Category Archives: Reviews

THE BOX

★★★

White Bear Theatre

THE BOX at the White Bear Theatre

★★★

“a good watchable show, with some interesting themes to explore”

Brian Coyle’s ‘The Box’ follows Tom (Martin Edwards) and Kate (Sarah Lawrie), a couple with a mysterious box in their lounge. How are the box and the pair connected? That’s one of the occasional mysteries to discover in the play. In the beginning, it’s unknown who they are to each other; they role play, each making up new back stories – which the other tends not to approve of. Slowly the nature of them being a couple is revealed. It becomes clear they’ve both shared a trauma which neither is comfortable being truthful about. The resolution to their cycle of lies is what follows.

From the start I sensed the actors were holding back. There’s several movement heavy moments that dictated transitions, in which I felt they were holding a lot of tension and could’ve given a lot more. Perhaps this came from nerves or not feeling free enough to push further and take more risks. What’s interesting about this is that the play opened with Tom and Kate role playing – and when they did, their characters felt so much more open and free. Perhaps this was a choice to show how they’ve become so uncomfortable with each other that they need another identity to relax. If this was Jonathan Woolf’s direction, however, I do not think it carried through and instead came off as stiff. Both actors, however, had beautiful moments of comedy which did succeed in charming the audience.

The sound (Simon Beyer) consisted of piano accompaniment in transitions and places where the dramatic intention of the scenes changed. This grated on me as it felt like the music was trying to prescribe what I was supposed to be feeling. Especially when there was no dialogue. Instead of silence that the actors could’ve used to create an atmosphere, we were told that there was a certain atmosphere. This was a shame as it took away from the couple’s uncomfortable pauses. In one scene towards the end, however, silence was allowed when the two reluctantly spoke of their love for each other. Here the beats were perfect and believable.

The set is minimal but detailed: the box taking centre stage, a shelf with a wine bottle and several glasses, a chair, a clothing rail with six dresses – all the same, in three different colours. I inferred this as trying to imply a potential mental health disorder – particularly given the dresses – which read well, and was subtle enough as to not be stereotypical. If this was the case, however, I wish that could have been explored more throughout. The costume included many bright and warm colours, contrasting the play’s heavy themes – as if it were part of the couple trying to pretend everything is ‘normal’ and masking their dark sides. Again, I appreciated the subtlety of this suggestion.

The content was interesting enough and did keep me wanting to know more about what’s really going on with the characters. Yet, I feel it’s a story and relationship dynamic I’ve seen many times before. Again, without giving too much away, I watch a lot of Detective TV shows and the main families, parents and couples all share this same struggle where one party doesn’t truly know the other since a shared trauma, and as a result they’re broken. Except here there is no mystery to unfold in action, it’s just the audience trying to guess what on Earth is up with the box.

Overall, a good watchable show, with some interesting themes to explore, but it did leave me unsatisfied and yearning for ten times more.

 


THE BOX at the White Bear Theatre

Reviewed on 24th July 2024

by David Robinson

Photography by Alex Walton

 


 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

JUST STOP EXTINCTION REBELLION | ★★★ | February 2024
I FOUND MY HORN | ★★★★ | February 2023
THE MIDNIGHT SNACK | ★★★ | December 2022
THE SILENT WOMAN | ★★★★ | April 2022
US | ★★★★ | February 2022
MARLOWE’S FATE | ★★★ | November 2021

THE BOX

THE BOX

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THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST

★★★★

Reading Abbey Ruins

THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST at  Reading Abbey Ruins

★★★★

“a wonderful adaptation of the Wilde Classic in a uniquely atmospheric setting”

The wit of the famed Irish playwright sparkled in the evening sun in this outdoor production by Progress Theatre. In the shadow of the gaol in which he was incarcerated for ‘the love that dare not speak its name’ well known Wildean epigrams bounce off the walls of the former Reading Abbey’s chapter house. We all know and relish Lady Bracknell’s (Caroline Warner) pronouncement on the ‘carelessness of the loss of two parents’, her astonishment at the receptacle in which the infant Jack Worthing (Chris Westgate) was found or the ‘immateriality of the line’ on which he was found and her daughter Gwendolen Fairfax’s (Stephanie Ness) declaration of the ‘sensational reading to be found in one’s own diary providing entertainment on a train journey’. However, the cast and director (Steph Dewar) highlighted many others including ‘The truth is rarely plain and never simple’, ‘All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does, and that is his’ and ‘The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means.’ 

The simplistic but effective setting covering the three acts in the town house of Algernon Moncrieff and Jack’s Hertfordshire estate works well within the historic setting; despite my initial misgivings that this ‘drawing-room comedy’ might be lost in the expanse of the outdoor venue. Costumes (Wendy Hobson and Chris Moran) and the required minimum of furniture and props provide the period elegance to anchor the production in its mid-1890s setting. The skilful interval split, mid Act II, works well to keep the pace racing along towards the conclusion.

Hindered in his attempts to keep his two worlds from colliding by the intervention of his friend Algernon, played with bubbling mischievousness by Matthew Urwin, Jack finally resorts to ‘killing off’ his fictional miscreant brother Earnest, who by continually misbehaving ‘in town’, provides Jack the perfect excuse whenever he needs to escape from the country. Algernon, who also has a fictional reason for leaving town to visit the country, in turn becomes enamoured with Jack’s young ward, Cecily Cardew (Nancy Gittus). Prepared to sacrifice their double lives for the love of Gwendolen and Cecily both men stride haphazardly forward to discover the importance of being ‘Earnest’.

Between the two young women a bond of ‘sisterhood’ is quickly reached and equally quickly ripped asunder on their first meeting. Only to be restored on finding themselves both to have been misled by their suitors. The speedy change is achieved with excellent precision and hilarity from Ness and Gittus. Ness is easily recognisable as the daughter of Warner’s Lady Bracknell both in mannerisms and speech. She deftly uses the dialogue to create a believable character of a young woman of society used to getting her own way. Whilst Warner’s approach to the notorious ‘handbag’ line of Lady Bracknell is to expertly underplay it with effective emphasis of shock and outrage at the presumption of Jack expecting her daughter to ‘marry into a cloakroom and forge an alliance with a parcel’.

In juxtaposition to the slightly smug and sarcastic Moncrieff and increasingly vexed and frustrated Worthing, the Rector of the Hertfordshire estate, Dr. Chasuble (Paul Gittus) and Cecily’s tutor, Miss Prism (Liz Paulo), provide a simmering, sublimated sexual tension to great comic effect. They, along with Algernon’s manservant, Lane (Dean Stephenson) and Jack’s butler, Merriman (John Goodman) who both portray with few words and a good many telling facial expressions the knowing yet rather put upon non-leisured-class, provide excellent comedic cameos in counterpoint to their erring employers.

Progress Theatre have produced a wonderful adaptation of the Wilde Classic in a uniquely atmospheric setting.


THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST at Reading Abbey Ruins

Reviewed on 19th July 2024

by Thomson Hall

Photography by Aidan Moran

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

HENRY I | ★★★★★ | June 2023

THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST

THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST

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