Category: STAGE

  • Rudy’s Rare Records is ‘black High Fidelity’, says show’s creator

    Lt-Rt: Joseph Roberts (Musical Director), Joivan Wade (Richie), Lenny Henry (Adam), Danny Robins (Writer), Libby Watson (Designer) and Paulette Randall (Director), Press Launch Monday 23 June 2014 for Rudy's Rare Records by Danny Robins, produced by Hackney Empire and Birmingham Repertory Theatre, Directed by Paulette Randall,  W
    Left to right: Joseph Roberts (Musical Director), Joivan Wade (Richie), Lenny Henry (Adam), Danny Robins (Writer), Libby Watson (Designer) and Paulette Randall (Director) at Hackney Empire

    Comedian Lenny Henry will this month be giving Hackney Empire audiences some comic relief when he stars in Rudy’s Rare Records, a Radio 4 series adapted for stage.

    The play is a comedy set in an old reggae record shop in Birmingham and features three generations of a British Jamaican family who are constantly at loggerheads.

    A live band will perform a soundtrack of classic reggae while shop owner Rudy Sharpe (Larrington Walker) and his son Adam, played by Henry, try to stop developers from flattening the shop and building a supermarket in its place.

    Lenny Henry conceived of Rudy’s Rare Records, which first aired in 2008, as a “black High Fidelity”, says Danny Robins, the show’s writer and co-creator.

    “It’s inspired by people he’d known and the record shops he’d hung out in as a kid,” he says. “I’d spent most of my mis-spent youth in record shops as well and the idea instantly clicked for me.”

    Robins does not have a Jamaican background, but being surrounded by members of the cast has given him huge insight into the country’s slang and heritage.

    “You do your research and I’ve been out to Jamaica, but just sitting around in rehearsals hearing the guys talk about their childhood is something that gives me loads of ideas.

    “In rehearsals the guys might say that’s not quite the right idiom or it’s not the right kind of slang, and the director [Paulette Randall] has this incredible encyclopedia of slang from her mother. Patois is an incredibly inventive language.”

    After four series of Rudy’s Rare Records, Robins and Henry tried to get a pilot episode commissioned for television. When that looked unlikely, they approached Susie McKenna, artistic director of Hackney Empire, about a stage version.

    “She was just instantly very enthusiastic about it and wanted to make it happen,” recalls Robins.

    But while writing the play, television executives decided to commission the pilot after all, which is due to be broadcast early next year on BBC1. It leaves Robins developing the show on two different fronts, which poses new challenges.

    “A half-hour radio sitcom is essentially a plot with lots of jokes in and there’s only so much character development you can do,” he says.

    “In a play less happens than in a sitcom episode, but the characters go on a bigger emotional journey. You want the laughs but the audience also wants to think and be moved a bit.”

    Writing a stage play also appealed to Robins because it meant tackling weightier issues. Father and son relationships are at the show’s core. Henry has described his own father as being like a copy of the Daily Mirror with arms and legs, as he never put the newspaper down long enough to talk, and Robins describes having a difficult relationship with his own dad.

    “I think for both us it was something that we wanted to explore, and certainly in the play the difficult relationships between these three generations of men is crucial.”

    The plot also revolves around the demise of the high street, the record shop’s tussle with a developer mirroring the David v. Goliath struggles waged by small businesses against larger corporations.

    “I think that’s something that will ring true with a lot of people as well,” says Robins.

    Live music will feature throughout, with songs by Desmond Dekker, Jimmy Cliff and the Sugar Hill Gang amongst others interspersed with the action.

    “I went to see The Commitments the other day and just that impact of great songs that we know in a theatre space makes your hair stand on end and has you standing up and clapping by the end. If we can achieve anything like that I’ll be pleased.”

    Rudy’s Rare Records is at Hackney Empire, 291 Mare Street, E8 1EJ from 24 September – 5 October

  • Hackney Downs Studios to host season of plays in “roundabout” theatre

    Cutting Off Kate Bush - Hackney Down
    Lucy Benson-Brown in Cutting Off Kate Bush

    Fresh from a successful spell at the Edinburgh Fringe, Paines Plough’s Roundabout Auditorium is back on the move and heading for the East End. The portable 168-seat theatre will set up camp at Hackney Downs Studios, with a series of Brave New Work running each night from 22-27 September.

    Met with resounding critical acclaim under the spotlight in Scotland, the material – penned by Duncan MacMillan, Alexandra Wood, Dennis Kelly and Lucy Benson-Brown – promises much. From Kate Bush to classroom trolls, audiences will be exposed to a “thought-provoking, funny and thrilling” bill of one-act, 50-60-minute productions, according to Louise Wellby, of the Hackney venue.

