Monday, 18 May 2009
Review - A Doll's House, The Donmar Warehouse
Tuesday, 12 May 2009
Review - Alphabetical Order, Hampstead Theatre
When my beloved was not silver just foxy he was a junior reporter on The Southern Evening Echo and it was with this in mind, plus the fact that men of a certain age (his) tremble at the memory of Imogen Stubbs as short-skirted, private investigator Anna Lee in the eponymous 90's TV show, that I had booked us into this trip down newspaper memory lane.
Set in the cuttings library of a provincial daily the play shows the effect of a new ultra-efficient assistant librarian Lesley/Chloe Newsome, on the chaotic work place and the lives of the librarian Lucy/Ms Stubbs and her journalistic colleagues. She tidies the filing system, steals Ms Stubb's boyfriend, John/Jonathan Guy Lewis, and eradicates the cosy bolt hole that comforts the quietly drunken features writer Arnold/Gawn Grainger and Wally/Michael Garner's terminally married leader writer. The cast is completed by Penelope Beaumont as Nora, an amazingly patronising features editor who carries with her a whiff of Celia Imrie's Dinnerladies-HR manager Phillipa, and Ian Talbot as Geoffrey an ageing boy scout of a messenger. They're all very good which makes it more of a mystery as to why they are appearing in this incredibly dated, immensely boring, play-in-aspic production.
Christopher Luscombe's last outing as director, Enjoy, is completing it's very successful West End run. It is a brilliantly dark piece in which Alan Bennett predicts the rise of the heritage industry, Northern terrace life becomes a living museum with human exhibits. In Alphabetical Order he has directed a play that could be on view in such a museum under the title "This is How We Did It Thirty Years Ago".
Mind you the Monday night audience seemed to love it... the gasp of surprise and delight as the lights came up on the second half and we saw the results of a good tidy up on the set was equal to any "reveal" moment on a prime time make-over programme. Similarly the giddy sense of naughtiness induced by the cast flinging folders of cuttings around the office had them nearly wetting themselves with delight., though, judging by their average age, inappropriate bladder leakage might be a not infrequent companion.
Random snippets from our post theatre discussion:
following up his critique of the ashtray situation (Ms Stubbs does light up, cigarette-wise, for one brief moment) the Silver-Fox reminised about compressed air tubes that were used to transport copy from one part of the newspaper empire to another and begged me to stop buying theatre tickets when there were still re-runs of Frasier he hasn't seen yet,
I commented that the bottle green corduroy jacket being worn by Gawn Grainger was the spit of one we picked up in a vintage shop in York,
my God she's 48!
and didn't Jonathon Guy Lewis' hair cut remind one of Robert Redford's floppy fringe in All The President's Men. Now that was a great piece of writing about a newspaper office.
Sunday, 3 May 2009
Review - Nocturnal, The Gate
I was there mainly because of Jasper Carrott-look-a-like Amanda Lawrence
who has become a pet project of mine since finding her in Tim Crouch's An Oak Tree at The Soho Theatre and then loving her as scootering Beryl in Kneehigh's Brief Encounter, but the cast was also made up of Justin Salinger, who we saw in Bliss at The Royal Court, Paul Hunter (another Kneehigh regular) and Justine Mitchell (The Stone also at The Royal Court). Great company for 80 minutes, no interval. The audience wasn't without interest either as Sam West and his partner settled into the seats behind me, and I adjusted my posture to catch whatever critical pearls might come my way. So.....
Short Man, council employee/personality vacuum, meets Tall Man, book-loving/sensitive/care worker in old people's home, in a cafe revealing that not only are they neighbours but that he is aware of Tall Man's illegal status in the un-named country and that in order to guarantee his silence Tall Man must become Short Man's new best friend. Nothing sexual you understand, just chatting, playing with his model train, visiting the zoo where he loves to sit in the nocturnal animal enclosure.
Short Man's wife (you're going to love this...Short Woman)meanwhile, suffers from insommnia and has become addicted to a late night phone-in TV show in which a supposed doctor in a dodgy fez (Matthew Dunster) dispenses advice to the sleep deprived. Tall Woman, luckily married to Tall Man, translates pulp Westerns and wears a really nice pair of trousers, while being creeped out by neighbourly visits from Short Man and developing an extra-marital relationship with, unseen, Hat Man. Tall Man becomes increasingly dominated by Short Man, and Short Woman having discovered the real basis for the friendship between the two men shifts from victim to aggressor, demanding the last dance of him at her husband's birthday party, after rejecting Tall Woman's offer of joining her and Hat Man on the last stage-coach out of town.
