Scotland

Assembly Hall – Edinburgh Festival Theatre

Assembly Hall by the Kidd Pivot company is curiously absorbing. Depicting an AGM of a historical reenactment group, this piece marries quick-fire dialogue, precision dance, a great sound design (Owen Belton, Alessandro Juliani and Meg Roe), mime and terrific ensemble work. This ailing reenactment troupe in love with paying homage to chivalric romance takes us on a journey inside the minds of its members, with their dreams, fantasies and illicit affairs.

The cartoonish mannerisms that illustrate the dialogue are exaggerated and aptly fit the battling excesses of a living history group. The compulsion to create long-lost hand-to-hand battle with clanking armor and heavy swords is intoxicating, indeed – almost an addiction which is hard to give up. Reenactment groups avidly research and make their own costumes. Their zeal is at odds with the earnest obligations of a dull AGM Committee with its obligatory rules. Two sides of the one coin are presented here.

© Michael Slobodian

The set (Jay Gower Taylor) resembles hundreds of community halls around the country. Taylor pays close attention to detail and uses different heights to good effect. The village hall stage doubles as a place for fantasy to play out and a rectangular box of colour, hidden behind curtains (as our inner fantasies are often hidden). It reminds us that this romantic hobby is separate from reality yet, perhaps it feels more real and vital than real life and this tedious committee meeting.

The show conveys a blend of fabulous fiction and mundane, ordinary folk, each inwardly invested in a grander, larger-than-life world. Sometimes fact and fiction get tangled up.

Choreographed by Crystal Pite (an Associate Artist at three institutions: Nederlands Dans Theatre; Sadler’s Wells and Canada’s National Arts Centre) and scripted by Jonathon Young (recipient of the UK National Dance Award) there is plenty to make you smile. The armour section at the end is beautifully rendered and this eight-strong cast work seamlessly together.

Reviewer: Kathleen Mansfield

Reviewed: 22nd August 2024

North West End UK Rating:

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Kathleen Mansfield

Recent Posts

The Tiger Who Came To Tea – Sheffield Lyceum

Tea that hits the perfect spot! The Sheffield Lyceum Theatre welcomed a full house of…

2 hours ago

Shenoah Allen – Soho Theatre

A therapist created a warning for Allen, ‘you have an unnamed dread’. He has been…

2 hours ago

Road – Royal Exchange

2026 marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Royal Exchange Theatre, an occasion…

3 hours ago

The Wizard of Oz – Northwich Memorial Court

In recent years, and thanks largely to the popularity of its spin-off cousin Wicked, it…

3 hours ago

The Last Picture – HOME Mcr

This may be a tale told by a dog, but it isn’t a shaggy dog…

4 hours ago

Perfect Show For Rachel – The Crucible Playhouse

Zoo Co (co-produced with Improbable) brought ‘Perfect Show for Rachel’ to The Crucible Theatre Playhouse…

4 hours ago