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 Keenan Munn-Francis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keenan Munn-Francis. Show all posts
Tuesday, 11 June 2024
Theatre review: Passing Strange
Ben Stones' white wedge of a set, with four musicians stationed around the stage along with the odd prop and piece of furniture, clues the audience in from the start to the fact that we're in for a night of gig theatre. The fact that it opens with a quartet of backing singers arriving on stage to find the star turn hasn't shown up yet, and it takes a few blackouts and resets for the Narrator (Giles Terera) to kick proceedings off, correctly lets us know that there's also a chaotic element in store: Stew Stewart (book, music & lyrics) and Heidi Rodewald's (music) 1970s-'80s-set coming-of-age musical Passing Strange pretty much plays by no other rules than its own. The Narrator introduces himself as Stew so from the start it's implied this piece will be autobiographical, and that he himself is an older version of our young protagonist.
Thursday, 21 January 2016
Theatre review: Lord of the Flies
Nigel Williams' adaptation of William Golding's Lord of the Flies premiered a
couple of summers ago at the Regent's Park Open Air Theatre to great acclaim, but
for various reasons I'm not crazy about seeing stuff there so I stayed away. Timothy
Sheader's production has now been restaged (by Liam Steel) for a national tour
though; it's about halfway through its run now, and I caught it on its Richmond leg.
The World War II setting of the novel has been updated to the present day but
Williams' adaptation imagines a new evacuation of children, with a number of boys,
few of whom knew each other beforehand, being flown away from a war. But their plane
crashes on a deserted island killing all the adult chaperones, and the surviving
boys try to organise themselves, quickly electing the no-nonsense Ralph (Luke
Ward-Wilkinson) as leader, with a plan to maintain a fire and attract rescuers. But
Jack (Freddie Watkins,) leader of a public school choir, believes he should be
chief, and quickly undermines Ralph's lead.
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