It's about neediness and alienation and there are quite alot of hats in it. It's billed as a satire, but of what? Neighbours are hell, and Randy Newman got it right about short people? Ben Stiller's underrated 1996 film The Cable Guy has a much darker portrait of friendship and blackmail delivered chillingly by Jim Carrey, the best thing he's ever done.
On a wall there's a poster of a theatrical performance starring Karen Carpenter, which led to thoughts that reports of the death of the seventies superstar may have been greatly exaggerated.
Best moment of the piece, the blinking marmoset-type creatures in the zoo created by Matthew Walker's animation, and out of the corner of my eye the sight of Samuel West resting his head on his partner's shoulder seeming as close to sleep as Short Woman was as far.
The programme notes interestingly that Nocturnal was originally commissioned by The Royal Court, but didn't play there.
Friday, 17 April 2009
Review - Dimetos, The Donmar
Wednesday, 15 April 2009
Review - In The Loop, Screening Room, Hammersmith
To: acquisitions@bbc.co.uk
From: makingplans4nigel@blogspot.com
Subject: good f***king news
Dear Bunny,
Got a great idea to fill your empty slot, late night Beeb 2.
Saw a piece of film last night obviously pre-final edit as the running time is a ludicrous 106 mins, but with a little gentle pruning it just might work.
Main character is a government employee - a splenetic Scot with fine line in Anglo-Saxon word play, seems to be played by that nice young man who was in Local Hero and wore those marvellous wigs in The Devil's Whore. Spends alot of time screaming to very little effect at his department, and anyone else in his way "Kiss my sweaty bollocks". This is a blatantly fictitious character with no basis in reality.
Supporting roles include; an ineffectual and extremely short Northamptonshire MP, luckily played by the shortest actor in Equity the lovely Tom Hollander, might want to rethink the inclusion of shark porn but idea of watching the Discovery Channel for fear of an X-rated channel appearing on an itemised bill is frighteningly relevant.
The Head of Communications is a lovely woman, a little on the pale side, who is really only included so that the frightening Scot can shout at another gender and employ a lot of anti-female bile.
Her new assistant, Tobes, gets the only sexual action in the piece, and that's with his female counterpoint on the American side - a welcome return to Anna Chlumsky who was last seen kissing Macaulay Culkin, in My Girl.
As to the rest of the Americans, they are made up of; an enormous slab of beef called James Gandolfini, playing an anti-war General, Mimi Kennedy as somebody with bad teeth( not sure if that is a crack at the bad English teeth thing) in diplomacy, the previously mentioned young aide, and a slimy Senator who really, really wants a war. Apparently Gandolfini is really big in TV stateside, sorry I'm not that up to date with my American imports, and has obviously been included as a kind of testosterone Andie MacDowell ( see Four Weddings and a Funeral),and must have cost a fortune! But don't worry about that, 'cos here's what we do...
We ditch the whole American angle, too expensive and the whole idea of backing into a war feels dated. Keep the action at home, with more of a Yes Minister feel about it ( marvellous stuff).
Love the Scot, but too much of a good thing can be wearing and as he is a one dimensional character he won't suffer if we chop the piece into half hour eps. with possibly an hour special if it takes off.
Lose the "completely embarrassing chap in the woolly hat" story line, a mate of the directors, maybe, in need of a few quid, and we can't afford to offend Northampton in the current climate. (try and keep the MP's line re. his constituents."I'm like Simon Cowell, without the power to say:"Fuck off. You're all mental" though).
At the moment it feels like the writers, Iannucci, Armstrong and Blackwell had a fine time coming up with pages and pages of fabulous insults and then had to keep the plot going in order to get them all in, btw we won't lose any of the cinematic quality beacause there isn't any. Lets keep all those lovely words and get six eps. out of them. Title, I'll leave up to you. Fuck Off Minister?
Hope this floats your boat and see you on Sunday for brunch.
xxxxx
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
(A Really Bad) Review - The Fever, The Royal Court Theatre
Is it me?
Last night at The Royal Court one woman gave a bravura performance of a depth and nuance rarely seen in SW1. Eyes flashing and with a hint of a smile touching the corners of her expressive mouth she laughed, sighed, nodded with sympathy. For 90 heightened minutes she delivered her solo, carrying the audience with her to a climax of resounding applause. And why did she chose to display her skill thus? Because she was sitting in Row E seat 13 and Wallace Shawn the author of The Fever was sitting directly behind her in Row F seat 14.
