright Andrew Maddock is quickly establishing him as a director specialising in spoken word. His skill with staging and extracting the nuance from linguistically dense work is evident and, along with Gauge, is a talent to watch. 

The Unmarried is now closed.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

 

Swing By Around 8, Theatre N16

Nailing that first job after drama school can be daunting. You are no longer competing for roles with a small collection of peers, you are bidding for work in an environment where literally everyone has more experience than you. There are unwritten rules, cultural differences and a lack of support to learn to deal with. It’s hard going, especially when most of these early-career jobs are unpaid. No wonder so many emerging artists give up within their first few years out of training.

Theatre N16 wants to combat that. They recently launched its First Credit scheme where four actors and two directors are provided the opportunity to gain their first professional credit after completing their training. Jess Bray’s sexual sitcom of a play Swing By Around 8 is brought to life by actors Paul Boichat, Rebecca Drake, Maanuv Thiara and Maisie Black, with direction by Amy Hendry and Ellie Gauge.

Bray’s script verges on farce, with clear television influences. The two-couple character comedy is reminiscent of The ‘Big Bang Theory’ and ‘Friends’, but much less PG. There’s plenty of good one-liners and gags about group sex, though the characters lack depth. It’s great for young actors looking to develop their comic timing, but a shame they don’t have the chance to get stuck into something meatier.

The four actors are pretty evenly matched, though Paul Boichat as Elliot is marginally stronger with a charismatic presence and more nuance. Hendry and Gauge share the directing well; there is a unified style and approach to the characterisation. Some moments of high tension tend towards hammy, but the comedy is well delivered.

This is a solid effort all around from these young creatives, and N16’s commitment to grant them exposure is highly commendable. The First Credit programme is certainly one to follow for new talent, and the selection process is no doubt rigorous – though a more substantial script would certainly serve them better.

Swing By Around 8 runs through 1 December.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

Wild at Heart, Pentameters Theatre

Pentameters Theatre, tucked above a Hampstead gastropub, feels more like a community theatre than a professional fringe theatre. Many of the audience know each other, and the theatre staff feel like they are an intrinsic part of the building. AD Leonie Scott-Matthews introduces the show; she states to the mostly local audience that Tennessee Williams’ plays are the first to sell out when she announces a new season. Williams wrote over 70 short plays as well as the full-length scripts that established him as a writer, so if he’s so popular with her audiences these are a fantastic resource to tap. Rarely staged, many of them offer his trademark poetic language and characters that capture the seedy underbelly of their time and place. 

Wild at Heart is a collection of four of them spanning states and decades, but they all tap into similar moments of despair. The performances are mixed as are the directorial choices, but its a great opportunity to see some lesser-known works.

The four scripts are on similar quality, through Mr Paradise and Hello From Bertha have the more interesting storylines. Even so, not a lot happens in these playlets. All of the characters are barely on the fringes of society, isolated and lost. Hopelessness hangs over the dingy set and misery permeates every nook and cranny. It’s a shame that the performances aren’t better – inconsistent accents and generic heightened realism lack emotional truth and feel hollow. 

Director Seamus Newham uses the wide but shallow space effectively, though there is some dubiously mimed door and window opening on the fourth wall. The pace across the four plays is largely unvarying, but he has a decent sense for Williams’ rhythm.

Williams provides a little window into his world through these short plays, and even though there isn’t the opportunity for depth of character or thematic exploration, they are an insightful barometer of those on the margins of American society in the 30s, 40s and 50s. Even though they could be handled better, it’s a lovely opportunity to experience his lesser-known work.

Wild at Heart is now closed.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

Romeo and Juliet, Rose Playhouse

It’s so easy to brush aside a production of Romeo and Juliet – it’s overdone, every one knows it, it’s not innovative. But when it’s staged with energy, passion and commitment, the story shines through and you’re reminded that it’s actually a wonderful play. Wolf-Sister Productions’ version does have some issues, but the vivacity with which they approach the text is truly captivating. A good edit and some phenomenal performances hovering on the edge of the Elizabethan remains of the Rose Playhouse make this Romeo and Juliet quite a special one.

