theatreCat
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"It seemed that honest vivid reviewing was a kind of duty: not merely a service to readers and potential ticket-buyers but to the art of theatre itself." Written by former Chief Theatre Critic at The Times, Libby Purves, Theatre Cat is a wonderfully tight review blog.
theatreCat
2d ago
REFLECTIONS ON A FAT KNIGHT
Due to train disruption – speak not of overhead wires and wind – I had to bail out at the interval, from Robert Icke’s epic three and a half hour modern-dress combination of Henry IV parts 1 and 2.
But I got my money’s worth, oh yes., Patt I, the least cut down, takes us to the interval in two magnificent straight hours. We reach Hotspur’s desth at Shrewsbury and Falstaff’s faked death, with almost all the favourite Falstaff moments (though I would have liked to see more of Clare Perkins’ Quickly ..read more
theatreCat
2d ago
WHY HALESWORTH MATTERS TO THE NATIONAL DRAMATIC ECOSYSTEM
The other day I did an overview-preview from some dress rehearsals at the INK short play festival in Suffolk (scroll below), where each “Pod” may contain up to five short plays. Now its four crowded days have passed, a few comments.
Firstly, an audience point was made at the Future of the Arts debate: that we should respect the short play – 5 to 15 minutes – just as we respect the short stories of masters like Graham Greene or HH Munro. A lot can be conveyed in a sh ..read more
theatreCat
5d ago
CROOKBACK DICK REIMAGINED
Saving Richard III from Shakespeare’s calumny seems to have a particular appeal to women: probably because around his accession in the 1480s there surged both female ambition and female victimhood . Both are stunningly present even in Shakespeare’s story of his murders and infanticide , which was basically a 16c court conspiracy-theory to solidify the dubious legitimacy of the Tudors. Josephine Tey wrote the brilliant detective story “The Daughter of Time”, debunking that theory and making ..read more
theatreCat
5d ago
DIVING ABOUT IN A UNIQUE SHORT-PLAY FESTIVAL
Join me on a parked Hoppa minibus where Henry VIII is chatting up a new Jane. She is not impressed by the Tudor-Tinder qualifications of a man who divorced two wives and killed two, but he protests that he was “in a bad place back then”.Since faking his death and living on for 477 years he’s taken up yoga, and deserves a new start.
This fifteen-minute treat is in the most unusual of the Halesworth settings for this year’s INK festival; why not, since th ..read more
theatreCat
2w ago
WUTHERING SIBLINGS
Grace Smart the designer sets the scene as we settle in with a sweet miniature moor, all harebells and heather and cloddy bits of earth. But it rises in the air as soon as Gemma Whelan’s cheerful, swaggering Charlotte Bronte has toured the auditorium demanding to know what our favourite novel is. The overhead grassland stays up there throughout, just occasionally throwing down sheets of paper or a microphone.
Charlotte opens the family scene with her two sisters – Rhiannon Clements as gentle Anne and Ade ..read more
theatreCat
2w ago
THE GAME’S AFOOT. EVENTUALLY.
Nick Lane’s adaptation of Conan Doyle’s late, broodingly complicated novel has met many huzzahs from Sherlock Holmes fans, previously here, on tour and streaming. So as a Southwark supporter I thought I should at last have a look now it’s back. Lane’s take on the 221b household is certainly refreshing: both Bobby Bradley’s lanky arrogant Sherlock and the tweedily amiable Watson of Joseph Derrington are more youthful than usual, and Alice Osmanski’s Mrs Hudson un-Victorian in her laid-back confident impertinence. So far, so modern. They double – every ..read more
theatreCat
2w ago
DOSTOYEVSKY IN DALTON
“These days” says the man on the empty stage, “people are precious to me, even when they insult me. I have woken up”. His stark features do not smile as he says it, because he has an urgent stoey to tell. Greg Hicks, restlessly prowling with a suitcase, making himself shabby, explains how he made a career, made friends, lost both as it dawned on him that ‘human existence is an unhappy accident in a malign universe”, and that there is no reason for anything. He evokes a Dalston pub where people are drunk, qu ..read more
theatreCat
2w ago
CAMPUS RITES AND WRONGS
Sometimes, I do like a stage set you could cosily move right into. Paul Farnsworth’s is a nice evocation of a Harvard professor’s study: shelves and panelling and framed certificates, and a leather chair redolent of five generations of chin-stroking academe and Democrat politics. Oh, and there’s a model yacht: things will happen to that.
The latter matters, because the witty poster for Paul Grellong’s play, written in 2019 and suddenly even more topical on its European premiere, has that same p ..read more
theatreCat
3w ago
HOMAGE TO THE FIRST CELEBRITY DIVA
Last time theatre’s pre-Victorian glory days – silk breeches, rowdy audiences and Garrickian hamming – were celebrated on this stage was in 2015: in Mr Foote’s Other Leg by Sam Kelly, with a rumbustious Russell Beale. This time it’s a decade or so later: the century has turned with the final King George, and actresses were becoming respectable and idolized . So we meet our heroine Sarah Siddons at her peak of female celebrity, recreated. by April de Angelis and director Anna Mackmin fr ..read more
theatreCat
3w ago
HOW TO WASTE A STELLAR CAST
Sheridan Smith is not only a box-office draw but a rare and genuine talent: two decades a star on screen and stage, musicals and drama: phenomenally hardworking (she flew off to make a TV series in Greece, complete with toddler, the day after her last curtain call in her sellout solo Shirley Valentine). In 2016, her father’s terminal illness during the run of Funny Girl (as usual, selling out) drove her into what she calls a “meltdown”. She ran away briefly, got a number of tattoos, wanted to hide ..read more