WHEN YOU PASS OVER MY TOMB at the Arcola Theatre
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“Challenging, stimulating, playful, thrilling, but above all, it defies categorisation.”
At curtain call, Al Nedjari, the actor playing the writer of βWhen You Walk Over My Tombβ announces that there is somebody in the audience βpretending to be meβ. He invites the real-life Sergio Blanco onstage. We are almost convinced it is this way round, such is the blurring of truth and fiction. We have forgotten by now that Nedjari isnβt, in fact, Blanco, and that Charlie MacGechan and Danny Scheinmann are not their onstage characters too. The acting is so natural and quasi-improvised that we have been utterly drawn into the surreal, stark, seductive fiction.
Two hours earlier, the trio emerge from within the audience and introduce themselves as ghosts, recounting how they each died, before slipping into their characters for the main narrative. βWhen You Walk Over My Tombβ recounts the authorβs last days having decided to arrange his own assisted suicide in a Swiss clinic run by Dr. Godwin (Scheinmann). He has resolved to donate his body to a convicted necrophiliac, Khaled (MacGechan), interned in the Bethlem psychiatric hospital in London (βwhat difference is there between donating my body to science and donating it to someone who might find pleasure in it when Iβm deadβ). The play unfolds, alternating between the playwrightβs encounters with the doctor and the young man who is lustfully preparing to receive his corpse after his death. We lose count of the taboos that are broken as we try to keep up with the uncomfortable yet dizzyingly fascinating and often beautiful prose. There are several references to Mary Shelleyβs βFrankensteinβ and, indeed, this play is its own chimera β a monster compounded of incongruous parts. Simultaneously tragic and hopeful. A love letter to life but lusting for death. It even has its own epitaph rather than an epilogue.
“the acting skills of Nedjari, MacGechan and Scheinmann alchemise the complex material into gorgeous bitesize pieces of entertainment that highlight every line of the brilliant material”
βWhen You Walk Over My Tombβ follows the success of Blancoβs OFFIE award winning βThebes Landβ and βThe Rage of Narcissusβ at the Arcola Theatre. One of the worldβs most performed living Spanish-language writers, his current work is brilliantly adapted and directed by Daniel Goldman who has teased out the themes of death, eroticism, passion, desire, mortality and the afterlife with a surgeonβs skill while still dressing the harrowing subject matter in swathes of humour. Cultural references are thrown in left right and centre from Shakespeare to the Brothers Grimm, Byron, Shelly, Flaubert, Bach, Lennon. Religious iconography becomes pornography, while a drowned childβs discarded Playmobil toy adopts the same potent symbolism of Yorickβs skull.
It is as though the concept of the play within a play is being reflected from parallel mirrors and stretched to infinity. But the acting skills of Nedjari, MacGechan and Scheinmann alchemise the complex material into gorgeous bitesize pieces of entertainment that highlight every line of the brilliant material. Blanco takes time out to explain certain matters, such as the subtle differences between euthanasia and assisted suicide. The doctor recounts some cases (real life or fictional weβre never quite sure) of necrophilia. But it is never expositional. The cast involve the audience at times, or address the tech box, giving cues to the operator – but it is never contrived. The actors blur their real selves with their on-stage personas, but we never lose sight of the distinction. It has been dubbed autofiction and, although the audience doesnβt question it, the actors often wryly step out of character, interrupting the action to ask what aspects of this show are actually real.
Challenging, stimulating, playful, thrilling, but above all, it defies categorisation. One can describe the patterns of a kaleidoscope, but it is only when you hold it up to the eye that you grasp the true beauty. βWhen You Walk Over My Tombβ is one of those pieces of theatre that has to be seen to be believed. Original, perverse, intoxicating. Funny and sad; it will make you look at life another way. And death. And what lies between and possibly after. A must-see triumph. I bet youβre dying to see it!
WHEN YOU PASS OVER MY TOMB at the Arcola Theatre
Reviewed on 12th February 2024
by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Alex Brenner
Previously reviewed at this venue:
SPUTNIK SWEETHEART | β β β | October 2023
GENTLEMEN | β β β β | October 2023
THE BRIEF LIFE & MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF BORIS III, KING OF BULGARIA | β β β β β | September 2023
THE WETSUITMAN | β β β | August 2023
UNION | β β β | July 2023
DUCK | β β β β | June 2023
POSSESSION | β β β β β | June 2023
UNDER THE BLACK ROCK | β β β | March 2023
THE MISTAKE | β β β β | January 2023
THE POLTERGEIST | β β Β½ | October 2022
THE APOLOGY | β β β β | September 2022
LβINCORONAZIONE DI POPPEA | β β β β | July 2022
WHEN YOU PASS OVER MY TOMB
WHEN YOU PASS OVER MY TOMB
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