Eight actors take on all of the roles, and four of them are women – a quiet middle finger to traditionalists – but the star performer is James G Nunn as Romeo. Nunn’s emotional and expressive range is phenomenal, and well beyond that normally gifted to the character. He soon renders the audience helpless at his feet as he barrels his way through the story. His Juliet doesn’t quite match him, unfortunately. Her love isn’t fully believable and, discarding the naivety of the character in favour of anger, she comes across as untenably mature. Niall Ransome is a hearty, grounded Mercutio and Esther Shanson’s direct address is quite good, as is her multi-rolling – though her Lady Capulet is the strongest of her four parts. The whole cast run, leap and wrestle constantly, keeping the energy and stakes high.

Director Alex Pearson insists on an explosive energy that cannily suits the impulsive, teen love affair within two duelling families. She sets the play within a refugee camp which, whilst the tents ringing the pool of water preserving the theatre’s remains are a pleasing aesthetic, doesn’t otherwise indicate it’s not a festival or a campground. Had the programme notes not stated it’s set in a refugee camp, I may not have guessed. There’s a mix of British accents, all but one actor is white, and the text is as written barring unnecessary concessions for gender swaps, so the only signpost of the specific location is the set.

Pearson does make some great choices, though. Mecutio’s undiluted venom towards Romeo as he dies is surprising, but grounded in believability. The sexual tension between Mercutio and Romeo is titilating and fun, and her female-led, often cross gendered casting is certainly commendable and provides another perspective on the characters, particularly the parental Friar Laurence. Pearson faces the challenges of the space head on, using the whole site as his stage with confidence.

Also executed well are the fights, choreographed by Dan Burman. The nastiness of knives adds to the visceral, impetuous energy that keeps the actors pelting around the space. It’s great to see a fringe theatre production use a proper fight director rather than the director try to fudge the choreography themselves.

Even though this recontextualisation doesn’t come across, the strong performances, unrelenting energy and intimacy provided by the venue make this a really rather good version. It’s accessible, easy to follow, and frames the eternal story of the star-crossed lovers and all of their tragic flaws excellently.

Romeo and Juliet runs through 10 December.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

Tonight With Donny Stixx, The Bunker

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Donny Stixx is a teenaged magician with boundless dedication to his craft and desperation for fame. Rather than doing things that boys his age normally do, he spends hours honing his skills and tweaking the act he performs at kids’ parties, hospices, churches and for anyone else that will watch. The only thing he ever thinks and talks about is his magic. But Donny’s pretty obviously on the autism spectrum; this combined with his unstable upbringing and lack of an appropriate support system is a particularly deadly combination. Philip Ridley’s 2015 Edinburgh award-winning solo show explodes onto a bare, grey stage in a linguistically vivid documentation of fanaticism and social disorder with a phenomenal performance by Sean Michael Verey.

Verey is an unrelenting force with inimitable energy and charisma that shines through a character who has precious little social intuition. Though Donny is awkward and frustrating, Verey’s performance captivates. Having a totally plain stage that is anywhere and everywhere means it’s entirely on the actor to hold attention – but the performance makes it work and is never, ever boring.

Ridley’s text is dense and Verey races through it; it would otherwise be double the length. Though the pace is exhausting to take in, it’s necessary. The language and imagery richly creates a wonderfully detailed believable world. Director David Mercatali coaxes the nuance from Donny’s biographical story incredibly well despite the speed – the sparsely used pauses are devastating. When the pace finally lets up, it’s like cold air hitting a friction burn.

A clearly foreshadowed conclusion results in awed, uncomfortable silence. After a week that saw the broken American political machine elect an orange fascist for its next president, Ridley’s play is far from comforting. Whilst Verey’s depiction of Donny’s passion is delightful and his performance is nothing short of extraordinary, his vulnerability weighs heavily on bruised and helpless liberal consciences. There is no safety net, and fanaticism is the new normal in this dark play from the innocent days of pre-2016. It’s a hard show to sit through, but absolutely worth it.