Wallace Shawn, the voice of Rex the dinosaur in Toy Story, the Masked Avenger in Woody Allen's Radio Days,
the (inconceivable!) Count Vizzini in The Princess Bride,
and more than all that Jeremiah ...... Diane Keaton/Mary's ex-husband in Manhattan. "He was just this oversexed, brilliant kind of animal."
As the applause died away I turned round, interrupting his conversation with Dominic Cooke's very attractive partner, and congratulated Mr Shawn whom I'm sure had found me a very impressive audience member. He shook my hand and sounded just as he should.
Wednesday, 1 April 2009
Review - Madame De Sade, The Donmar at the Wyndham's Theatre
Last week, grumpy sex symbol, Gordon Brown lookalike Ken Stott stopped mid-flow in a performance of A View From The Bridge and refused to continue giving his much praised Eddie Carbone until some annoying school kids were removed from the audience. It took 15 minutes of wrangling with the accompanying teacher and the "Out, Out, Out"encouragement from some other members of the audience before the young people left and the play recommenced.
Last night at the Wyndham's as the porcelain perfect Rosamund Pike launched herself bravely into another over-written, ludicrously pretentious defence of her wifely devotion to the Marquis de Sade, the Silver-Fox had to physically restrain me from leaping to my feet and in an homage to Ken demanding the ejection from the theatre of the
six women on the stage who were ruining my evening.
And this was the sainted Dame Judi, and the afore mentioned Ms Pike, and Frances Barber, doing a wonderful Margaret Lockwood,
Deborah Findlay, who the Silver-Fox triumphantly recognised as a Cranford graduate, Jenny Galloway, a dreamy look in her eye as she recalled the good old days of Mamma Mia!, and, a new-comer to me, Fiona Button who had drawn the short straw in the wig department and seemed to be wearing a couple of Douglas Hodge's old Richard Mawbey's from La Cage Aux Folles. I know!
The play, by wacky Japanese funster Yukio Mishima, revolves around the wife and mother-in-law of the Marquis de Sade with miss whiplash, naughty little sister and disaproving prude standing around then sometimes, and this is the most action you will see on stage in the 105 tortuous minutes of the piece, sitting.. as they give great long, lurid speeches about how they feel about the Marquis' little quirks. ...over an 18 year period.
Frances Barber as the Comtesse de Saint-Fond, sporting a wig of Marge Simpson proportions, seems to reach a higher plane of sexual and spiritual fulfilment when she allows her naked body to be used as an altar/table, but she just talks about it. Rosamund Pike as the Marquis' wife spends a lovely Christmas at home nakedly suspended from a chandelier watching her "worker bee of pleasure" husband sodomise the help, but once again we are denied the pleasure of any action and she just talks about it.
I had a vision of the real story happening off-stage and all being directed with flaming brands and whips and dwarves, by Ken Russell, and wha'd you know at that point Deborah Findlay re-entered dressed as a nun! Was I the only one laughing?
Dame Judi appears with the help of a cane, though one that never caresses a bare buttock, a consequence of her spraining an ankle last week. One can only presume she was making a break for sanity and was injured when being wrestled to the ground by stage management.
Scouring the programme for a reason why the Dame lent her reputation to this painful experience, the Silver-Fox came upon this..
"Before I look at any play, I like to hear a vision for the piece. I need to be excited by other people's enthusiasm and so I start by listening to what the director has to say. When I finally read Madame de Sade, I realised I hadn't come across anything like it before."
I think we know what she's saying.
When the Marquis was finally announced to be at the door I was thinking, let it be Russell Brand! but the old bugger showed the greatest of taste in not appearing in this most unsexy piece about sex.
As the applause, and there was alot of it, died down a chap in front of us turned to his wife/companion and with a deathly finality said, "Well that's that then", and you just knew that she'd blown her chance of seeing the inside of a theatre for the rest of the year. Leaving, a woman behind us tapped me on the shoulder and said: "I noticed you were fidgeting a bit, what did you think of it?" I gave her my frank opinion, it didn't take long, she turned to her friend saying: "See it's not just me!"
Maybe there is a whole audience of people clapping like crazy each night all thinking that they were the only one to see that the Emperor had no clothes.
Tuesday, 31 March 2009
Review - The Damned United, Islington Vue
scene one int. north london
man ( mid thirties, tall , floppy hair, Oxford educated, Julian Rhind-Tutt in my dreams) sitting on wall. woman gingerly approaches...
