Tag Archives: A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

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Bridge House Theatre

A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

Bridge House Theatre

Reviewed – 28th November 2019

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“two hours after the first internalised β€˜humbug’ we’re all singing β€˜Have Yourselves a Merry Little Christmas’ with the cast and feeling impressively jolly”

 

The first question is β€˜Why?’ Why take on the challenge of Dickens’ mawkish seasonal classic, with its rich recipe of bustling streets, vivid characters and hovels packed with rosy-cheeked urchins with four actors above a pub? Nevertheless, two hours after the first internalised β€˜humbug’ we’re all singing β€˜Have Yourselves a Merry Little Christmas’ with the cast and feeling impressively jolly.

The group’s secret appears to be twofold. One, to approach their task as strolling players, chivvying up spirits by strumming instruments and carolling in a vaguely Victorian manner. Two, and not quite so successfully, relying on our imaginations. So stretched are the consummate performance skills available that the ghost of Christmas future is played by a human-shaped structure with a sheet over it. Doubling up is part of the fun, of course. Bridge House Theatre regular, Jamie Ross, copes with both extremes of the optimism spectrum in bright-eyed Bob Cratchit on one hand and decomposing Jacob Marley on the other; he is also Musical Director. Ben Woods navigates a similar stretch between Scrooge’s nephew and Young Scrooge but does so effortlessly. Saorla Wright mops up the female roles and the ghost of Christmas Past with cheeriness and agility, literally jumping between parts at times, whether Mrs Cratchit, Belle or atmospheric cello.

Best of all, the central role of Scrooge is played by Rachel Izen, by some reports the first female to play the role, and it is the originality and force of her performance that keeps the venture from ever looking like coming off the rails. Playing him as a more contemporary, bullish capitalist rather than the shrivelled old fun-sponge usually depicted lifts this familiar yarn and steers it away from the gothic spookiness that’s often wasted on modern audiences anyway.

In service of Scrooge’s emotional journey, Director Guy Retallack’s own adaptation pushes the action along and allows for joyous interludes like a game of charades with the audience, a threat of participation which brings the only true scary moment for many. His adaptation also demands great discipline and support from the creative and technical departments, outstanding among which is the Sound Design from Phil Lee, who is kept especially busy evoking a roomful of invisible children and howling winds whenever a door is opened. The puppetry (Consultant, Jo Elizabeth May) is a good solution to space and cast issues, but an inanimate Tiny Tim is as hard to love as it’s possible for a sickly child to be. This is awkward given his job of delivering the tear-jerking last line, but by then everyone has caught Bob Cratchit’s spirit of forgiveness and is ready to join the singalong. Why? Because β€˜Christmas’.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

 


A Christmas Carol

Bridge House Theatre until 22nd December

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Plaid Tidings | β˜…β˜…β˜… | December 2018
Twelfth Night | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2019
Tick, Tick… BOOM! | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2019

 

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A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol
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Print Room at the Coronet

A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol

Print Room at the Coronet

Reviewed – 12th December 2018

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“Francis’ conviction sees many of us craning to check that there isn’t a haunting figure lurking stage left”

 

‘Bah! Humbug!’ So one might say of A Christmas Carol, a story so well-known as to risk being hackneyed (indeed, this is one of several London Christmas Carols running in 2018). Despite this being a tale many audience members must know well, this one-man performance by Clive Francis still manages to surprise and move.

An extremely pacey seventy minute rendition sees us rattle through a merry cast of characters, with Francis seeming to transform before our eyes. So speedy is the delivery that an actor with less-than-perfect diction would risk losing the audience amidst the occasional density of the Dickensian language. No such danger with Francis, whose lengthy West End credits are testament: we are in safe hands. That said, we do occasionally lose the odd phrase to the relentless pace – a compromise worth making for a performance that’s brisk enough to never see us bored.

The range of characters unfolding before us doesn’t allow for a moment of inertia. One moment we shudder at the miserly Ebenezer Scrooge, pinched and acerbic; the next, with chameleonic dexterity, the figure transforms to an affable and particularly well-realised Bob Cratchit. Perfectly devised and executed lighting design (Alex Ramsden) and music and sound (Phillip Sheppard) further bring the story to life. We can readily believe that we’re shifting seamlessly from the rosy interior of a warm family celebration, echoing with laughter, to the chilly presence of unwelcome spirits. The ghostly visitors are cleverly represented by shafts of white light, and Francis’ conviction sees many of us craning to check that there isn’t a haunting figure lurking stage left.

Light and sound also contribute to the performance variously being genuinely creepy, as when Scrooge stands in horror at his own deathbed, and truly affecting. That the production remarkably manages to avoid mawkishness, even around the (let’s face it, frankly treacly) Tiny Tim character and narrative, is credit to the utter class of the staging and actor.

As a seasonal night out, this can’t be beat. What could be more festive than a viewing of the archetypal Christmas tale replete with snowy trees, flickering candles and the scent of mulled wine? The Coronet makes for the perfect setting, with its air of faded grandeur and peeling paint only adding to the ambiance. Oh – and, as the star at the top of the tree, look out for a truly magical surprise as the performance draws to a close. Dickens would approve.

 

Reviewed by Abi Davies

 


A Christmas Carol

Print Room at the Coronet until 14th December

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Open House | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2018
The Comet | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | March 2018
How It Is (Part One) | β˜…β˜…Β½ | May 2018
Act & Terminal 3 | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2018
The Outsider | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2018
Love Lies Bleeding | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2018

 

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