Tonight With Donny Stixx runs through 3 December.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

An Inspector Calls, Playhouse Theatre

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Seventy years ago, J B Priestley’s thriller An Inspector Calls was first staged in the UK. Twenty-five years ago, Stephen Daldry’s acclaimed, progressive production opened at the National. His approach shook up the insular, drawing room script in order to highlight the selfish elitism of the middle and upper classes and has been regularly staged since 1992. Now, in a post-Brexit, post-Trump 2016 punctuated by hate crime, polarised political views and gaping social inequality, Daldry’s production about the death of a working class woman known to all members of a posh family still feels relevant. Though there are some clunky moments and miss-matched performance styles, the crusade for accountability and justice that drives the plot keeps this play firmly in the present within a stunning production concept.

Daldry’s interpretation manifests through Ian MacNeil’s design that takes much of the action out of the Birling family home and into the dark, wet street below. Copious fog and treacherous cobbles interfere with their joyous engagement celebrations and ruling class entitlement, endowing the inspector with more power as the Birlings are actually destabilised. The family and their guests are drawn out of the warm comfort of their stilted home that quickly becomes remote and inaccessible, and made to face the dirty secrets that Inspector Goole extracts from each of them in a landscape of damp despair. As their individual facades collapse, so does the home that protects and elevates them from the working classes, the people of the streets. Some of the set transitions are a bit mechanical, but it’s otherwise a powerful visual metaphor and one that’s excellently executed.

The cast’s performances are good, though there are a few different styles. Barbara Marten’s matriarchal Sybil Birling is comedically melodramatic, earning a laugh whenever she speaks. Considering the gravity of the play’s message, this is a strange choice and one that clashes with the largely naturalistic work from the rest. Liam Brennan is an excellent Inspector Goole, earthy and immoveable. Clive Francis is a somewhat frail Arthur Birling, though his vocal power and characterful rage keep him in constant battle with the inspector.

This visually striking production is still relevant what with Priestley’s attacks on the British class system and the casualness with which the upper classes and government treat the lives of the working class and those down at heel. The energy, pace and tension keep it from descending into stale playacting that dances around a real, serious problem and the high production values give it popular appeal and spectacle. With hope, its wide reach will have a big impact and remind audiences that the unseen, working girl in the play is the entire population of impoverished people in this country at the mercy of those with more financial power.

The Inspector Calls runs through 4 February.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

The Beggar’s Opera, Brockley Jack

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By guest critic Michaela Clement-Hayes, @_mickychaela

London in 1728 was a dark and dangerous place. Highwaymen, hangmen and harlots roamed the streets and life was hard. John Gay’s satirical musical The Beggar’s Opera steps away from the traditional romanticised stories of heroes and villains, unrequited love, choosing instead to tell a tale of rogues and murderers. And a little bit of love, for good measure.

Polly Peachum (Michaela Bennison) has defied her parents and married the notorious highwayman Macheath (Sherwood Alexander) However, he has most certainly not forsaken all others. Wanted for his crimes, he leaves Polly with a promise to return.

Lazarus Theatre have taken David Gay’s story and brought it into the 21st century with a bang. Literally – there are party poppers. It’s a whirlwind of a tale – quirky and fun, transcending the centuries and combining modern day with the past.

Performances are strong from everyone, with the cast acknowledging the audience with intense stares throughout, involving them discreetly yet hardly breaking the fourth wall. The staging is simple yet effective, with ladders, coloured masking tape and a few pieces of furniture whisked on and off, and the cast adopting masks and a few props as they switch from key character to chorus.

Singing is good, but feels a little strained in places. However, this does not detract from the story (adapted and directed by Ricky Dukes), and the new lyrics (penned by Bobby Locke) are both clever and amusing.

It’s fun, fast-paced and funny – a very enjoyable show.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

London Stories: Made By Migrants, Battersea Arts Centre

For time immemorial we have sat in cosy circles sharing tales of gods, monsters and everyday heroes with those we love and those we have just met. Everyone has stories in their hearts – extraordinary and familiar – and we love to share in them. Storytelling is theatre in its most elemental form, one that unites and shares rather separates and distances. In a world so fragmented and polarised, this art form is a sorely needed leveller. 