    “When we heard about The Roundabout Auditorium – the UK’s first small-scale in-the-round touring amphitheatre – we knew it would be an excellent fit,” she says, explaining that the flat-pack pop-up is just right for the studios’ 400-square-foot industrial performance space. “The mission of our theatre is perfectly aligned with the mission of Paines Plough.”

    Said mission is “to open up theatre to everyone”. Paines Plough, famously established in 1974 over a pint of Paines bitter in The Plough pub, believes that “everyone should have the chance to see the best new plays, no matter where they live”, and has taken an innovative approach to achieving its goal. The Hackney Studios gig is just one stop amidst substantial tour plans, with no village hall, community centre or warehouse off limits.

    The design of the theatre itself will contribute to a novel taste of the stage. “The shape of the Roundabout creates an intimate experience – there is nowhere to hide,” says Wellby. “We are excited about bringing brave new writing to Hackney, altering and opening up the way people experience theatre – making it accessible.”

    Every Brilliant Thing
    by Duncan MacMillan

    MacMillan’s six-year-old narrator is staring his mum’s dangerous depression in the face and wants to help cheer her up. The solution, he feels, is simple; he starts work on a list of all the brilliant things in the world that he can think of, hoping its contents might change her outlook. A pinch of audience participation helped this one-man comedy go down a storm with crowds and critics alike in Edinburgh.

    Lungs
    by Duncan MacMillan

    A first baby is on the cards for one half of central-couple M and W, but the other half takes the suggestion like a punch in the face. Thirty-something, well-educated and busy making fruitless trips to Ikea, the pair confront the moral dilemma of having a family in a world of overpopulation, erratic weather and political unrest.

    Our Teacher’s a Troll
    by Dennis Kelly

    With a Roald Dahl kind of no-holds-barred approach to the darker side of characterisation, Kelly has taken kindly to unsettling young audiences – in the best possible way, of course. Our Teacher’s a Troll is a three-person performance in which a set of scally-wag twins see their nervy headteacher replaced by a child-eating monster. As well as saving the school, the naughty pair must get peanut-buttered Brussels sprouts off the lunch menu.

    The Initiative
    by Alexandra Wood

    When an East London taxi-driver, with a taste for the scenic route, hears that pirates from his Somali homeland have seized a British couple he takes it upon himself to negotiate a release. Flying against his wife’s fears, Dalmar embarks on a journey of self-discovery – unwittingly so, perhaps. Wood’s thoughtful script is packed with thrills and weighty ideas about the nature of identity and belonging.

    Cutting Off Kate Bush
    by Lucy Benson-Brown

    Tracking the meltdown of a twenty-something Kate Bush fan-girl, Benson-Brown’s self-performed piece looks at family, loss and the backlog of an eclectic and eccentric pop star. Cathy’s mum is dead and things are falling apart around her; in keeping with modern trends, she turns to Youtube for a Bush-themed vent.

    Brave New Work is at Hackney Downs Studios, Amhurst Terrace, E8 2BT from 22–27 September.

    www.hackneydownsstudios.wordpress.com/whats-on

  • Spoiling review: a post-apocalyptic look at Scottish ‘independence’

    Spoiling - Richard Clements and Gabriel Quigley credit Jeremy Abrahams 620
    Spoiling alert: Richard Clements and Gabriel Quigley in comedy about Scottish independence. Photograph: Jeremy Abrahams

    Fresh from the Edinburgh Fringe with a Fringe First Award from the Scotsman, John McCann’s short, snappy Spoiling is now showing at London’s own Theatre Royal Stratford East.

    Set in the aftermath of the ‘yes’ vote of Scotland’s independence referendum, Spoiling is smartly-timed, peppered with dark humour and a sense of inevitability.

    With the fantastic casting of Gabriel Quigley as First Minister Fiona and Richard Clements as Northern Irish aide Mark, this play is a sensational envisioning of post-apocalyptic (post-yes vote) Scottish politics in the hands of a modern woman. Staging is immediate, lighting that brightens with the intensity of a satirical slant on what’s about to happen. McCann’s writing is sudden and intelligently funny, laced with blatant sexism.

    Fiona’s intense swearing and comedic timing solidifies the situation, turning it from grand ideas into a reality. Mark is more guarded, toeing the party line to avoid ‘career suicide’.

    There’s an undeniable political message, though one isn’t quite sure which way it leans: is it mocking or championing Scotland’s desire and ability to be a sovereign state? Fresh and tasteful, this hour-long play lays a heavy gaze upon a never more relevant issue.

