Kate Hewitt's production of Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train is the first time Stephen Adly Guirgis' play has been revived in London since 2010, when I saw a production at the smaller of the Trafalgar Studios. The Young Vic's main house is a much larger space but set designer Magda Willi has found interesting ways to evoke the different kinds of confinement and freedom in this prison-set drama. The location is New York's Rikers Island prison, and as the play opens the glass walls on Willi's traverse set form a small central cell where Angel Cruz (Ukweli Roach) waits to hear his fate. He's there because, after all his attempts to free his friend from a cult failed, he shot the "son of god" cult leader in the ass. He's facing an attempted murder charge but insists he only planned to hurt the man, and his lawyer should be able to plead the charge down; until complications in surgery kill his victim and he suddenly finds himself up for First Degree Murder.
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 Kate Hewitt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Hewitt. Show all posts
Thursday, 21 February 2019
Tuesday, 3 November 2015
Theatre review: Tomcat
After a few years based at the Finborough, the annual Papatango playwrighting prize
has moved to a new home with roughly twice the seating capacity, in Southwark
Playhouse's Little space. This year's winner, James Rushbrooke, taps into the
current trend for plays about science with Tomcat. In a not-too-distant
future, genetic screening of foetuses has resulted in the eradication of most
illnesses, but at the cost of roughly one in four pregnancies being terminated - a
legal requirement if a scan finds anything out of the ordinary. A subculture does
exist that rejects this degree of state interference, so there are a few exceptions
- one of them is 12-year-old Jessie (Eleanor Worthington-Cox,) who's been kept under
observation by the authorities since they discovered her at the age of three. She's
lived in the same windowless room since then, forbidden from touching people or
making any sudden moves: According to her genetic makeup, she might be a psychopath.
Friday, 14 November 2014
Theatre review: Far Away
This year's JMK Award-winner is Kate Hewitt, who directs Caryl Churchill's Far Away at the Young Vic's Clare. It's a fairytale nightmare that follows Joan, first as a child (Emilia Jones or Sasha Willoughby,) who on a visit to her aunt Harper's (Tamzin Griffin) farm witnesses something horrific in the stables. As an adult, Joan (Samantha Colley) gets a job creating elaborate hats alongside co-worker Todd (Ariyon Bakare.) Their work is creative and beautiful, but the hats serve a grotesque purpose. Finally we see Joan, Todd (now her husband) and Harper all together, trying to stay safe from an enemy with eyes and ears everywhere. But the trio are as suspicious of each other as they are of anyone outside their walls, and in a world where anyone and anything could be an enemy, and allegiances shift constantly, it's hard to even know which side you're on.
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