Category Archives: Reviews

The Man Behind the Mask

The Man Behind The Mask

★★★★

Churchill Theatre

The Man Behind the Mask

The Man Behind The Mask

Churchill Theatre

Reviewed – 8th May 2022

★★★★

 

“He’s eighty-eight. An icon. He can afford to mock”

 

After walking onto the stage accompanied by a packed auditorium whooping and cheering, Barry Humphries still feels the need to introduce himself. A paradox that defines the evening ahead; self-deprecation mixed with a majestic awareness of his celebrity. A man of many words he ad-libs but chooses his words carefully, ensuring a rich mix of humour and pathos. “I’m a recovering comedian”, he pronounces at the outset, setting the tone for the next two and a half hours. The throwaway, yet precisely worded, remark prepares us for the vivacious anecdotes, while also hinting at a night peppered with revelations of lost years and alcoholism.

It is a brave enterprise. Humphries has always hidden behind the characters he created. Even after shedding those characters, he has claimed he still always wore a mask, inventing a character called Barry Humphries. “The Man Behind the Mask” is his way of letting us see the truth. For Humphries, at his stage of life, the time has come to talk of many things. And talking is one thing he does exceedingly well. Clad in a rich claret velvet jacket, with Ben Dawson at a grand piano periodically underscoring his reminiscences, Humphries is a born raconteur. He occasionally takes his time, sometimes dipping into easy listening mode. As we approach interval there is a vague tug of disappointment at the cosiness; the lack of outrage or offensiveness. But we soon forget as we are drawn into his life story and the defining moments of his career. The shock of old is replaced by a newfound poignancy. Both bully and bullied as a child, his epigrams betray an outsider’s melancholy fused into a privileged life. He jokingly describes his mother as the “mistress of the vocabulary of discouragement”, and affectionately recalls discovering mementos his father kept throughout his life. He delves into the seemingly inconsequential – school days, art classes, interior decoration, driving lessons – with a novelist’s skill that lets us know that this trivia will have a point later on.

After the interval Humphries is in his stride and his element. For a while he lets Dame Edna Everage take over as he settles back in his Chesterfield and watches, with us, video clips from the nineties and noughties. Scenes from the “The Dame Edna Experience” (her chat show famously described as a ‘monologue interrupted by total strangers’) are highlights of the evening – including a hilarious and prophetic interview with a young Boris Johnson. Johnson is introduced by Edna as the “man who refuses to learn from his mistakes”.

Via a stopover in the guise of Les Patterson, we are soon treated again to Humphries without the mask. He makes frequent cracks at the politic ideology that is increasingly proliferating and shaping entertainment (and society). When his trademark offensiveness seeps through he asks, “will I be cancelled for that?”. He recalls suspected inappropriate attention from a director back in his early career, but brushes it aside: “that didn’t happen back then – it wasn’t invented”. When talking about the difficulties in breaking into comedy, he quips that these days it’s not hard to be a comedian. “You don’t need to be funny. You just have to identify as being funny”. He’s eighty-eight. An icon. He can afford to mock.

Humphries is not afraid of adopting a serious and respectful tone when needed. In plaintive mode he recollects his alcoholism. Laced, of course, with his comic flair. He talks of his stints in rehab at “a private nursing home for thirsty people”. He discards jokes entirely when he touchingly pays tribute to Emily Perry, the actress who portrayed Dame Edna Everage’s sidekick and former bridesmaid, Madge Allsop.

From the man who has always solved his problems by making them worse, we are treated to a relatively safe unveiling, with a slightly uncharacteristic nod to sentimentality. “Delving into one’s memories is often painful, and nostalgia can be toxic. You stir up a lot of sediment and unexpected recollections jump at you with a lethal savagery. You can’t take that journey back alone. You need a friend, a helping hand… an audience! So thank you”. But his declarations are earnest and sober. And thankfully his irreverent humour never dried out when he did.

“Have I slowed down?” he asks us. “Well, yes I have, the show should have finished half an hour ago”. Maybe it should, as we look at our watches; but our hearts disagree, and we would be perfectly happy to stay and listen to him for another two hours.