Monday, 30 March 2009
Review - Il Divo, The Screen on the Green
The Volpe-Argento and I have been learning Italian since the beginning of the year, or anno as I now know it. The Volpe has been concentrating on grammar and construction and declensions, while I have mastered the art of ordering vino and mangiare. We hoped we would be able to put this knowledge to some use when we shimmied in to see Paulo Sorrentino's Il Divo at The Screen on the Green, most uncomfortable seats in filmdom, on Saturday. Unfortunately there wasn't a scene where President Giulio Andreotti, seven times premier of Italy, and his small child entered a trattoria and was asked whether he/she or they would prefer red or white vino, they ordered some spaghetti/meat/fish, then paid the bill and left. Questa e la vita! So once again the VA put on his glasses and launched into the world of the subtitle. Over the few years that we have been together his reluctance to read a film as well as watch it has receeded, in the beginning was the word and at the beginning he wouldn't go there, but now there is hardly a whisker's flicker if I suggest a movie not in the English language.
As we entered, one of the ushers was being asked to explain what Il Divo was about, she's probably still trying.
What it is, is fabulous, witty, highly intelligent film making with a mesmerising central performance by Toni Servillo channelling a bloodless Nosferatu by way of Peter Sellers in Vittorio de Sica's After The Fox.
What it is not, is easy to follow.
It covers Andreotti's life from his successful election win in the 1980s to his arrest and unconvincing aquittal for Mafia connected crimes in the 1990s. The time shifts are confusing and the constant introduction of many minor figures, all male and all unfamiliar faces, left us unsure of what story we were following at times. There seems to be a lot of bother over whether Andreotti kissed a man called Riina, a no-no when he's the head of the Mafia. And as to those subtitles, the VA wasn't the only one finding the reading to watching ratio a little challenging.
But the visual wit and the beauty of the cinematography makes your heart soar, the script is literate and it's humour as dry as apparently Andreotti was and is still, because the man that Sorrentino is persuasively implying was involved in numerous murders and supposed suicides is, at the age of 90 a senator for life.
It is said the character of Don Licio Lucchesi in The Godfather Part lll was based on our gnome- like leading man, which gives greater weight to the argument that Coppola's film was actually a documentary rather than a work of fiction.
Walking home my happy Volpe was explaining that proportional representation as a voting system was responsible for the fragmented nature of the Italian political landscape and resulted in a weak opposition to any Andreotti or Berlusconi that acquired power.
I will never look at the Liberal Party political broadcast in the same way again. Ciao
Friday, 27 March 2009
Review - Spring Awakening, Novello Theatre
You can see why I thought I was on to a winner by persuading the Silver-Fox to visit The Novello Theatre for the press night of the multi Tony award-winning ("the best new musical I've seen in years" Mark Shenton) Spring Awakening. Because these are not members of the fresh-faced-making -their-professional-theatrical-debut cast, no!
This is the cast.
See what I mean?
Maybe the evening would prove a trip down scholastic memory lane with tales of midnight feasts and tuck shops and roastings in the dorms. Well James Robertson Justice how wrong could a girl be?
To misquote Boney M....."O Those Germans".
It's crap being a teenager; bad hair, bad clothes, bad teachers, all the hormones in the world and no where to put them. If only someone could write a great musical about being young and in love and misunderstood, maybe adapted from a great play! Oh, I forgot they did..Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein and West Side Story.
The songs in Spring Awakening are the kind of adolescent soft-rock that you hear in shopping malls, immediately gettable and instantly forgettable.The lyrics think they're shocking and radical and they may be if you are fourteen and saying fuck very loudly in front of your parents over and over again gives you a hard on. Speaking of which, Mark Ravenhill handled synchronised masturbation much more enjoyably in Over There at The Royal Court.
It's a musical for people who don't like musicals, for people who really want to be rock stars. The themes are dark; suicide, teenage pregnancy, abortion leading to death but the show is as deep as a teenager's mood swing and just as interesting.What did we like? The cast are fresh and energetic, Bill T Jones' choreography in "The Bitch of Living" (surely a shoo-in for our next Eurovision entry?) was a highlight, the set and lighting by Christine Jones and Kevin Adams are fun. We were particularly taken by a sideways moving Stannah chair lift creation that crawled across the back wall for no palpable reason, and I loved the innovation of the song list being written on the school blackboard so I could count them off more easily than sneaking a look at my programme too often. The hair products used should get their own credit.
