Tag Archives: Abi Davies

The Incident Pit

★½

Tristan Bates Theatre

The Incident Pit

The Incident Pit

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 27th July 2019

★½

 

“The actors are talented, and do their best with the starkest of stagings”

 

Wikipedia defines an incident pit as ‘a conceptual pit with sides that become steeper over time and with each new incident until a point of no return is reached. As time moves forward, seemingly innocuous incidents push a situation further toward a bad situation’. Regrettably, the bad situation here is an uncomfortable combination of underwhelming scripting and direction.

The play’s namesake is a flooded quarry, the depths of which remain unexplored. As the play opens, yet another diver has lost their life in the attempt, and the performance goes on to document the impact of the seductive pull of this untamed beast as two divers consider what might lie below. The premise is gripping and there are chances here for fascinating themes to be explored. Where does bravery end and recklessness begin? When does courage and determination tip into selfishness and obsession? And what is it about unexplored places that so compels us?

The fact that the theses are so promising makes the execution all the more frustrating. The Tristan Bates specialises in new writing, and this is to be celebrated – but The Incident Pit is a salutary reminder that sparkling playwriting is so much more than just bodily lifting the written word into stage dialogue. The actors in this two-hander, Carl Wharton and Miranda Benjamin, do their best but the language is unforgiving. Clumsy, improbable phrases like ‘she was decorated on her return extensively’ (Benjamin as Fiona on her resistance fighter grandmother) and ‘the pit has claimed the lives of…’ (Martin, played by Wharton) make it impossible for us to believe in these characters (not to mention the unexplained peculiarity of two people who seem to have nothing in common and seem to frankly dislike one other spending so much time in each other’s company). This not how people speak, and it’s hard to watch the cast try and sometimes fail to inject credibility into the script.

Wharton, especially, seems to struggle. He has the perfect look for diving-obsessed Martin; athletic, lean, driven. But the plodding pacing and unvarying tone (with a few high drama moments that, when they come, seem so at odds and without preamble that they ring out, sounding tinny) mean that Wharton’s delivery drifts towards monotony.

One of the more febrile moments, a wartime scene, falls especially flat. Fiona’s grandmother is bound to a chair while Martin stalks around as a Nazi officer in a performance dripping with cliches. We’re but a hair’s breadth away from ‘vee haff ways of making you talk’ here, and the plot conceit deserves better. Using ‘ein’ and ‘und’ liberally throughput speech in a frankly hammy German accent doesn’t make for a convincing or in any way menacing performance; again, Wharton has been hamstrung by scripting, but the delivery and indeed the directing (by Chris Leicester, also writing and producing) call for far more nuance.

The titular pit sounds full of intrigue and menace, and the ideas here are compelling. The actors are talented, and do their best with the starkest of stagings. But ultimately, the thrill of this pit comes not during the drama of the night, but at the production’s end.

Reviewed by Abi Davies

 


The Incident Pit

Tristan Bates Theatre

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Drowned or Saved? | ★★★★ | November 2018
Me & My Left Ball | ★★★★ | January 2019
Nuns | ★★★ | January 2019
Classified | ★★★½ | March 2019
Oranges & Ink | ★★ | March 2019
Mortgage | ★★★ | April 2019
Sad About The Cows | ★★ | May 2019
The Luncheon | ★★★ | June 2019
To Drone In The Rain | ★★ | June 2019
Sorry Did I Wake You | ★★★★ | July 2019

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com

 

After Dark; or, A Drama of London Life
★★★★

Finborough Theatre

After Dark; or, A Drama of London Life

After Dark; or, A Drama of London Life

Finborough Theatre

Reviewed – 20th June 2019

★★★★

 

“once you get your ear into a penny dreadful frame of mind, it becomes engrossing and plain fun”

 

If you’d told me that a Thursday evening in Brexit Britain following the latest instalment of a soulless slog towards finding the new Tory Prime Minister would have seen me grinning along to a rousing rendition of Rule Britannia, complete with Union Jacks, I’d have laughed in your face. But perhaps the play is right; all the best things do happen After Dark.

Written by Dion Boucicault (who based it on Les Oiseaux de Proie by Eugène Grangé and Adolphe d’Ennery), the work, subtitled A Drama of London Life, was an 1868 box office hit. London life is right; we find ourselves at the nexus of some key moments in our city’s past. Robert Peel’s bobbies patrol the streets, the new Metropolitan line (cleverly rendered) plays a starring role and (gulp) empire is held above all. Despite adjustments for modern audiences (director Phil Willmott rightly removed anti-Semitic characterisation), this remains every inch the melodrama, with ham in spades. The music hall is still alive at the Finborough, with the saucy ditties to prove it, and some depictions border on panto. Toby Wynn-Davies as sly lawyer Chandos Bellingham, for example, is only ever a signature song away from Fagin – but once you get your ear into a penny dreadful frame of mind, it becomes engrossing and just good plain fun. Wynn-Davies in particular brings real menace, especially in a beautifully-choreographed scene making the most of the clever sliding set and a terrific thunderclap sound effect.

In fact sound (Julian Starr) and lighting (Zak Macro) are, uniformly, first class. Rousing Victorian brass sets the scene and the live music too is of exceptionally high quality; Gabi King, Rosa Lennox (who is also musical director) and Helen Potter deliver a genuinely affecting rendition of Abide With Me, amongst other more ribald pieces. Hannah Postlethwaite’s adroit staging, establishing all of London from treacherous Rotherhithe to a smart hat shop, combined with liberal quantities of dry ice, make the small space feel genuinely atmospheric. It doesn’t take long to believe we’re in the murky streets of old; fans of Sherlock Holmes will find plenty here to enjoy.

Those of us who have had a sticky tube journey here might be heard snorting at the underground described as a ‘glorious pathway of shining light’, and certainly there are other moments that date the piece even uncomfortably (the uneasily stereotypical Russian dance troupe springs to mind). But approach the night with tongue firmly in cheek, anticipating an ending of Shakespearean levels of silliness, and you can’t go too far wrong.

 

Reviewed by Abi Davies

Photography by Sheila Burnett

 


 After Dark; or, A Drama of London Life

Finborough Theatre until 6th July

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Square Rounds | ★★★ | September 2018
A Funny Thing Happened … | ★★★★ | October 2018
Bury the Dead | ★★★★ | November 2018
Exodus | ★★★★ | November 2018
Jeannie | ★★★★ | November 2018
Beast on the Moon | ★★★★★ | January 2019
Time Is Love | ★★★½ | January 2019
A Lesson From Aloes | ★★★★★ | March 2019
Maggie May     | ★★★★ | March 2019
Blueprint Medea | ★★★ | May 2019

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com