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

Photography courtesy TEG Dainty

 


The Man Behind The Mask

Churchill Theatre then UK Tour Continues

 

Other shows reviewed by Jonathan this year:
Freud’s Last Session | ★★★★ | King’s Head Theatre | January 2022
A Level Playing Field | ★★★★ | Riverside Studios | February 2022
An Evening Without Kate Bush | ★★★★ | Soho Theatre | February 2022
Steve | ★★★★ | Seven Dials Playhouse | February 2022
The Devil’s in the Chair | ★★★★ | Riverside Studios | February 2022
Us | ★★★★ | White Bear Theatre | February 2022
The Straw Chair | ★★★ | Finborough Theatre | April 2022
The Silent Woman | ★★★★ | White Bear Theatre | April 2022
The End of the Night | ★★ | Park Theatre | May 2022
Orlando | ★★★★ | Jermyn Street Theatre | May 2022

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

American Idiot

American Idiot

★★★★

Bridewell Theatre

American Idiot

American Idiot

Bridewell Theatre

Reviewed – 5th May 2022

★★★★

 

“the large ensemble inject a real energy into the show”

 

American Idiot, directed by Matt Bentley, follows the lives of three disgruntled young men struggling to find purpose after the events of 9/11. Leaving their small town for the big city with big dreams, the trio’s paths soon diverge when Johnny (Nick Dore) succumbs to his drug addicted alter ego St. Jimmy (Sorrel Brown), Tunny (George Langdown) enlists in the army, and Will (Joshua Yeardley) returns home to look after his young child.

All set to the songs of Green Day’s chart-topping album American Idiot, the eponymous musical explores the political atmosphere of the early 2000s and the presidency of George W. Bush. The album in fact was conceived by the band as a concept album telling the story of a low-middle class American anti-hero Jesus of Suburbia and thus its rendering on stage should not be considered a jukebox musical but rather an already fleshed out tale of woe. The album only has two explicitly political songs – American Idiot and Holiday, both of which feature in the show – but a general theme of anti-establishment is threaded throughout.

Despite its relatively depressing subject matter, American Idiot is a complete romp. The show is jam-packed with songs and medleys and the large ensemble (led by Alice Signell) inject a real energy into the show with their lively dancing and expressive movements (Jen Bullock). The plot itself is simple enough to follow but some more dialogue between songs would really help to bridge the gap between back-to-back songs.

Brown’s performance as St. Jimmy is particularly dynamic and her performance of the song St. Jimmy the strongest in the show. It is a joy every time she is on stage. Dore’s performance is strong too and he truly embodies the early-2000s punk in both attitude and aesthetic. He is wholly believable, and his voice is perfect for his numerous solos. Other notable songs include American Idiot, Know Your Enemy and 21 Guns – all of which the cast deliver with great emotion and enthusiasm.

The band, led by Oscar Denihan, are phenomenal, blasting out track after track. Unfortunately, there were a few technical difficulties with electric guitars not working and sound levels varying slightly, but it was otherwise a fantastic performance from all. James Green on the drums is particularly good.

The set (Andrew Laidlaw) is simple but highly adaptable and the space well used. Black flight cases are used effectively as seats, hospital beds and even coffins of the American soldiers killed in the Iraq war. A Murphy bed is used for certain scenes and cleverly has a shelf with glued-on beer cans on its underside for décor when it is put away.

Costumes (Clare Harding) are authentically early-2000s punk with skinny jeans, flannel and eyeliner abound. Lighting (Olly Levett) is for the most part well done though again there were a few technical glitches with late spotlights and light changes out of beat to the music.

Though a cultural commentary of its time, Green Day’s call for radical change remains relevant today. American Idiot will be a thrill for any lover of pop punk and the amateur cast should be very proud of this production.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

Photography by Stephen Russell

 


American Idiot

Bridewell Theatre until 14th May

 

Other shows recently reviewed by Flora:
Myra Dubois: Dead Funny | ★★★★ | Garrick Theatre | September 2021
Flushed | ★★★★ | Park Theatre | October 2021
Dick Whittington | ★★★★ | Phoenix Theatre | December 2021
Dog Show | ★★★★★ | Pleasance Theatre | December 2021
& Juliet | ★★★★ | Shaftesbury Theatre | April 2022

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews