Concluding a season of work by female playwrights at the Almeida is Clare Barron’s Dance Nation, a funny, touching and sometimes devastating look at what it’s like to be a pre-teen girl, all framed within a national dance competition. The bullying Dance Teacher Pat (Brendan Cowell) rules the roost over a class of girls no older than 13 (all played by actors from their twenties to their fifties,) and as the trophies surrounding Samal Blak’s set can attest, has masterminded wins in dance competitions across America. Right from the start, when one girl is injured and never seen or heard of again, it’s obvious that failure is not an option, and this year’s crop of girls can either join the hall of fame – perhaps even becoming a legend like the one alumna who got into the chorus of a Broadway show – or be forgotten.
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 Karla Crome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karla Crome. Show all posts
Thursday, 6 September 2018
Saturday, 5 November 2016
Theatre review: Amadeus
Michael Longhurst makes his Olivier debut in epic fashion with a revival of Peter Shaffer's Amadeus, which takes its title from the middle name of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - the middle name because that's the one that means "love of god," and it's a twist on that that causes the obsession at the heart of the play. Antonio Salieri (Lucian Msamati) is a star composer in 18th century Vienna, court composer to Emperor Joseph II (Tom Edden) and with much of the aristocracy as students. His choice of career comes from his religious faith, having prayed to be able to express the glory of god through his music. When the former child prodigy Mozart (Adam Gillen,) now a fully-fledged performer and composer himself, arrives and becomes flavour of the month, Salieri has a violent reaction to the younger man's talent.
Monday, 7 December 2015
Theatre review: Linda
Penelope Skinner's Linda opens with the title character bemoaning the fact
that cosmetics for women over fifty are regularly advertised with images of much
younger women. There'd be irony in the 55-year-old Linda being played by an actor
ten years younger, if it weren't for the fact that she's a very last-minute
replacement: When Kim Cattrall pulled out of the production with less than a week to
go, the Royal Court turned to Noma Dumezweni, who'd only recently worked with
director Michael Longhurst, and who's due to make her own directorial debut there
next year. Dumezweni's won an Olivier, although hopefully she doesn't bring it up in
conversation quite as often as Linda does the marketing award she won ten
years ago. She's head of branding at a beauty company, and her "Changing the world,
one girl at a time" campaign helped turn them from an obscure brand to a world
leader, with a charity arm that funds self-confidence workshops for young women. Now
that she's over fifty herself, her new project is for the company to stop women her
age from feeling invisible, both in their outreach programmes and in the way they
market their products.
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