Saturday, December 21

Author: Donna M Day

Amanda Tovalin: Música Verde (Green Music) – Edinburgh Fringe Online
Scotland

Amanda Tovalin: Música Verde (Green Music) – Edinburgh Fringe Online

Amanda Tovalin: Música Verde (Green Music) is a short concert in which musician, Amanda Tovalin explores her relationship with all things green and natural through song. The concert is performed with Spanish and English narration, with all song lyrics in Spanish, and is available to watch with Spanish, English and Portuguese subtitles. The concert opens with a philosophical narration over a background of haunting flute, played by Gastón Artigas. The narration immediately brings the theme of the concert to the fore, with the inextricable link between humans and the natural world being outlined and what the deterioration of that relationship means for our lives. The concert is performed in a low-lit studio with projections of the natural world shown behind the three musicians as a rem...
AnotherKind – Edinburgh Fringe Online
Scotland

AnotherKind – Edinburgh Fringe Online

AnotherKind is a multi-media scrapbook of the creative process, inspired by Amy Louise Wilson’s award-winning play, Another Kind of Dying, which tells the story of a young man who moves from the rural Eastern Cape to Johannesburg after the death of his father. For anyone who watches theatre but isn’t involved backstage, it’s easy to think that rehearsals mostly consist of actors repeatedly performing scenes until they stick, but AnotherKind offers a unique insight into what it actually takes for a cast to develop characterisation and explore plot to ensure that their show is as intricate and vibrant as it can be. A product of the pandemic and the effect it had on in-person theatre, the piece features heavy use of typed observations and narration, which are cleverly amended and corre...
Aionos – Edinburgh Fringe Online
Scotland

Aionos – Edinburgh Fringe Online

Toasterlab’s Aionos is a mixed reality, experimental performance, which promises to blend Ancient Egyptian history with the fantasy, sci-fi fairy tale world of Star Wars. The production hopes to appeal to gamers, fans of online gaming streams, and anyone curious about theatre and/or Ancient Egypt by combining elements of all these things. It’s an exciting and brilliant concept, but also a lot to handle. There are three ways to view the show: in person, via livestream or using a virtual reality (VR) headset. This review was written based on the online stream. The show was produced based on a concept by Debbie Deer Productions in consultation with multi-disciplinary theatre practitioner, Ari Tarr. The piece opens with Anubis, God of Death (Shaharah Gaznabbi) introducing their livestream s...
Einstein! – Celebrating 100 Years of General Relativity, Edinburgh Fringe Online
Scotland

Einstein! – Celebrating 100 Years of General Relativity, Edinburgh Fringe Online

Today is Nobel Prize winner, Sir Alexander Fleming’s birthday and Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer continues to show the life story of the father of the atomic bomb in cinemas, so it seems like the perfect time to visit Einstein and the formation of his Theory of General Relativity. Written and performed by Jack Fry, Einstein! Celebrating 100 Years of General Relativity, is a unique one-man show, combining scientific theory, irreverent humour, and poignant reflections on the life of everyone’s favourite genius. The show’s director, Tom Blomquist opens the play with a projection of a graveyard and a soundtrack of tinkling bells, rattling chains, and howling winds, reminiscent of the appearance of Jacob Marley in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. This creates the feeling that what we will see is...
Transistor – Hope Street Theatre
North West

Transistor – Hope Street Theatre

Dark Horse Theatre Chiang Mai’s Transistor is an exploration of gender and sexuality and its effects on family life. Written and directed by Kelly Holliday this is a very funny and dramatic piece of theatre which takes an issue which is currently causing a lot of controversy and arguments, particularly online, and makes it something which can be talked about albeit without minimising the strength of emotions people feel about it. The set is overwhelmed with busyness, with clutter and cardboard boxes littering most of the stage. The chaos contrasts well with a peaceful looking bench on a patch of grass. Empty picture frames hang over the stage and the boxes are labelled to illustrate that their contents are the result of an ongoing clear out. The play opens with Vivian (Judy Mandel) c...
Whatever Happened to Billy Kenny? – Liverpool Theatre Festival
North West