    Contained within one room on the stage throughout, Spoiling is so real it’s almost history, or prophecy. Orla O’Loughlin’s direction displays an incredible grasp of political banter, so for the audience this is threatening, powerful, thought-provoking. Sublime performances from both actors make this a driven showcase of political and personal frustration and conviction.

    Between the lines of party politics and patriotism, there are overarching themes of peace or dysfunction, quiet or protest, compromise or oppression.
    A brave poke at a bear that sets the tone for a long-held breath before the referendum that will change history, McCann’s creation has integrity and spirit – let’s hope this is behind Scotland’s imminent decision.

    Spoiling is at Theatre Royal Stratford East, Gerry Raffles Square, E15 1BN until 13 September.

    www.stratfordeast.com/spoiling

  • ‘Too much silence around FGM perpetuates the tradition’

    Director Alex Crampton
    Director Alex Crampton

    Why do you think FGM goes under the radar in the UK?

    It’s down to our lax legislation: there are too many holes. British Kenyans are clinics’ biggest customers. In this country there is a race concern within the law – how do we differentiate between cosmetic surgery and FGM? Is it a black and white issue? In Kenya women are taking legal action, protecting themselves. Here, FGM can be a way of gaining control of culture, tradition and community. Western populations need to be involved in this conversation.

    What does Little Stitches mean to you?

    It has meant increasing amounts as time has gone on. I didn’t understand the physical reality and complexity of FGM before. The play’s humanising, flesh and blood relevance has moved [FGM] from being something one should be aware of to a civic responsibility. [With the play] I want to remove negativity and shame, and deal with this problem in a long-lasting way.

    How did this sensitive subject matter first capture your imagination?

    An African film, Moolaade, captured my attention. It brings the tensions of the practice to the surface, with ancient rites and a sense of the sacred, which is so alien to my culture. There’s so much acute pain in the physicality of FGM and I’m still informing myself of it.

    How is it working trying to create such a powerful piece of theatre?

    We’ve spent a lot of time building up openness and trust. It’s tough, but engaging and empathetic. I’m so happy with the casting, everyone’s so motivated by the aims of the project. The hardest part is the emotional process and reining in the impassioned discussions. We’re trying to keep it as concrete as possible, and to ground it when we veer off into discursive territory.

    What are you bringing to the mix?

    A stripped down production, in terms of movement and set. Characterisation is at the forefront, with detailed digging behind the media front line. Too much silence – even within families, between mothers and daughters – around FGM perpetuates the tradition, fermenting resentment in this unspoken traumatic experience. We’re trying to make this everyone’s business.

    Little Stitches is at the Arcola Theatre, 24 Ashwin Street, E8 3DL from 29-30 August

  • Dalston’s Grimeborn festival is underway

    Grimeborn 2014 -620
    Grime is of the essence at alternative opera festival

    A fraudulent psychic, persecution in Mussolini’s Italy and a shepherd’s marriage to a semi-divine nymph are some of the subjects set to feature at this month’s festival of alternative opera Grimeborn, at the Arcola Theatre.

    Ten productions, including new operas and small-scale re-workings of established favourites by Monteverdi, Massenet and Handel, are to be staged throughout the month in the Arcola’s two main studios.

    Eye-catching operas include Women Box, a triple bill of musical theatre and opera about women’s boxing and the rise of the female conductor; a new translation of Monteverdi’s The Coronation of Poppea; and The Medium, an invitation to a séance with dark voices, magic tricks and flying spirits.

    Now in its eighth year, Grimeborn aims to turn the stuffiness of the English summer opera season on its head, with its name a playful reference to the Glyndebourne opera festival.

    The Arcola’s Artistic Director, Mehmet Ergen, calls Grimeborn “a breeding ground for original voices and some of the stars of tomorrow”.

    The festival prepares vocalists for future roles by giving them the chance to perform in a more intimate setting and aims to attract new audiences to opera by adopting a bold, risk taking approach and by selling tickets at affordable prices.

    Grimeborn 2014 is at Arcola Theatre, 24 Ashwin Street, E8 3DL until 7 September

  • The Nightmares of Carlos Fuentes – review

    Selva Rasalingam  and Nabil Elouahabi in The Nightmares of Carlos Fuentes. Photograph: Judy Goldhill
    Selva Rasalingam and Nabil Elouahabi in The Nightmares of Carlos Fuentes. Photograph: Judy Goldhill

    Seeking asylum in Britain is no laughing matter, but journalist and screenwriter Rashid Razaq’s new black comedy is perhaps an exception, using well-observed wit to take aim at the cultural superiority and political insensitivity of the West during the Iraq war.