It all ended to a standing ovation, saving S-F and myself , and a reprise of that old crowd pleaser "Totally F***ed". Speaking of which how about the search for the next Connie Fisher/ Lee Mead being based on Spring Awakening and every time one of the contestants is voted off they have to be serenaded by the others singing..."you're f***ed, you're f***ed, you're totally f***ed"?
Turning on Newsnight at home we found the debate being about sex education for the young, with the prospect of abortion clinics being advertised on television. Nothing changes.
Wednesday, 25 March 2009
Review - Genova, Empire Leicester Square
Michael Winterbottom had a spare few weeks in his hectic schedule so he decided to take a crack cast of American actors, plus Equity's Mr. Dull - Colin Firth, follow them round the older bits of Genoa and scare the bejeesus out of me.
With shades of Don't Look Now, twisting alleyways and glimpses of a loved one, and bizarrely Walkabout (maybe it's the browning of a sixteen year old skin, or the trailing of one sibling by another) the film follows a newly widowed Firth and his two children, Willa Holland and Perla Haney-Jardine as they re-locate to the titular Italian city after the death of his wife in a terrible car accident. Firth teaches, what, I'm not sure, at a university and dabbles in a flirtation with a younger student, the elder child, Holland, explores her sexuality, the local lads and the local drugs, while her sister plays the piano, sketches and is visited by the ghost of her mother.
And watching it unsettled me more and gave me more distress than a barrel load of Japanese horror movies.
The handheld camera work is fantastic, the acting is superb; Catherine Keener, Firth's old Harvard flame, as always looking right at home in whatever she does and ageing like a real person, not a Hollywood actor, Perla Haney-Jardine heart-breakingly touching, Willa Holland needs to eat some pies and Colin Firth does Colin Firth very well...But....Love-Will-Tear-Us-Apart it was painful!I don't think I recovered from the terrible way the Hope Davis dies in the opening scene and as Winterbottom racked up the sense of guilt and forboding and despair I just wanted it all to stop...and then it did incredibly abruptly.
the horror, the horror.
Genova is released on Friday the 26th of March.
Tuesday, 24 March 2009
Review - Liliane Montevecchi, Pizza on the Park
(Has anyone seen Liliane Montevecchi in the same room as Carry On favourite and Morecambe and Wise alumni Anita Harris, ever?)
Monday, 23 March 2009
Review - The Murder Game, the King's Head
"It's local" I said.
"It's a cheap ticket" I said
"It's got Michael Praed in it. You know Michael Praed...Robin of Sherwood, Prince Michael of Moldavia? .....the narrator of Timewatch : Aces Falling!"
Got him.
So the Silver-Fox and I slipped into the Sunday matinee of The Murder Game at The King's Head, looking forward to an undemanding couple of hours of " screwball comedy set in the cut-throat world of the New Orleans legal system."
Dear Reader, I know my screwball comedy, from "It Happened One Night", through "The Lady Eve" to "Arsenic and Old Lace" ; the double takes of Cary Grant, the rapid -fire dialogue of Ros Russell, the blonde perfection of Carole Lombard. And this is no screwball comedy.
This is a giant turkey.
But it comes across as an embarrassing seventies sitcom with Patrick Clancy giving a nauseatingly dated stereotype of a peformance as the gay (maybe too evolved a word) PA to Josefina Gabrielle's fast talking but hardly wise-cracking New Orlean's judge. Ben Jones as the Brazilian love interest seems to have escaped from TV's least proud moment "Mind Your Language", while the Kojak look-a-like gangster turned effete luvvie of Matt Healy ........well, I can't go on, which is something I wished he had said in rehearsal.
As to the voice of Timewatch, Mr Praed was perhaps the least objectionable and certainly the easiest on the eye element of the piece. He knows how to wear a suit, has a boyish twinkle in his eye, and employs the loveliest hair since Doctor McDreamy .
The author of this " how did my agent talk me into it?" is an attorney, a political consultant and presumably a Republican, having thanked Newt Gingrich for his support in the progamme.His name is James Farwell, and would you believe it....this is his first play. One doesn't want to stamp on an emerging artist but judging from his picture he's old enough to know better.
The Silver-Fox and I made it to the end but only because, as my beloved said at the interval "It's so stupid it's impossible not to see if it get's any worse". It did.
We crawled home trying to come up with analogies for the sound of jokes falling so flat you could iron your shirt on them.
The worst GOP decision since Sarah Palin.