Tag Archives: Alex Forey

HIDE AND SEEK

★★★★

Park Theatre

HIDE AND SEEK at the Park Theatre

★★★★

“a real testament to exciting new writing, a brilliantly well-constructed meditation on fantasy and reality”

Tobia Rossi’s tale of teenage exploration and alienation is a great new take on attraction across the divide. There are shades of Holden Caulfield in Louis Scarpa’s Gio, an awkward teenage theorist, whereas Nico Cetrulo’s Mirko is the polar opposite; popular, and growing into his own power. This is no Heartstopper-esque wholesome teenage love story and all the better for it.

The two boys are contemporaries at the same school, though definitely not friends. Mirko stumbles upon Gio, who is hiding in a cave in remote woods, kilometres from their Italian village where nothing exciting happens. Gio is inexpertly living like a hermit after having run away and cut himself off from the world, his last message a cryptic online post. Mirko is thrilled at his discovery, informing Gio of his infamy in the outside world. Gio pleads for Mirko to keep his hiding place secret, persuading him of the discontentment he experiences in the outside world. Mirko resolves to help him, and becomes an enabler, bringing Gio sustenance and companionship over their visits. As they become close, their talk turns to their fantasies, and they explore their sexualities, initially under the guise of helping Mirko ‘practice’ for girls.

Their conversations often revolve around local stories and gossip that have dogged Gio since he was small, resulting in him being a target for school bullies. These are slowly uncovered, and often play at the boundaries of innocence and darkness. Misinterpretation is also a major theme, sometimes willfully prompted as Gio’s cover up becomes ever more elaborate. This contrasts with Gio’s obsession with authenticity; there are delicious tensions between this and the construction of falsehoods that suit both characters.

Both Rossi’s story and Carlotta Brentan’s translation and direction have ensured the script is full of interesting circularity, really mining the most out of these ideas, with believably unsympathetic characters at the core. I particularly enjoyed the juxtaposition of Mirko’s self-help pseudo-intellectualism against Gio’s misguided teenage logic. Rossi doesn’t insist on pointing out the flaws, and allows them to find dark common ground. The action builds to a climax that feels inevitable thanks to artful signposting, but is not lacking in emotional and visceral heft.

Louis Scarpa is all awkward sleeve pulling as Gio, which plays well into a central motif surrounding hands. He also nails down a mysterious and otherworldly air to Gio, which foreshadows the final monologue perfectly. When he gets into a flow on his special interests, his wide-eyed energy is infectious, and matched by Nico Cetrulo as Mirko. Cetrulo is able to strike the right balance between Nico’s outward confidence, and the inexperience he is acutely aware of. Their relationship feels appropriately accidental, never straying far from the shame that engulfs Mirko.

The set (Constance Comparot) evokes Gio’s stinking cave well, with concrete and stone blocks getting strewn with rubbish and tinned supplies throughout the piece. Alex Forey cleverly uses a combination of side lights and the torch on a phone to evoke dinginess, and allows the actors to play in the shadows before revealing themselves. Later, pulsating LED lights (brought by Mirko) subtly tell the passage of time, and are a backdrop to Gio’s reclusive and confused existence. This is again emphasised by Mirko’s costume changes (Alessandro Milzoni) between scenes which contrast with Gio remaining in the same filthy hoody.

This is a fantastic production that has journeyed from Italy via New York and the Vault Festival in 2023. It is a real testament to exciting new writing, a brilliantly well-constructed meditation on fantasy and reality, truth and untruths, authenticity and facades with two enticing performances at its heart


HIDE AND SEEK at the Park Theatre

Reviewed on 14th March 2024

by Rosie Thomas

Photography by Mariano Gobbi

 

 


Previously reviewed at this venue:

COWBOYS AND LESBIANS | ★★★★ | February 2024
HIR | ★★★★ | February 2024
LEAVES OF GLASS | ★★★★ | January 2024
KIM’S CONVENIENCE | ★★★★ | January 2024
21 ROUND FOR CHRISTMAS | ★★★★ | December 2023
THE TIME MACHINE – A COMEDY | ★★★★ | December 2023
IKARIA | ★★★★ | November 2023
PASSING | ★★★½ | November 2023
THE INTERVIEW | ★★★ | November 2023
IT’S HEADED STRAIGHT TOWARDS US | ★★★★★ | September 2023
SORRY WE DIDN’T DIE AT SEA | ★★½ | September 2023
THE GARDEN OF WORDS | ★★★ | August 2023

