BEST OUT THIS WEEK: The Echo • Didi Mothers' Instinct Deadpool & Wolverine ALL REVIEWS > |
Friday, 26 July 2024
Critical Week: Look over there
Friday, 19 July 2024
Critical Week: Grandma's got a gun!
BEST OUT THIS WEEK: Crossing • Thelma Scala!!! • Shayda ALL REVIEWS > |
Wednesday, 17 July 2024
Stage: Get to the punchline
Jack Tucker: Comedy Standup Hour
with Zach Zucker, Dylan Woodley
direction & sound Jonny Woolley
Soho Theatre, London • 15-27.Jul.24 ★★★★★Fans of Stamptown host Jack Tucker will love the chance to see a full hour (or most likely more) of him on his own in this almost panic-strikingly hilarious show. As played by Zach Zucker, Jack is an exploding bundle of nervous energy who struggles against all manner of distractions as he tells random jokes before laboriously arriving at a surreal or even downright stupid punchline. But we may never get to the end of a joke, and he certainly won't finish within his allotted hour. There isn't a moment of this show that doesn't feel like it's spiralling far out of control. It's a work of genius.While referencing his New York roots, Jack makes riotously timely comments about America's politics, Britain's recent election and England's performance in the Euro 2024 final, plus some wicked Brexit references. But mainly he tries to tell extended standup-style jokes about everyday things like airplanes, smartphones and bees. And he's continually interrupted by his own stream-of-consciousness as well as the ongoing antics of roller-skating opening act Dylan Woodley. On press night, a trumpeter mercilessly stole the show every time he appeared. Jack's interaction with the audience is a barrage of lightning-quick throwaway gags that continually catch us by surprise. And every malapropism is so impeccably targeted that we quickly realise that chaos is clearly the entire point of the show.Hugely likeable even when playing an idiot like Jack, Zucker is pathologically talented comic who expertly combines his razor-sharp timing with clowning physicality. He interacts with the crashing sounds and shifting lights with gleeful precision. And yet everything feels improvised, as if an under-rehearsed show is being pulled apart at the seams. Obviously, this can't happen by accident, and even when it feels like it has perhaps genuinely gone off the rails, he still manages to be hilarious. While continually checking his notes, the pace of his gags is so fast that it's not possible to keep up, so the laughs pile up like a car crash on a motorway at rush hour. "It's a hurricane up here," Jack shouts. "Or maybe a him-icane!"
As with Stamptown, the stage is a scene of total carnage by the end of the show, while the increasingly disheveled Jack is covered in confetti and sweat (and other things). Most impressive is how Zucker maintains Jack's relentless awkwardness, simulating failure and pandemonium while delivering one expertly aimed zinger after another. And there's a vulnerability even to his obvious lies that makes us want to give him a hug. Not a single thing has gone the way he planned it, and yet the mayhem comes together perfectly. Yet another triumph.
For info, SOHO THEATRE > • STAMPTOWN >
photos by Dylan Woodley & David Monteith-Hodge • 16.Jul.24
Sunday, 14 July 2024
Dance: All for one and one for all
Wall
by Oona Doherty
dancers Aleesha Moyo, Anya Rakshit, Aoibh Ryan, Ayuna Berbidaeva, Charly Knights, Daisy Bilsland, Ernie Shorten, Francis Henry, Frank Thorpe, Fue Akama, Georgia Coulson, Gilbert Dicks, Jacob Lincoln, James Airey, Kitty Newton, Lina Kasasa, Luis Green, Luke Pele, Matthew Atkinson, Meeri Niva, Megan Chaytor Wilson, Megan Georges, Monét Brooks, Morgan Heimsot, Otis De Ville Morel, Phoebe Mufushwa, Rosa Boadle-Soumah, Roselynn Gumbo, Rowan Williams, Ruben Morais, Venus Shury, Wray Maxwell-Mulligan
music Mark Leckey, Luca Truffarelli, Shamos
costumes Ryan Dawson Laight • lighting John Gunning
Sadler's Wells, London • 13.Jul.24 ★★★★Rippling with youthful energy and passion, the talented National Youth Dance Company is on a national tour this summer with their show Wall, which made its London debut at Sadler's Wells. It's a fascinating, visually stunning hour-long piece that continually provokes thought as it explores ideas relating to community and culture. Created in a series of workshops with 32 dancers aged 16-25 from 21 cities, it's a conversation that reflects different backgrounds, touching on common feelings shared by teens across generations. And Oona Doherty's choreography vividly offers these performers a chance to demonstrate their skills, tenacity and resilience.
