Category Archives: Reviews

Space Station Earth

Space Station Earth

★★

Royal Albert Hall

Space Station Earth

Space Station Earth

Royal Albert Hall

Reviewed – 15th May 2022

★★

 

I come away not really knowing what I have witnessed”

 

Two men dressed in flight suits enter the blue, dimly lit space and sit themselves down on armchairs at the front of the stage. They don’t introduce either themselves or each other but launch straight into a somewhat contrived chat. The packed Royal Albert Hall audience recognises British astronaut Tim Peake and treats his arrival with cheers fit for a national hero. If they don’t recognise show creator and music composer Ilan Eshkeri, they don’t let it show. For this is the first part – a Q&A session – of an “epic concert experience” created by Eshkeri in collaboration with the European Space Agency.

Tim speaks unassumingly of his time as an astronaut. We learn that he prefers The Beatles to The Stones, he’s a dog person rather than cat, and Marmite gets a thumbs up. But the questioning from Eshkeri doesn’t delve and we learn little of any import. There’s a big laugh when Tim says he is not allowed to answer whether he has seen alien lifeforms, followed by a collective intake of breath when he admits that he firmly believes such lifeforms do exist. Tim further states that it is impossible to describe in words what looking down onto the Earth is like, but he hopes the music of Eshkeri can do it in sound. I fear this may be asking too much of any composer.

And so, onto part two of the show. Projected onto three large screens are photographs of earth; images shot from space so that we see the earth through the eyes of the astronaut. Peake explains: Earth, home of humanity, is just a small blue oasis amidst the infinity of the absolute blackness that is space. Performing live against this backdrop is a twenty-five piece orchestra, a choir ensemble, and a rock band led by Eshkeri himself on violin, guitar, keyboards and piano, playing his own score written to augment the images. Synth-led – with important solo roles for cello, and soprano – the works of Philip Glass, Mike Oldfield and Ludovico Einaudi come to mind.

The images are stunningly beautiful: the moon, sun, and earth, the northern lights flickering their greens and yellows. But do we feel now what Tim has experienced for real – the Overview Effect – a change in outlook that astronauts admit to experiencing on their return to earth? I fear again this is one step too far for any sight and sound show to achieve. And after one relentless and impelling hour – but with no informative commentary or listed programme – I come away not really knowing what I have witnessed.

For the final track, Tim Peake is invited to the stage, electric guitar in hand, to join in with the band. It’s a nice touch with which to close the performance even if, amidst the coloured light show, our astronaut hero seems to not quite know what he is doing there.

Space Station Earth continues with a European tour featuring guest astronauts in their home countries.

 

Reviewed by Phillip Money

 


Space Station Earth

Royal Albert Hall

 

Other shows reviewed by Phillip this year:
Holst: The Music in the Spheres | ★★★★★ | Jack Studio Theatre | January 2022
Payne: The Stars are Fire | ★★★ | Jack Studio Theatre | January 2022
Animal Farm | ★★★★ | Cambridge Arts Theatre | February 2022
Richard II | ★★★★★ | Jack Studio Theatre | February 2022
The Wellspring | ★★★ | Royal & Derngate | March 2022
The Woods | ★★★ | Southwark Playhouse | March 2022
I Know I Know I Know | ★★★★ | Southwark Playhouse | April 2022
The Homecoming | ★★★★★ | Cambridge Arts Theatre | April 2022
The Paradis Files | ★★★★ | Queen Elizabeth Hall | April 2022

 

 

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The Breach

The Breach

★★★

Hampstead Theatre

The Breach

Hampstead Theatre

Reviewed – 12th May 2022

★★★

 

“The performances are uniformly magnificent: honest and brutal. Yet it stops just short of drawing us in emotionally”

 

Towards the end of Naomi Wallace’s “The Breach”, the joint protagonist, Jude, is imagining a version of the past that didn’t happen, but could have. It takes a while to get there but the scene encapsulates both the power and impotence of hindsight. The characters wrestle with regret, bereavement and guilt, but more so with the question of whether that could have been avoided had they acted differently.

The play jumps between 1977 and 1991, initially as two very different worlds but gradually they overlap and the two separate decades bear witness to each other. Set against a completely bare stage there is little to differentiate the two ages. Different actors play the younger and older versions of the characters. Between the scenes a stark line of white light sweeps the stage, brushing them away like skittles to replace them with their counterparts.

We begin in the seventies, in small town America, a time of restlessness, turbulence, political scandal and a questioning of traditional authority (there are extensive, weighty articles in the programme notes depicting the profound effects on the American youth of the Vietnam War and ‘Neoliberalism’ – although not touched upon at all in the script). Seventeen-year-old Jude (Shannon Tarbet) has taken it upon herself to protect her younger brother Acton (Stanley Morgan). They spend their days in the basement of their modest home creating their own world. Frayne (Charlie Beck) and Hoke (Alfie Jones) gate-crash this world – not so much friends of Acton but emotional racketeers. Conditions are laid and sacrifices must be made. Inevitably the bond between brother and sister is snapped in two. In hindsight, the love they shared that could have prevented this is the exact same love that caused it.

So, you cannot escape the actions of the past then. But can you learn from them? Tellingly there is no casting for the older Acton, but Jude (Jasmine Blackborow), Frayne (Douggie McMeekin) and Hoke (Tom Lewis) reconvene fourteen years later. As each snapshot of 1991 plays out onstage, more is revealed of the dangerous games the teenagers played, focusing on many issues – most notably sexual consent. A lot is said today about how it was a ‘different time’, back then. But accountability (rightly or wrongly) has no limits. As these thirty-somethings examine their past, one wonders who the victims and who the culprits are. And are the intervening years of guilt and atonement enough or should further punishment be executed? This play, while never giving us a succinct answer, suggests we punish ourselves enough. There are no winners.

Sarah Frankcom’s sharp and efficient direction matches Wallace’s writing which is as penetrative as ever. The performances are uniformly magnificent: honest and brutal. Yet it stops just short of drawing us in emotionally. We don’t quite see the fragility, fear and loneliness that lies beneath the rough exterior. Which is a shame, and a surprise. Based partially on past experience, it seems that Wallace has poured a lot of her own heart into the writing; but ultimately it appeals more to the intellect than to our hearts.

 

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Johan Persson

 


The Breach

Hampstead Theatre until 4th June

 

Recently reviewed at this venue:
Night Mother | ★★★★ | October 2021
The Forest | ★★★ | February 2022
The Fever Syndrome | ★★★ | April 2022

 

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