HIDE AND SEEK

HIDE AND SEEK

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page

 

21 Round For Christmas

★★★★

Park Theatre

21 ROUND FOR CHRISTMAS at the Park Theatre

★★★★

“There is an ease to the performance that disguises the daunting task of being alone on stage for an hour and a quarter”

There are plenty of theatre shows that pop up at this time of year that like to describe themselves as an ‘alternative’ Christmas gig. Not all live up to the accolade. “21 Round for Christmas” is one that does. Its originality sneaks up on you like the punchline of a shaggy dog story, hiding for much of the time behind the kitchen sink drama of a meandering monologue that, at times, veers as far away from ‘festive’ as the Grinch on speed.

Tracy is holed up in the kitchen, attempting to prepare Christmas Dinner, while a motley crew of assorted members of her extended family are making merry (a loose term) across the hallway. The turkey (and various substitutes to cater for multiple dietary demands) is, literally, left on the back burner. She blames us – the audience – for distracting her and allowing her to unleash her candid and foul-mouthed reminiscences while mother-in-law’s vegan tart burns. She often addresses a photograph stuck to the fridge door – a snapshot of her absent, best friend Jackie. It is the past escapades of the two of them that comprise the bulk of the narrative, the humour and occasional moments of pathos. The anecdotes gush forth, but too often they have little connection to the dramatic frame around which they are structured, and they become off-the-shelf recollections that could fit any scenario.

Cathy Conneff, as Tracy, is brash, profane, unashamed, and wonderfully charismatic. Her natural affinity with the audience gives the character an unaffected authenticity. There is an ease to the performance that disguises the daunting task of being alone on stage for an hour and a quarter. One of a kind, Tracy is also ‘everywoman’ as she unwraps her regrets and throws them onto the pile of spent joys and tribulations like unwanted gifts.

“She has the makings of becoming a seasonal staple”

Conceived in lockdown as part of the Hope@Home series of monologues, writers Matt Ballantyne and Toby Hampton (Hampton also directs) display a sharp insight, but the script is a bit unbalanced. Some yarns are stretched too far while others are left hanging. Alex Forey’s lighting cleverly transports us to past locations in Tracy’s mind while in the here-and-now the set (Hampton, again, with Laurel Marks) evokes the class-defined, London suburban kitchen with precise detail. There is a film maker’s eye at work here, enhancing the realism that Conneff already provides in abundance. Unfortunately, Emily Rose Simons lifelike sound design, that conjures up the rabble next door, doesn’t match the naturalism; which could probably be rectified by a re-jigging of the venue’s sound system.

There are bound to be comparisons to Willy Russell’s ‘Shirley Valentine’, which is no bad thing. Like the eighties’ forerunner, “21 Round for Christmas” (a clumsy title I have to say) has an existential quality, and Conneff skilfully manages to reveal the depth beneath the froth. We are teased in this respect, wanting to know more about Jackie who we learn is lying in a hospital bed at the Royal Marsden. The comedy is dished up loudly and haphazardly, but garnished with intimate detail that almost goes unnoticed. Something in Conneff’s eyes betrays a crisis unfolding. No wonder Tracy ends up hurling the roast potatoes. Her defiance, steeped in humour, has more than a double edge.

We come away feeling like we’ve caught up with an old friend. A bit of a black sheep. Flawed, but somebody we love. In small doses perhaps. For about an hour or so maybe. See you next Christmas, Tracy. We hope we do. She has the makings of becoming a seasonal staple. She can’t please the twenty-one people she has round for Christmas – but she certainly pleases her audience.


21 ROUND FOR CHRISTMAS at the Park Theatre

Reviewed on 11th December 2023

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Cam Harle 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

The Time Machine – A Comedy | ★★★★ | December 2023
Ikaria | ★★★★ | November 2023
Passing | ★★★½ | November 2023
The Interview | ★★★ | November 2023
It’s Headed Straight Towards Us | ★★★★★ | September 2023
Sorry We Didn’t Die At Sea | ★★½ | September 2023
The Garden Of Words | ★★★ | August 2023
Bones | ★★★★ | July 2023
Paper Cut | ★★½ | June 2023
Leaves of Glass | ★★★★ | May 2023
The Beach House | ★★★ | February 2023
Winner’s Curse | ★★★★ | February 2023

21 Round For Christmas

21 Round For Christmas

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page