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 Ibinabo Jack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ibinabo Jack. Show all posts
Monday, 5 October 2020
Stage-to-screen review: Monday Monologues
A quick roundup of a series of very short pieces courtesy of the Bush Theatre, which posted a new YouTube video every few weeks over the summer as their contribution to keeping theatre in people's minds and lives over lockdown. And lockdown is very specifically the theme of most of the Monday Monologues, beginning with Skype d8 by Travis Alabanza, in which Ibinabo Jack plays a woman fretting over what to wear for a virtual date with a man she'd only met a couple of times in person. It's frantic and funny as Jack's character recognises the ridiculousness of how much time she's spending making a good impression on Skype, but it does reveal an underside about how the starkness of having to deal with people virtually makes people feel exposed in a way face-to-face communication smooths out. The Bush's artistic director Lynette Linton directs most of the videos including this and the second, Shaun Dunne's Beds.
Tuesday, 18 February 2020
Theatre review: The High Table
The Bush's current season opened with a commitment to telling the stories of queer women of colour, a theme that's revisited in the latest main-house show as actor Temi Wilkey's playwrighting debut The High Table follows the preparations for a British-Nigerian lesbian wedding. It's an event the family are going to have a lot to say about - and not just the living family. Tara (Cherelle Skeete) introduces her parents Segun (David Webber) and Mosun (Jumoké Fashola) to her fiancée Leah (Ibinabo Jack) for the first time three months before the wedding. They've been together for some time and engaged for nine months at this point, so the fact that Tara has put it off for so long suggests she's worried about their reaction. And while they, in theory, accepted her coming out as bisexual a few years earlier, this confirmation that their daughter won't settle down with a man after all makes them show their true colours, and they refuse to attend the wedding.
Thursday, 15 December 2016
Theatre review: Dreamgirls
Not every Broadway hit makes a quick move to the West End but Tom Eyen and Henry
Krieger's 1981 show Dreamgirls taking until 2016 to make it to London must be
one of the longest delays. The film adaptation a few years ago can't have hurt it
finally making the trip, as it now has an enthusiastic audience ready for it, so the
vast Savoy is the venue for Casey Nicholaw's production of a story set in the 1960s
and '70s, about black music making a play to break out of its "specialist" niche and
into the pop mainstream. Girl group The Dreams are childhood friends Effie (Amber
Riley, doing this to supplement her income because her day job as a Dream Ghost
doesn't pay so well,) Deena (Liisi LaFontaine) and Lorrell (Ibinabo Jack,) who sing
original songs composed by Effie's brother C.C. (Tyrone Huntley.) Shifty producer
Curtis (Joe Aaron Reid) convinces them to take a job as backing singers as a
stepping stone to their own career.
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