    Perhaps inspired by Fuentes himself – famous for his rotating narrators – Nicolas Kent’s direction sees the play, based on a short story by Iraqi author Hassan Blasim, jump giddily forwards and backwards in time between 2006 and 2011. Projected politicians appear on the walls but their confusing speeches, presumably intentionally, provide little context.

    Saleem Husain, played movingly by former EastEnders actor Nabil Elouahabi, is a street sweeper, used to cleaning the carnage left by car bombs on the streets of Baghdad with his colleague Khaled (Selva Rasalingham). Hiding in a van full of frozen peas he makes his way over the border to England – a reassuringly “godless” place. Saleem turns over a new leaf and adopts the name of famous Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes after seeing a handsome picture in a magazine.

    While the videos of Bush’s and Blair’s garbled justifications of invasion draw grim smirks of derision, Carlos’ new persona provides Fawlty Towers-style gags. We meet him reeling off the eight wives of Henry VIII he has learnt for his citizenship test while on a dirty weekend with posh totty Lydia (Caroline Langrishe).

    The amenable Carlos tries to convince UKBA he is an atheist, fleeing persecution from God, only to be told: “God is not on our recognised list of dictators, Mr Husain” by a dour Scottish case worker, played by the talented Sara Bahadori.

    But Carlos’ fresh new start soon begins to lose its shine. No matter how much inane trivia Carlos ingests, the memories of his homeland are as hard to erase as his stubborn Arabic accent. Carlos’ composite identity – a suave Mexican with the demeanour of an English gent – gradually erodes, leaving a Sunni Iraqi tormented by his nightmares.

    Rashid Razaq’s play shows us not only the psychological damage suffered by those forced to seek asylum, but reminds us that the complexities of sectarian conflict are not reducible to tick boxes on an immigration form.

    The Nightmares of Carlos Fuentes is at the Arcola Theatre, 24 Ashwin Street, E8 3DL until 16 August.

  • There’s a Monster in the Lake – review

    The acting company performing at the Hay Festival (see Katie Glass story). (L-R) Tara Postma (standing), Hugo Nicholson, Cressida Bonas, Zoe Stevens (sitting top), Zena Carswell (sitting front) and Florence Keith-Roach (standing) (28 May 2014)Photograph: Adrian Sherratt
    Spoken Mirror production company: (L-R) Tara Postma (standing), Hugo Nicholson, Cressida Bonas, Zoe Stevens (sitting top), Zena Carswell (sitting front) and Florence Keith-Roach (standing) Photograph: Adrian Sherratt

    Nothing is sacred from health and safety checks in this surreal production by Spoken Mirror at the Rosemary Branch theatre, featuring a headache-prone devil, two squabbling sisters and an out-of-shape wolf played by Cressida Bonas.

    Inspired by playwright Tallulah Brown’s four months working with Mira Hamermesh towards the end of the Polish filmmaker’s life, the Lily Ashley-directed play flits between a bland, uncompromising care home and the wooded mental refuge of the ageing Kazek, with songs delivered by Kazek’s daughters and a clutch of unseen sirens.

    “I want to die…let me die!” utters Kazek at the outset, played with tremulous, stubborn vulnerability by Zoe Stevens. To the audience’s relief, the statement does not trigger a play-long debate on life versus death, but rather a thoughtful meditation on memory, story-telling and making amends.

    Kazek’s carer (significantly named just ‘Nurse’), is executed with wonderful impassivity by Tara Postma and provides necessary injections of humour into the narrative. Her straight-laced and unsympathetic – though not unkind – method of care is sharply contrasted to Kazek’s daughters emotional coming-to-terms with their father’s ageing process.

    Esme (played with wide-eyed impetuosity by Florence Keith-Roach) is the idealistic daughter, excellent with their father but absent when it comes to the gruelling practicalities of his decline – which her more pragmatic sister Mari (Zena Carswell) has to take on. Brown deftly describes the fraught sibling interplay, universal to those who have had to deal with poorly parents.

    There’s A Monster In The Lake is perhaps most poignant when highlighting the helplessness felt by those faced with the impending death of themselves or loved ones. “He’s my dad, not my child!” Mari says sharply to Nurse. The hints that Kazek was not always the perfect father also combat the romanticisation of the father-child role and add depth to the fantasy-fuelled vignettes.

    The care home scenes are the best drawn, but the woods also have a charm, with Cressida Bonas playing a sprightly, health-and-safety-obsessed wolf, springing across the stage with alacrity, whilst the lecherous, maladied devil (Hugo Nicholson) nuisances his way through the dark undergrowth.

    A child-like wistfulness persists throughout the play, a thread of fantasy and hope which challenges the idea of age equating to wisdom, and sensitively explores what it means to care and be cared for.

