Thursday, December 18

REVIEWS

Sense – A New Musical About Dementia – theSpace Triplex
Scotland

Sense – A New Musical About Dementia – theSpace Triplex

Produced by Belgian-based company Plotfish, Sense is a touching new musical created in collaboration with the Belgian Alzheimer’s League.  Gathering around the dinner table for Christmas, the Smit family is hosted (as they are yearly) by their Grandad Albert (Erik Goris).  Being gifted a projector for his Christmas, Albert takes the family on a trip down memory lane as he peruses his old photos.  The further the night goes on, the more Albert begins to confuse his memories - we realise the Smits aren’t the Hallmark family they are pretending to be.  The family are no longer on speaking terms but have agreed for this one night to come together for Albert’s sake.  Having been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s six years ago, they play happy families so as not to confuse or u...
2 Muslim 2 Furious 2: Go Halal or Go Home – Laughing Horse @ Bar 50
Scotland

2 Muslim 2 Furious 2: Go Halal or Go Home – Laughing Horse @ Bar 50

As the free sticker at the end of the show claimed, “First I was afraid, now I’m Islamified.” I wasn’t afraid but I was curious as what to expect and was pleasantly surprised, also glad I managed to take in this gem of a show. It was a Halal feast of comedy. The Garden room at Bar 50 is a tight squeeze and has a basic set up but the comedy duo used the space as best they could. They fulfilled roles as ticket sales, ushers, tech and performers, which is all part of the fringe experience. Once they started the surroundings were unimportant. What followed was clever and beautifully written insight. "2 Muslim 2 Furious 2: Go Halal or Go Home" explores the nuances of Muslim identity, culture, and experiences. The show's title itself, being a clever play on words, referencing the...
Richard II – The Libra Theatre Café
London

Richard II – The Libra Theatre Café

Shakespeare’s Richard II is the inspiration for The Whole Pack Theatre Company’s pared back version of the bard’s history play.  In a brief summary of the play – the play covers the last two years of King Richard II’s life 1398-1400.  The play begins with King Richard (Jessamy James) presiding over a dispute between nobles, in which Richard decides that the matter should be settled by ‘trial by combat.’  In a last-minute decision by King Richard, he instead, decides to banish both men from England.  Bolingbroke (Lydia Shaw), is allowed to return to England early, but the suspicion that King Richard may have had a role in the death of the Duke of Gloucester, will not go away.  Richard leaves England to join the war in Ireland but leaves himself exposed to treachery ...
Lavender – The Courtyard Theatre
London

Lavender – The Courtyard Theatre

We meet Edie (Maisy Fuggle) as she consults a psychiatrist in an effort to come to terms with the loss of a loved one.  We are then taken on a journey of Edie’s life with Harvey (Patryk Wachowiak), who she meets in a coffee shop when she is venting to the barista about her coffee, which is definitely not made with coconut milk as requested.  Harvey is intrigued by this fiery girl that he met in the coffee shop, and they begin dating.  Harvey is a book shop assistant, and Edie works in an estate agency in a job that she complains about constantly.  The couple grow closer together, meeting each other’s parents and eventually decide to move in together. The couple have their whole life ahead of them, making plans to go on a once-in-a-lifetime holiday to Australia, a...
Isn’t It Byronic – The Courtyard Theatre
London

Isn’t It Byronic – The Courtyard Theatre

As if you had not guessed by the title, this is a show about Lord Byron – no not the pub (of which I am sure there are many), but the romantic poet who penned his verse in the late 18th and early 19th century.  Performer Zoe Maltby is a little obsessed with Byron, and to prove it, she has made a show in reverence to him, but in allusion to his very promiscuous lifestyle, Maltby summons up the camp, drag artist within herself, to become Lord George Gordon Byron – well sometimes at least! Maltby, clearly knows her Byron, and as she explores his life and work in a chaotic, dramatic, festival of riotous fun.  Audience members are harpooned with the microphone and encouraged to participate within the realms of a script, but it is Maltby’s sharing of her personal difficulties, t...
Fragments of Fatigue – theSpaceUK on the Mile
Scotland

Fragments of Fatigue – theSpaceUK on the Mile

A shy girl in pink checked pyjamas and ankle socks clutches a model pink brain and talks to the queuing audience about how she is training to be a neurosurgeon. Leading us into the venue space a makeshift bed lies unmade center stage. From here Riley begins her first calm and unpretentious monologue. She’s studying for her dream career as a neurosurgeon and she lectures with casual confidence on how exactly the brain functions. She’s years away from completion but the cracks of her education are beginning to show. The workload is intense and she’s falling asleep in class. Adulting at 20 is hard work for Riley. She’s alone and struggling but her reasons are different. Phone calls with her friends just don’t cut it but she needs to face a reality; something is physically wrong with her and s...
Figures in Extinction – Festival Theatre
Scotland

Figures in Extinction – Festival Theatre

The Edinburgh International Festival continues to prove how committed it is to bringing the finest examples of the arts to the city every year, and this time it could not have been otherwise. Figures in Extinction is one of the most elevated ballets I have ever seen, both in terms of technique, concept and production design. Crystal Pite proves herself to be one of the finest choreographers currently working in Europe. What sets her apart is her willingness to look directly at the world around her and to translate difficult, often painful subjects into movement that feels alive, urgent and deeply human. In Figures in Extinction, a trilogy created with Simon McBurney of Complicité and performed by the extraordinary dancers of Nederlands Dans Theater, she turns her attention to the climate c...
Bernstein and Stravinsky – Usher Hall
Scotland

Bernstein and Stravinsky – Usher Hall

The Edinburgh International Festival welcomed the return of conductor Karina Canellakis, who lit up Usher Hall with her energetic presence on the podium. Following her stunning debut at the closing concert of the 2023 Festival, her comeback was highly anticipated – and she more than lived up to expectations. BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and Edinburgh Festival Chorus director James Grossmith created an evening of music that was both dazzling and deeply emotional. The 95-minute piece, performed with one interval, started with the vulnerability of the violin voice, expanding incrementally out to the full forces of the orchestra before the chorus entered. The uncomplicated layering of massed choral voices over instruments gave an intimacy merged with something divine. The performance con...
Every Brilliant Thing – Soho Place
London

Every Brilliant Thing – Soho Place

Every Brilliant Thing was created by Duncan Macmillan and Johnny Donahoe and was first performed at the Edinburgh fringe in 2014 and has since been performed by many artists in 80 countries around the world.  This is the first time that it has had a performance in London’s West End.  It still has the feel of a fringe performance with a solo actor performing with no set dressing and largely without props and involving the audience in the performance.  It works well in the intimate theatre in the round auditorium at Sohoplace. Another feature of this production is that it is to be performed by five different actors on different nights during its run.  At Press Night it was the turn of Johnny Donahoe, who has performed it many times and his familiarity with the material...
The Three Maria’s – Greenside @ George Street
Scotland

The Three Maria’s – Greenside @ George Street

This play is centred around the dictatorship of Salazar and his regime known as the Estado Novo; it was an authoritarian and anti-parliamentary government in Portugal that continued over many years from 1933 to 1974. A time when women were censored and subordinate to men. Any sign of female independence was severely punished. The Three Maria’s “inspired by Maria de Fatima Velho da Costa, Maria Isabel Barreno, and Maria Teresa Horta are the authors of the New Portuguese Letters”. A book written by the Maria’s to celebrate their womanhood, sexuality and defiance in an opposing system that saw men holding primary power and privilege. Stoic feminists with a voice, open to opportunity, and penned their writings of poetry, essays and short prose to challenge their oppression. They risked prison ...