The show emerges around verbatim recordings, music and spoken word art that are reflected on a video screen above the stage, white lettering sometimes vibrating on a black screen, plus a stunning moment of bright whiteness. The words include music lyrics and vox pop clips in which people share honest views about what it means to live as a young person in Britain. As ideas of national identity swirl around, many of the comments touch on immigration, from opinions about refugees to first-person comments about how it feels to live in a country other than the one you were born in.
While these words and sounds engage our brains, the dancers perform hugely expressive movements, both as a large group and in individual break-out solos. Movements are repetitive, sometimes almost painfully so, and often heart-stopping in the way they show this widely varied group of performances interconnect and support each other. With open emotionality, they are telling their own stories, both collectively and individually, through words and dance. So the performances feel almost startlingly intimate, energised from within as dancers cycle through fluid movements, whether huddled together, in a line or going against the grain.The stage is wide open, without any curtains or set aside from the video screen hanging above the dancers' heads. Coming from the sides and accented by spots, the lighting cleverly isolates performers in the blackness, highlighted by the blues and golds in their streetwear-style costumes. With a range of physicalities, each individual performer is able to shine within the group, with standout moments like a gorgeous solo by Ayuna Berbidaeva, a wheelchair user from Siberia, and a staggering section in which the dancers fall and stand up again nearly 100 times. And it ends with a triumphant party, sending us into the street with hope for the future.Friday, 12 July 2024
Critical Week: Everybody wants to rule the world
BEST OUT THIS WEEK: Sisi & I • Problemista Despicable Me 4 Fly Me to the Moon ALL REVIEWS > |
Thursday, 11 July 2024
Stage: I'm gonna live forever
Dorian: The Musical
music & lyrics Joe Evans
book & direction Linnie Reedman
with Alfie Friedman, Gabrielle Lewis-Dodson, George Renshaw, Leeroy Boone, Megan Hill, Rhys Lambert
choreography Korinna Kokkali • lighting Adam King
sets & costumes Isabelle Van Braeckel • sound Mike Thacker
Southwark Playhouse, Borough • 4.Jul-10.Aug.24 ★★★Adapting Oscar Wilde's classic novel The Picture of Dorian Gray for the social media age, this new musical comes with a heavy dose of gothic design, arch drama and rock opera-style songs. It feels strangely constrained by the small theatre space in the large room at Southwark Playhouse, and the direction doesn't properly take into consideration the fact that two-thirds of the audience must watch the backs of characters' heads during momentous conversations, simply because they don't move. But this mixed bag is sold by the gifted cast, who properly pour themselves into their roles. Their singing is often impressive. And the show looks properly lush.
While the florid set and costumes reside in a parallel 19th-meets-21st century universe, the story and dialog have been cleverly updated to the present day, offering telling new insights into Wilde's vivid themes. It's a fable about artistic ambition and the quest for eternal youth, as young Dorian (Friedman) begins to go viral with his music, then is promoted by publicist Victoria (Lewis-Dodson) and literally immortalised by photographer Baz (Boone). But he makes a bargain with the devil, remaining youthful as a picture in the attic begins to reveal Dorian's twisted soul. He also discovers he is unable to love, despite crushes on both opera singer Sibyl (Hill) and his music producer Harry (Renshaw).
Lewis-Dodson & Friedman |
Friedman & Renshaw |
Friedman & Boone Hill
For information, SOUTHWARK PLAYHOUSE >
photos by Danny Kaan • 10.Jul.24
Wednesday, 10 July 2024
Stage: Just clowning around
London Clown Festival
host Riss Obolensky
with Piotr Sikora, Paula Valluerca, Nancy Trotter Landry, Neil Frost, Frankie Thompson
band Sarah Woolfenden, Dan Lees, Tom Penn, Julie Nesher
Soho Theatre, Jackson's Lane and other venues
8-25.Jul.24 ★★★★London Clown Festival brings three weeks of riotous physical comedy to venues across the capital ahead of the Edinburgh Fringe, and it kicked off with a lively two-hour cabaret featuring a number of notable acts playfully interacting with the audience in the upstairs studio space at Soho Theatre. The results were a bit uneven, as these kinds of programmes usually are, but the general atmosphere was hilarious, especially as the performers unapologetically went for it. And being press night, this included some pointed interactions with critics in attendance.
Obolensky |
Furiozo |
Woolfenden, Suki Tawdry, Frost |
Madame Señorita, Thompson |
For details, LONDON CLOWN FESTIVAL >
Soho Theatre, 8.Jul.24
Friday, 5 July 2024
Critical Week: It wasn't me
BEST OUT THIS WEEK: Kill • The Conversation Orlando, My Political Biography Unicorns • The Nature of Love ALL REVIEWS > |
Three films use surrealism to address big themes: Julia Louis-Dreyfus stars in the eerie dark drama Tuesday, as a mother confronting death (in the form of a parrot) about her daughter's life. Ewan McGregor and Ellen Burstyn lead the offbeat and intense Mother Couch, about a woman who forces her adult children to grapple with her mortality. And Paul Raci is a guru teaching The Secret Art of Human Flight in an quirky comedy-drama that's bleakly emotive. And then there were father and son Stellan and Gustaf Skarsgard teaming up for the gloomy and haunting Scandinavian mystery What Remains, and fiercely inventive Chinese drama Black Dog, which deservedly won a couple of prizes at Cannes. I also attended Carlos Acosta's breathtaking stage production of Carmen at Sadler's Wells.
This coming week isn't looking quite as crazy as this one was. I'll be watching Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum in Fly Me to the Moon, Sandra Huller in Sisi & I, Korean thriller Sleep, Iranian drama My Favourite Cake and the British animated adventure Kensuke's Kingdom. In live theatre, I'm attending Dorian: The Musical and the opening cabaret for Soho Theatre's Clown Festival.Thursday, 4 July 2024
Dance: Raging bull
Acosta Danza
Carlos Acosta’s Carmen
choreography Carlos Acosta • music Georges Bizet
with Laura Rodríguez, Alejandro Silva, Enrique Corrales, Carlos Acosta, Denzel Francis, Raúl Reinoso,
Zeleidy Crespo, Patricia Torres, Daniela Francia, Adria Díaz, Jennifer Suárez, Amisaday Naara, Frank Isaac,
Leandro Fernández, Brandy Martinez, Elizabeth Tablada,
Brian Ernesto, Chay Deivis, Liana Taly
sets and costumes Tim Hatley • lighting Peter Mumford
Sadler's Wells, London • 2-6.Jul.24 ★★★★★Expanding on his one-act production, Carlos Acosta creates a full-length ballet based on Georges Bizet's 1875 opera Carmen, infusing the action with Cuban flavours to create a thoroughly mesmerising romantic thriller. Inventive and colourful, this is the story told with humour, intensity and big emotions. And it's also very, very sexy thanks to the talented young performers, Acosta's expressively physical choreography and Tim Hatley's terrific costumes.
After a prologue introduces a demonic bull (Acosta) who is pulling the strings and recounting the story, things kick off with a flurry of burlesque in a bar, as dancing soldiers strip down to their underpants, much to the delight of the women around them. Carmen (Laura Rodriguez) engages in a witty to and fro with officer Don José (Alejandro Silva), which escalates to passion after Carmen is arrested and put under José's watch. Her skills at seduction allow her to escape, and then her head is turned by handsome toreador Escamillo (Enrique Corrales), although she rejects his advances. Carmen is just playing with both José and Escamillo, but they clash over their infatuation with her.
Each element works together gorgeously to convey this narrative and the internal wranglings of the characters. The costumes are particularly vivid, catching colours and lights in striking ways that wash the stage in shades of red and black. With clever touches, the set is dominated by an enormous circle in which video projections create both earthy backdrops and otherworldly glimpses of what beyond. And Acosta's bull towers over everything.The dancing itself is simply transcendent, performed to perfection by gifted dancers who infuse personality and passion into each movement. Soaring, spinning and striking spine-tingling poses, this multi-ethnic cast has real power, bringing each encounter to life with an earthy honesty that extends from fingers to toes. As a result, the intense internal battles going on within each of the characters is clearly visible, expressed with a lyrical fluidity that rattles our bones.
Bizet's familiar music is given a Latin twist that adds a wonderful spark of additional energy. Delicate ballet numbers morph into brutal fights, as a series of solos and duets allow the dancers to deploy their physical strength in ways that reveal deep yearnings and intentions. This is hugely involving theatre, haunting and moving as the feisty Carmen and her besotted men circle around each other, unaware that there's a menacing force beyond them controlling their destiny. Essential.For more info, SADLER'S WELLS >
photos by Johan Persson & Cristina Lanandez • 2.Jul.24