    There’s A Monster in the Lake is at the Rosemary Branch theatre, Shepperton Road, N1 3DT until 19 July.

  • Yvonne Rainer: Dance Works

    Yvonne Rainer dance performance at Raven Row
    Dancers perform an Yvonne Rainer dance work at Raven Row

    Dancer, choreographer, filmmaker and writer Yvonne Rainer (born 1934, lives in New York) is widely acknowledged as having played a key role in revolutionising post-war dance, inspiring generations of performers. In the sixties and early seventies, initially as part of the Judson Theater in New York (alongside Trisha Brown, Simone Forti and Steve Paxton), Rainer made dance works that were concerned with social and political form. Her choreography incorporated ‘ordinary’ movement and ‘neutral’ performance, rethinking the performer-audience relationship.

    This exhibition is the first to present live performances of Rainer’s dance works alongside other aspects of her practice: theoretical and lyrical writing, sketches and scores, photographs of performances, documentary and experimental films, and an audio recording of one of her early performative lectures. Together these convey a vivid picture of Rainer’s production from 1961 to 1972, and its proximity to the visual arts of the time, notably to minimalist sculpture.

    A highlight of the exhibition is a 45-minute dance programme performed four times daily. Dancers trained for the occasion by Rainer and her long-time collaborator Pat Catterson will perform her celebrated works Trio A (1966) and Chair Pillow (1969), as well as the UK premieres of the very rarely seen Talking Solo and Diagonal (both 1963).

    The exhibition is curated by Catherine Wood, Curator of Contemporary Art and Performance at Tate Modern, and made possible through the generous co-operation of the Getty Research Institute. The live performances are organised with Martin Hargreaves, Programme Leader at Trinity Laban Conservatoire.

    Due to limited audience capacity for the live performances, the exhibition will open for the first time on Friday 11 July at 11am.

    Yvonne Rainer: Dance Works is at Raven Row, 56 Artillery Lane, E1 7LS until 10 August 2014.

    +44 (0)20 7377 4300
    www.ravenrow.org

  • The Frida Kahlo of Penge West – review

    Cecily Nash and star both star as Frida Kahlo in The Frida Kahlo of Penge West
    Raising eyebrows: Cecily Nash and Laura Kirman star in The Frida Kahlo of Penge West

    If you like your revolutionary history brief, and brash and sexual, this is one for you.

    This mega-consolidated satirical history of the life of Frida Kahlo, weak in ‘back, legs and womb’ is a filthy bit of GCSE history – in the best way possible.

    But despite all this high politics and high sex, this play-within-a-play has altogether more banal groundings.

    A terribly meek Zoe (Laura Kirman) has her Penge West sofa colonised by a loud-mouthed, embittered uni mate, out-of-work actress Ruth (Cecily Nash). A motley crew of revolutionaries are filtered through the minds of these two equally, but differently, hapless friends putting on a play to appease Ruth’s ill-conceived feminist streak, and boredom.

    The muralist Diego Rivera graces the stage as a pot-bellied Manc. There’s Leon Trotsky, with a bad Russian accent. Kahlo herself is a blonde ‘Mehican.’ Like Kahlo’s works, this two woman show is surreal and overtly sexual in a grotesque kind of way. In not much more than an hour it packs in an impressive amount, drawing innuendo from every little piece of political theory. And on top of being a two-woman show about two women making a two-woman show is, this is a revenge tale in disguise.

    Following its run at the Rosemary Branch Theatre on Shepperton Road, the show skips town this week. A fresh set of dates are set to be announced later in the week.

  • New hidden Dalston Tango hub

    Tango like a pro
    You can dance: learn the Argentine Tango at beginners’ classes in Dalston

    Tango is one of the world’s most sensuous dances – and among the most exciting. It’s also known as a social, inclusive dance, and Tango at the Light has done justice to the spirit of this with its beginners’ classes. You don’t have to bring a partner and there’s no need to feel nervous about getting the steps wrong.

    As the classes are aimed at newcomers to dance, you’ll learn the fundamentals of Argentine tango, from posture to step and connection. The lessons will give you an awareness of the music and will teach you to relax, have fun, make mistakes and learn from them. Above all, they will familiarise you with this, one of the world’s most exuberant and beautiful dances.

    Beginners’ Tango Classes Every Thursday Night @ Saint Barnabas’ Church Dalston

    Beginners’ Class 7 to 8pm, £10 (includes dancing until 11pm)
    Práctica (social dancing) 8 to 11pm, £5
    Student discount £5 per class (includes dancing until 11pm)

    First class is free.

    Visit www.tangothelight.com