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 Catrin Aaron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catrin Aaron. Show all posts
Thursday, 12 September 2024
Theatre review: Our Country's Good
After a few years away from its ubiquity about a decade ago, I'm going to guess Our Country's Good is back on the A'Level syllabus as it makes a return to the stage (and the school groups in the audience seemed very familiar with the play as well.) For Rachel O'Riordan's production at the Lyric Hammersmith Timberlake Wertenbaker has made some revisions to her most famous play, apparently to provide a more authentic voice to the speeches by the play's sole Australian First Nations character, who casts a detached, quizzical eye over the hordes of British men and women who've come off a fleet of ships. In addition to these text revisions, which I guess are the translations into Aboriginal dialect that pepper the speeches, instead of a man in traditional dress Killara (Naarah) is now a woman in modern clothes, witnessing the soldiers and convicts arriving in what will eventually become Sydney in the late 18th century.
Labels:
Aliyah Odofin,
Catrin Aaron,
Finbar Lynch,
Gary McCann,
Harry Kershaw,
Jack Bardoe,
Naarah,
Nick Fletcher,
Paul Keogan,
Rachel O'Riordan,
Ruby Bentall,
Simon Manyonda,
Timberlake Wertenbaker
Thursday, 29 February 2024
Theatre review: Out of Season
Back to Hampstead and this week I'm Downstairs for its latest commission, Neil D'Souza's Out of Season and a midlife crisis comedy that gently takes in some themes you don't often see on stage. Thirty years ago, a trio of university friends went on a memorable holiday to Ibiza. Now, to celebrate his 50th birthday, Chris (Peter Bramhill) has asked that they recreate the trip - right down to the same room in the same hotel. Regardless of how many times he and Dev (D'Souza) say it's been done up since they were last there, the grubby walls and fading paint of Janet Bird's set suggest both the fact that they might have unrealistically romanticised their original holiday, and that they, like the room, have seen better days. Once in a band that came within sight of success only to miss their chance, manchild Chris still plays gigs in pubs, while Dev has become an academic and music historian, grumpily putting himself through a week he didn't really fancy for his old friend's sake.
Thursday, 2 March 2023
Theatre review: Romeo and Julie
It's 2023 but shows that I originally had tickets to see in 2020 are still making their belated returns. Callum Scott Howells had already been slated to appear in Gary Owen's Romeo and Julie then, but in the intervening time his appearance in It's A Sin and subsequent status as The Gay Internet's Official Fantasy Boyfriend of 2021 means he brings some added star power now the show finally premieres. It was worth the wait to get the show on with Howells in place: He plays Romeo (pronounced Romeo, but usually referred to as Romy,) an 18-year-old single dad who can't even rely on his alcoholic mum Barb (Catrin Aaron) for help babysitting his daughter. Like Owen's previous plays this takes place in the impoverished Cardiff suburb of Splott, but presumably on its edges: Julie (Rosie Sheehy) only lives a couple of streets away, but has led a much easier life so far.
Tuesday, 15 May 2018
Theatre review: Hamlet (Shakespeare's Globe)
After the “teaser” of the touring Twelfth Night and Shrew, it’s time for the main season as Michelle Terry takes over as Artistic Director of Shakespeare’s Globe. Not only has the venue gone back to having an actor in charge (the first one to hold the post will be returning later in the summer) but the idea of the productions being “actor-led” has been heavily promoted leading up to her first season; in fact the new Globe Ensemble’s first pair of productions were originally announced as being put together without a director, although Federay Holmes and Elle While have since been brought in to fulfil that role. This reliance on actor input is apparent, in both positive and negative ways, in the opening show of the Terry era, and she’s come straight in to take on a challenge, playing the title role in Hamlet*. The Prince of Denmark is in mourning two months after the sudden death of his father, but the royal court around him has already moved on.
Thursday, 23 June 2016
Theatre review: Henry V (Open Air Theatre)
It's a year of gender-flipped and gender-blind Shakespeare, with a particular
emphasis on giving women a shot at more good roles, and until Glenda Jackson's
Lear arrives the most high-profile example must be Future Dame Michelle Terry
as Henry V at the Open Air Theatre. It's not at the forefront of Robert
Hastie's production but the lead actor's gender is acknowledged: During the
opening speech the Chorus (Charlotte Cornwell, unsure of her lines) seems to be
choosing who to give the role to, passing over more obvious choices to give the
crown to Terry's slight figure. Appropriately Alex Bhat, who looks most put out to
be overlooked in favour of a woman, later returns as Henry's would-be nemesis the
Dauphin, pointedly sending the king a gift of the balls she doesn't have (although
as we know from Cleansed, Terry does have a cock now.)
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