Whatever Happened to Billy Kenny? – Liverpool Theatre Festival

The 2023 Liverpool Theatre Festival once again sees writer, Ian Salmon and director, Mikee Dickinson united for another poignant and emotional piece about the complexities of life and regret. Whatever Happened to Billy Kenny? is a one-man show performed by Jay Johnson which rockets at breakneck speed through the short and dramatic career of an Evertonian footballer who was derailed by his heavy use of alcohol and cocaine. The play opens with voiceovers talking about Kenny and everything he has thrown away. The disembodied voices disintegrate into Johnson’s creation of a club scene where he does a remarkable job of creating the illusion of a crowded nightlife alone on an empty stage. The voiceovers then repeat with overlap and distortion, creating a real sense of anxiety and panic. Jo...
What the Dog Said to the Harvest – Unity Theatre
North West

What the Dog Said to the Harvest – Unity Theatre

What the Dog Said to the Harvest is an immersive multi-disciplinary exploration of climate change, presented as part of the Liverpool Arab Arts Festival. Combining song, dance, film and spoken word, the show is a fresh interpretation of the often-explored theme of climate change. On entering the theatre, various footage relating to climate change is being played. There are numerous logs on the stage and on some of the seating and a collection of instruments waiting on the stage. Immersive from the start, the performers begin sitting as part of the audience and when the show begins, call out to each other coming together on the stage in a place of safety and comfort. The performers do a good job of utilising all of the space in the theatre. The logs scattered about the venue confused ...
Making it Up (One Playwright to Another) – Greater Manchester Fringe Digital
REVIEWS

Making it Up (One Playwright to Another) – Greater Manchester Fringe Digital

Making it Up (One Playwright to Another) is a touching tribute to the theatre industry and renowned playwright, Edward Albee. Written and performed by Norm Reynolds, the show was filmed for online streaming by John Bertram at the Red Sandcastle Theatre, Toronto. Director, Lesley Ballantyne has brought out the best in Reynolds and made this one man show about how one man’s life was touched by theatre, into something which has universal appeal and something which everyone, whether they are familiar with Albee or not, could take something from. The play is primarily focussed around an interview with Edward Albee, and Reynolds narrates his character’s life before, during and after this interview. Beginning his career as a teacher, this endeavour was put aside on writing a semi-successful pl...
Choosh – Unity Theatre, Liverpool
North West

Choosh – Unity Theatre, Liverpool

People often say they’re scared of clowns. What they usually mean is they’re scared of a thick layer of white greasepaint covering a face with a red nose and overexaggerated red mouth sitting beneath a green wig. Julia Masli is not that type of clown and Choosh, part of Physical Fest 2023, is like nothing you’ve seen before, either in or out of a big top. Masli has worked with dramaturg, Annie Siddons, to create a surreal and unique homage to migration, hunger, desperation felt during a job search, and love at first sight, whether that is for another human or a hot dog. The set is simple: an orange suitcase sits on a floral platform, but of course the simplicity is not what it seems as the suitcase is crammed with Masli’s props and tricks. She bursts onto the stage with an inside out...
Sixteen Swans – Liverpool Philharmonic
North West

Sixteen Swans – Liverpool Philharmonic

Sixteen Swans was a collection of dramatic and enchanting music, which created a wonderful evening of high emotion played by very talented musicians. Conducted by Roderick Cox, this combination of Strauss, Tchaikovsky and Sibelius is a powerful combination which mesmerised and enthralled the captive audience. The dramatic opening of Strauss’ Don Juan with powerful percussion allowed the flutes, played by Cormac Henry and Helen Wilson, to really shine through with an air of mystery. The tinkling of a triangle provides an air of sweetness before the strings sweep away as gentle melodies contrast well with more intense themes. Accomplished pianist, Inon Barnatan plays on Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No.1. Another piece with a dramatic opening, staccato piano is complimented by pizzi...