Category Archives: Reviews

BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF

★★★★

UK Tour

BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF

Theatre Royal Windsor

★★★★

“Tragedy and farce link arms and are not afraid to share the same lines of dialogue.”

Although Alan Bleasdale wrote the original series of television plays before Margaret Thatcher came to power, it wasn’t first broadcast until 1982 and was consequently seen to be a specific critique of the Thatcher era. His writing, though, had a far more wide-ranging effect that guaranteed the success of the stories. The nostalgic and gritty realism still holds power nearly half a century later, as evidenced by James Graham’s stirring adaptation for the stage, currently on a nationwide tour.

The early nineteen-eighties were different things for different people. At one end of the scale there were the rich and ambitious, riding on progress and the jetstream of new money. But while Harry Enfield parodied this selfishness of the yuppie culture (we all remember the ‘Loadsamoney’ character?), Bleasdale was focusing on the underside; the high unemployment and collapse of the primary industries. “Boys form the Blackstuff” follows five working class men trying to keep afloat amid this recession, not helped by the suspicious and bullying hand of the Department of Employment.

Amy Jane Cook’s brutalist and severe set evokes the Liverpool docklands with its iron frameworks which close in on the more intimate scenes, lending an air of claustrophobia to the domestic bickering that runs parallel to the collective fight for survival that these characters are up against. Kate Wasserberg’s stylish direction weaves the short scenes together into a series of choreographed vignettes that flow, then clash like freshwater rapids coming up against the murkiness and remorselessness of the Mersey.

We get to know the principal characters early on (if we don’t know them already). Chrissie, Loggo, Yosser, George, Dixie and Snowy. Even if you are unfamiliar with the original, and once you’ve acclimatised to the authentic Liverpudlian accent, their stories are easy to follow. The performances of each cast member are strikingly individual and recognisable. Obviously, Jay Johnson’s ‘Yosser’ stands out from the crowd with his peppered catchphrases (‘gizza job’ and ‘I could do that’) and jittery, unpredictable energy. We realise that this could be a play about mental health – a sudden understanding that whisks the narrative into the present day but without the unease of having to tread carefully through contemporary fragility. Words of wisdom, particularly from Ged McKenna’s wonderfully uneducated yet perfectly erudite ‘George’, are never lost in the humour. We laugh through this show just as much as we gasp at the personal hardships endured.

The pace picks up in the second act, even as the scenes get longer and more introspective. The humour and pathos join forces in monologue. Tragedy and farce link arms and are not afraid to share the same lines of dialogue. A funeral scene, as poignant as they come, bleeds brilliantly into the comedy of a dole queue. An anguished wife (a superb Sian Polhill-Thomas) wondering how to feed her children is, in the next scene, an acerbically grim clerk at the jobcentre. But under the lights, each character casts shadow of hope. Even if the shades aren’t subtle, it is the contrast of light and dark that bring this show alive.

We might not have admitted this in the eighties, but these ‘boys’ feel emasculated, fragile and desperate for hope. The writing is sensitive beyond its years, and in Graham’s revival we can carouse in the period without having to make excuses for it. Despite being geographically and culturally specific, it is universal. And despite being rooted in a particular decade, it is timeless. The stories of ordinary people, told in an extraordinary production.



BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF

Theatre Royal Windsor then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 29th January 2025

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Alistair Muir

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

FILUMENA | ★★★★ | October 2024
THE GATES OF KYIV | ★★★★ | September 2024
ACCOLADE | ★★★½ | June 2024
OH WHAT A LOVELY WAR | ★★★★ | April 2024
CLOSURE | ★★★★ | February 2024
THE GREAT GATSBY | ★★★ | February 2024

BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF

BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF

BOYS FROM THE BLACKSTUFF

 

 

DEMI ADEJUYIGBE IS GOING TO DO ONE (1) BACKFLIP

★★★★★

Soho Theatre

DEMI ADEJUYIGBE IS GOING TO DO ONE (1) BACKFLIP

Soho Theatre

★★★★★

“it is Demi’s charisma, energy and warmth which shoot the show onto a whole other level”

Demi Adejuyigbe is Going to Do One (1) Backflip is a delight from beginning to end. By Demi’s own admission the show is ‘so f*ing dumb’. But that is the glory of it.

Nominated for Best Newcomer at Edinburgh Fringe 2024, Demi Adejuyigbe has shot onto the U.K. comedy scene, despite hailing from LA, with his own brand of joyous offbeat musical comedy.

In a self-aware twist on the stand-up tradition of exploring identity, this show is unapologetically impersonal. Demi has heard his crush (Marge Simpson) thinks backflips are cool, so he’s going to do one live on stage. But before that he’s going to take us through the best ways to impress a crush, from teaching them about jazz, to solving racism. Hopefully the interruptions from various celebrity phone calls won’t ruin Demi’s chances with his crush!

The show is structured as a presentation, using AV, but there’s also pre-recorded elements, an on-stage keyboard, a mysterious box where audience members are encouraged to write their names, and at one point, a robot.

The presentation becomes a series of musical bits, each spiralling further into an atmosphere of general silliness. Demi’s relaxed style makes a thoroughly scripted and impeccably planned show feel fresh and off the cuff. The world is so well constructed that it briefly seems plausible that Barack Obama is really calling him.

The show is fun, and divorced from reality, but it is not empty escapism. There are topical elements, and moments where the darkness of the world bleeds briefly into the show, before Demi shakes it off and returns to a delightful musical number.

The script itself is so cleverly composed that someone else could follow the beats and perform the piece. However, it is Demi’s charisma, energy and warmth which shoot the show onto a whole other level. His cheeky, knowing vibe gives depth to the absurdity and allows the audience to float away on the tide of the madness.

This show is specific and odd, but Demi Adejuyigbe entirely pulls it off. It’s a piece oozing with zany originality which will stay with you for weeks to come.

Demi Adejuyigbe is performing at Soho Theatre until Saturday 15 February, and will perform at Fairfield Social Club, Manchester on Sunday 16 February.

 



DEMI ADEJUYIGBE IS GOING TO DO ONE (1) BACKFLIP

Soho Theatre

Reviewed on 29th January 2025

by Auriol Reddaway

Photography by Josh Goldner

 

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

MAKE ME LOOK FIT ON THE POSTER | ★★★★ | January 2025
SANTI & NAZ | ★★★★ | January 2025
BALL & BOE – FOR FOURTEEN NIGHTS ONLY | ★★★★ | December 2024
GINGER JOHNSON BLOWS OFF! | ★★★ | September 2024
COLIN HOULT: COLIN | ★★★★ | September 2024
VITAMIN D | ★★★★ | September 2024
THE DAO OF UNREPRESENTATIVE BRITISH CHINESE EXPERIENCE | ★★★★ | June 2024
BABY DINOSAUR | ★★★ | June 2024
JAZZ EMU | ★★★★★ | June 2024
BLIZZARD | ★★★★ | May 2024
BOYS ON THE VERGE OF TEARS | ★★★★ | April 2024
SPENCER JONES: MAKING FRIENDS | ★★★★ | April 2024

DEMI ADEJUYIGBE

DEMI ADEJUYIGBE

DEMI ADEJUYIGBE