Sean Foley’s comic instincts have never been infallible (remember Ducktastic? I certainly don’t, it closed with unseemly haste before I could see it) but I do seem to be disappointed with his work more often lately. Jeeves & Wooster in Perfect Nonsense was one of his bigger hits a few years ago, but teaming up again with its star Stephen Mangan hasn’t really recaptured that magic as they bring Roger MacDougall, John Dighton and Alexander Mackendrick’s Ealing comedy The Man in the White Suit to the stage. Mangan plays Sidney Stratton, a lab technician at a Lancashire textile mill in the 1950s, who keeps blowing things up in his attempts to create a revolutionary new kind of material. When he gets fired from Corland’s (Ben Deery) factory he wangles his way into rival mill owner Burnley’s (Richard Cordery) lab, where he finally comes up with a fabric that never deteriorates, loses its shape or even gets dirty.
Writing down what I think about theatre I've seen in That London, whether I've been asked to or not.
Showing posts with label Charlie Fink. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Fink. Show all posts
Thursday, 10 October 2019
Thursday, 19 July 2018
Theatre review: As You Like It (Open Air Theatre)
Second time lucky at the Open Air Theatre's As You Like It - if you thought London hadn't had a drop of rain for weeks you weren't in NW1 last Friday, when it came down so heavily the performance was abandoned before it could even start. Although this afternoon's grey clouds never resolved themselves into another downpour the fates still seemed against me seeing this production: At least two audience members fainted 20 minutes in, leading to a pause in the performance, and the least said about the pigeon that tried to land on my head in the second act the better. But Max Webster's production made it to the end, and the multiple marriages at the end of one of the more music-heavy Shakespeare plays, made even more so here with some original compositions by Charlie Fink.
Thursday, 17 December 2015
Theatre review: The Lorax
The colourful worlds and wacky rhymes of Dr. Seuss would make him seem a natural fit
for stage adaptation, but his books are so short that expanding his stories to make
a full-length show can't be easy without losing a lot of their charm. David Greig,
though, has succeeded in giving new life to one of the writer's most heartfelt
stories, as he brings a musical version of The Lorax to the Old Vic. In this
expanded version of the environmental fable, the Once-ler (Simon Paisley Day) is a
dreamer who travels the world hoping and failing to invent something amazing, until
he stumbles upon a forest of colourful Truffula trees, that produce an incredibly
soft and fluffy wool. Knitting it into a shapeless thing he calls a thneed, it
becomes a must-have accessory despite nobody being quite sure what it is. He builds
a thneed factory and a town supported by its economy, ignoring the warnings of the
Lorax (voiced by Simon Lipkin,) a woodland creature responsible for the trees and
worried about what'll happen when the Once-ler starts chopping them down.
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