Battersea Arts Centre’s London Stories: Made By Migrants gives a voice to those that howling Brexiteers long to expel, in a format that naturally brings people together. With 24 performers who share their stories, small groups of audience members commune with them and each other in a work that, whilst quietly direct, is a potent piece of peaceful direct action with stories that awaken the heart in these dark days.

There are no more than five or six per group, including a guide. Coloured wristbands labelled with the name of a London borough determine the six stories stories heard, each a solo effort in a room or corner of the vast building. The stories are a straightforward structure, simply told, with no theatrics. The tellers come from all walks of life and all over the world, though there are more than a few theatremakers in the collection. Their stories are as varied as they are: a young artist from New York who arrived on a spousal visa days after Brexit, a Jamaican man that has struggled with homelessness, a Syrian refugee, a Kuwaiti adoptee raised in the UK and her quest to find her birth parents. Some have more impact than others, but all are immensely personal and it a privilege to hear them.

Some of the lighting is too dark, which frustratingly prevents eye contact with the storytellers even in such intimate settings. Most of the stories are told live, though there is at least one filmed story by a holocaust survivor. It’s a nice variation, though the liveness is missed. The stories are stylistically similar which isn’t an issue, though it would be interesting to explore different forms and structures across the stories offered. There are also some lengthy waiting times in between – though it is lovely to chat and connect with others in the group, it would be great to see another couple of stories instead.

This storytelling installation is much needed medicine in this post-referendum/Trump time. It reminds us of the importance of being still and listening, and the vast amounts of empathy such a simple task fosters. London Stories: Made By Migrants is necessary, vital and accessible work. Don’t miss it.

London Stories: Made By Migrants runs through 26 November.

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.

Dead Funny, Vaudeville Theatre

Ellie and Richard live a comfortable, domestic life in 1990s little England. Only their marriage is in pieces because Richard can’t bear the thought of touching Ellie, who just wants to get knocked up and have a child like their friends, Nick and Lisa. Richard’s too busy with his work as an obstetric surgeon and his amdram-esque club of British comedy, the Dead Funny Society. When Benny Hill dies and he tries to arrange a party to commemorate his life and work, all doesn’t go to plan when his private life and the public party collide.

Terry Johnson’s 1994 play functions both as a cleverly interwoven tribute to old school British comedy and a domestic drama, with a good balance of comedic and serious moments. But even though the play is only a couple of decades old, it occasionally feels its age. There is also a particularly dubious casting or directorial decision that is, quite frankly, incredibly racist.

Johnson’s first act is the stronger of the two, though the start of a stereotypically bickering couple takes a bit of time to develop. Once it picks up, the moments of hilariously staged sexual dysfunction between Ellie and Richard are the funniest. Act two, starting with the party for Benny Hill, quickly loses its way in a mire of impressions of comedic sketches where little else happens. The four society members who turn up are wearing some sort of semi-fancy dress with the white Nick (Ralf Little) dresses up as an East Asian character complete with gobsmackingly offensive accent. There is no reason why this role couldn’t be played by an East Asian actor, or Johnson (who also directs) could make a different accent choice. Once the plot moves away from the play acted in-jokes and returns to the collapse of a marriage it vastly improves, crescendoing into a satisfying mix of slapstick and emotional trauma.

Of the cast of five, four are fantastic. Katherine Parkinson as Ellie particularly excels with her sarcastic, deadpan delivery. Though she alienates the other characters, the root of her bitterness is moving – she just wants a husband who loves her. Steve Pemberton’s camp Brian is utterly delightful with his good intentions and genuine care for his friends. Ralf Little is the weakest (though not bad by any means), with occasional moments of awkward delivery.

Most of this production is reasonably enjoyable, though the script is a bit baggy with the comedy references. The mix of genres keeps the story from being too light or weighty, but the performances are the best part of this production. Even with the old fashioned gags and racism, it’s a fun show.

Dead Funny runs through 4 February.

Ticket courtesy of @TheatreBlogs/theatrebloggers.co.uk & stagedoorapp.com

The Play’s the Thing UK is committed to covering fringe and progressive theatre in London and beyond. It is run entirely voluntarily and needs regular support to ensure its survival. For more information and to help The Play’s the Thing UK provide coverage of the theatre that needs reviews the most, visit its patreon.