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 Melody Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melody Brown. Show all posts
Friday, 28 April 2023
Theatre review: The Good Person of Szechwan
The Lyric Hammersmith's programming is currently giving me flashbacks to my drama degree, and particularly playwrights who, if you'd believed my course, are produced way more regularly than they actually are. After Dario Fo and Franca Rame it's the turn of Bertolt Brecht, and his political morality tale The Good Person of Szechwan. Three gods come to Earth on a mission to find a good person: If there isn't at least one left in the world, they won't be able to avert an apocalyptic flood that will wipe out the unworthy mankind. They've landed in a very poor district, where people are too busy trying to keep themselves and their families alive to worry about anyone else, but prostitute Shen Te (Ami Tredrea) has a reputation for generosity, and is chosen as the experiment's subject. The gods give her $1000 to set her up for the future, and she uses it to buy a tobacconist's shop.
Labels:
Aidan Cheng,
Ami Tredrea,
Anthony Lau,
Bertolt Brecht,
Callum Coates,
Camille Mallet de Chauny,
DJ Walde,
Georgia Lowe,
Jon Chew,
Leo Wan,
Melody Brown,
Nick Blakeley,
Nina Segal,
Suni La,
Tim Samuels,
Togo Igawa
Saturday, 30 March 2019
Theatre review: The Taming of the Shrew
(RSC / RST & tour)
With Shakespeare's plays so well-known, and the amount of people who presumably include a theatre trip to one of the plays, whichever one's playing, in a visit to Stratford-upon-Avon, the RSC must get more than its share of audience members who don't really look at the description of the show. You could even miss the fact that Justin Audibert's production of The Taming of the Shrew was going to be notably high-concept. That would explain the "ooooohhhh"s of sudden understanding, after opening scenes full of women eager to push the plot forward, when Baptista (Amanda Harris) introduces her eldest and most difficult son, Katherine (Joseph Arkley.) Audibert's idea isn't to cross-cast the play but to set it in an alternate 1590 (the likely year of the play's premiere,) in which the world has developed exactly the same, but as a matriarchy. So wealthy women like Baptista run the show, and their sons depend on marriage to secure their futures. But the yobbish Katherine is too independent to attract a husband when there's more compliant men like his brother Bianco (James Cooney) around.
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