Tag Archives: 2024X

🎭 A TOP SHOW IN AUGUST 2024 🎭

TWO COME HOME

★★★★★

King’s Head Theatre

TWO COME HOME at the King’s Head Theatre

★★★★★

“raw emotion is never far from the surface in this attention grabbing show”

Billed as an exploration of the realities of being gay in an impoverished rural community, ‘Two Come Home’ is a gut-wrenching drama that is a huge credit to its highly talented queer cast and crew.

Previously performed in Brighton, the show has an unmissable four-day run at the King’s Head Theatre, Islington as part of the Camden Fringe Festival. There’s a compelling, raw energy to this piece by Joe Eason which is set on the wrong side of the tracks in small town, deep south America.

The multi-talented Eason also co-stars in his own play and has in addition both designed the show and composed its haunting music. Kirsten Obank-Sharpe’s direction is meticulous, keeping the focus sharp throughout. She is also a member of an on-stage three-piece band, together with Cam Southcott on violin and Elizabeth Cleone Hopland on cello.

Evan’s dad has been jailed for ten years for violent crime. His gay son is clinging to the wreckage of a broken affair that ended a decade earlier. His mum (Nicola Goodchild in a wild performance full of sad energy) is a dysfunctional addict who has never learnt to love him. What happens when Evan’s ex (Ben Maytham) walks back into Evan’s life and will love rekindle in these most desperate of times?

As Philip Larkin famously wrote, ‘they fuck you up, your mum and dad’. Besides the gay love story, there’s an important second narrative here about the failure of familial love. Come what may, raw emotion is never far from the surface in this attention grabbing show. There’s plenty of that strength of feeling in the furiously frustrated language the characters exchange, and there’s wit and poetry too.

Joe Eason’s design is simple and to the point, with some effective lighting adding to the atmosphere generated by the off-key, melancholic score. A highpoint was his voice and guitar rendition of a beautiful song about love lost. The chemistry between the two estranged lovers is electric, helped by intimacy coaching from Marina Cusi Sanchez. James Burton blisters with toxically dangerous energy as Caleb Nicolson.

At the end it’s left to a woman cop (a deft and witty performance by Hannelore Canessa-Wright) to act the Greek chorus and deliver a final message: ‘Just drop the drama! Happiness is a choice’.

I’m not able to report why the playwright chose the American rust bucket setting. This Brokeback vibe has big screen reasonance. The show’s publicity cites its relevance to young audiences. Do similar dramas play out in rural Norfolk or Wales today?

 


TWO COME HOME at the King’s Head Theatre

Reviewed on 15th August 2024

by David Woodward

Photography by J. R. Dawson

 

 


 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE PINK LIST | ★★★★ | August 2024
ENG-ER-LAND | ★★★ | July 2024
DIVA: LIVE FROM HELL! | ★★★★ | June 2024
BEATS | ★★★ | April 2024
BREEDING | ★★★★ | March 2024
TURNING THE SCREW | ★★★★ | February 2024
EXHIBITIONISTS | ★★ | January 2024
DIARY OF A GAY DISASTER | ★★★★ | July 2023
THE BLACK CAT | ★★★★★ | March 2023
THE MANNY | ★★★ | January 2023

TWO COME HOME

TWO COME HOME

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🎭 TOP EDINBURGH FRINGE MUSICAL 2024 🎭

GODFATHER DEATH: A GRIMMS’ MUSICAL

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

GODFATHER DEATH: A GRIMMS’ MUSICAL at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“The carefully crafted and deftly performed musical score has earthy tones of folk and blues”

Godfather Death: A Grimm’s Musical is a commanding and energetic musical adaptation of a dark, morality fairy-tale first collected by the Brothers Grimm. It is brought to life by the talented stage and musical direction of brothers Jack and Finlay Avison and a strong, committed, and versatile cast.

On the birth of her thirteenth child, with another mouth to feed and under threat of the child being sent to the workhouse, a mother must find a Godfather who will be a benefactor to her new-born son. Vying for this role are God and the Devil. God imperiously offers unconditional love and other divine promises, but the mother has only witnessed poverty and hardship and finds God’s promises empty. The Devil’s temptations are similarly unpalatable.

Godfather Death, languid yet playful, then offers his own services, promising to look after the boy and family financially. On the son’s coming of age, he bestows upon him the gift of knowing when someone is to live or to die. His benefactory gift comes with a warning, however: there can be no way to avoid Death when the person’s time is up.

As the Godson, grows, becoming ‘the Physician,’ he encounters the myriad complexities of the mortal struggle as he stands in the way of Death. The tongue-in-cheek song ‘Death is a friend of mine’ catches this moment. Is it acceptable to profiteer from people’s fear of Death? How do we square our moral stance in accepting or railing against the fate of others? We all come to accept Death’s invitation.

Andrew Lodge (Death) holds the stage and the audience throughout this captivating musical, an ever present and highly able singer and actor, bringing malice, charm, persuasion and wit to the role with ease.

Jack Mailer gives the performance of his life as the Godson / Physician, with superbly controlled singing and emotive strength.

Iona Wood (Mother, Princess) brings the full range of emotions to her roles and the audience feel her plight, whilst Aila Swan (God, Queen, Sibling, Servant) shows a highly dynamic vocal dexterity in her characterful and energetic portrayal of God and the sister, especially in lively duets with her brother.

Finlay Avison (Co-Director) works hard to overcome the challenges of a small stage, many costumes and props and a complex narrative. The cast, especially Death, engage with the audience, moving in and around the auditorium, ensuring we are fully immersed in the storytelling.

The set is simple, with the two live musicians on stage and amusingly taking a comedic part in the narrative at times. Use of costumes and props clarify the multiple roles, and the thematic use of candles is a powerful metaphor for life as it is created and taken away.

Lighting by Fraser Scott is used effectively and evocatively throughout, creating a suitably ethereal suspense, although the small stage did mean at times it was difficult for the cast to follow the spot at the edges.

Jack Avison is an accomplished Co-Musical Director, helping the swift transitions in an otherwise complex narrative to take shape. He is ably assisted by Jon Wallace on drums, which never overpowered. The carefully crafted and deftly performed score has earthy tones of folk and blues alongside haunting and memorable melodies and some real crowd-pleasing ensemble songs. The overlapping melodies are performed with gusto by this musically talented cast, which despite the odd slip in intonation, had the audience laughing especially at the closing number ‘Everybody Dies (Thank F**k)

This is a thoroughly entertaining musical, which would be interesting to see on a larger stage.


GODFATHER DEATH: A GRIMMS’ MUSICAL at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – theSpace @ Surgeons’ Hall – Haldane Theatre

Reviewed on 13th August 2024

by Lucy Williams

 

 


GODFATHER DEATH

GODFATHER DEATH

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