Tag Archives: Andrew Wright

Amsterdam

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Orange Tree Theatre

Amsterdam

Amsterdam

Orange Tree Theatre

Reviewed – 11th September 2019

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“a brilliant piece of writing, but its formal dazzle ultimately detracts from its emotional resonance”

 

In February of this year, The Guardian ran an article charting the rise of anti-Semitism across Europe. France reported a 74% increase in the number of offences against Jews in 2018 and Germany said the number of violent antisemitic attacks had surged by more than 60%. Here in the UK, the Community Security Trust (CST) – which monitors anti-Semitism among the Jewish community in Britain – said the 892 incidents so far reported this year mark a 10% increase on the same period last year. Islamophobia too is on the rise, and the disturbing trend of xenophobia and intolerance is being felt sharply by immigrants and the LGBTQ community Europe-wide. Against this backdrop, Orange Tree Theatre’s programming of Maya Arad Yasur’s 2018 play Amsterdam couldn’t be more timely.

By tracing the origin of an unpaid gas bill, which our unnamed protagonist finds herself having to deal with, Yasur invites us to look again at the devastation of the Jewish population of the Netherlands, 75% of whom were killed in the Holocaust, and also to consider the polyglot nature of modern Europe, and what it means to be an immigrant. She doesn’t forget that Jews and Arabs are each Semitic peoples, and in an early scene in a supermarket queue we are made aware of the shared experience of a woman wearing a hijab and our Jewish protagonist; of the exhaustion of the continual awareness of the second-guessing of one’s identity – ‘She’s thinking he’s thinking she’s thinking’ – and the weight of being viewed as a representative – ‘Why do I carry around this flag wherever I go?’.

Yasur has quite rightly chosen to address the palimpsest of European history with a degree of formal experimentation, recognising that this complex layering of experience, these different voices and memories, demand a non-linear narrative language. The text is shared by four actors, who tease out its meaning, tossing phrases between themselves like a ball, dancing with repetitions and tangents, punctuating with amplified Dutch phrases, leading us along the circuitous paths of this city and its history, toward a final narrative revelation and resolution.

Amsterdam is a demanding watch, and requires intellectual concentration. Such theatrical moments as there are are few and far between, and seem grafted on to the text to throw the audience a bone rather than stemming organically from the words themselves. The text is king here. And Matthew Xia (director) isn’t quite brave enough to let it fully reign. The success of The Brothers Size at the Young Vic in 2017 showed that London audiences can do stripped back, and this production could have followed its example. The chain metal curtain, the chairs, the glasses; all seemed superfluous, clumsy and dead, in contrast to the living, shape-shifting text, which is its own illustration. Similarly, this is a piece in which the performers are storytellers, not actors, and the show would have benefited from less verbal demonstration. Asking an actor not to act is difficult, but less is more in this instance, and the text didn’t need as much help as they gave it.

Amsterdam is a brilliant piece of writing, but its formal dazzle ultimately detracts from its emotional resonance. ‘No-one wants to hear about the Jews anymore’ our protagonist states, and Yasur’s writing is fierce in its counter-attack. But these words need to be felt; not merely heard. Theatre at its best can hit the heart, and Amsterdam, to its detriment, leaves this power unharnessed.

 

Reviewed by Andrew Wright

Photography byΒ Helen Murray

 


Amsterdam

Orange Tree Theatre until 12th October

 

 

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Becoming the Invisible Woman
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Drayton Arms Theatre

Becoming the Invisible Woman

Becoming the Invisible Woman

Drayton Arms Theatre

Reviewed – 11th June 2019

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“feels rather like being trapped in a Cosmopolitan questionnaire, or perhaps in the form that needs to be filled in before a health treatment at a spa”

 

Sarah Wanendeya’s play, in which she also takes the lead, starts from a simple premise: a woman ‘wakes up’ to find herself in an unknown country; she has become middle aged. Four other middle-aged women act as a chorus, leading her to understand where she is and how she got there, and guide her into her future.

The stage is set with an enormous pile of laundry and an overturned laundry basket; the 1930s classic ‘Keep Young and Beautiful’ plays. The opening of the show sees Wanendeya emerge from under the laundry heap, to be greeted by the four other women, in lab coats with clipboards. It’s a fun reveal, but the opening section, in which the women bombard our central character with questions, is problematic. It feels rather like being trapped in a Cosmopolitan questionnaire, or perhaps in the form that needs to be filled in before a health treatment at a spa. More importantly, the phrase ‘This is what middle-aged women look like’ needs to be challenged when the five women in question all have white skin. Similarly, the domestic drudgery of ‘wife, mother, cleaner, cook’ which our protagonist rails against, is far from common to all, but is instead a very particular, hetero-normative take on this period in a woman’s life.

Becoming the Invisible Woman steps onto safer ground when it more clearly becomes a personal story, and the ‘universalisms’ of middle-aged womanhood are left behind. We revisit Sarah’s fourteen year old self, and then track her early aspirations to be an actor, her discovery of the rave scene at Manchester University in the late 80s, where she met the man who would become her husband, and her emergence into a new, empowered, middle-aged self. Despite a couple of moments, in which we see Sarah giving birth, and dancing to the music she loves, this section is oddly restrained, and would have benefited from being more connected and visceral. This is Sarah’s story, but it somehow loses its power and specificity along the way.

All in all, this is a show which plays it safe, and could definitely afford to take more risks – in the writing, direction and performance. Pollyanna Newcombe (director) and her able team (Sound Designer Peter Challis; Lighting Designer and Operator Bryony Maguire) would perhaps have had more opportunity to play, had the four other cast members been slightly better used. There were brief moments when their individuality sparkled, but, somewhat ironically, ultimately Sophie Doherty, Wiz Kelly, Lizzie Parry and Karen Staples were reduced to the golden age number on their T-shirts.

 

Reviewed by Andrew Wright

Photography by Peter Clark

 

Drayton Arms Theatre

Becoming the Invisible Woman

Drayton Arms Theatre until 15th June

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Jake | β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2018
Love, Genius and a Walk | β˜… | October 2018
Boujie | β˜…β˜…β˜…Β½ | November 2018
Out of Step | β˜…β˜… | January 2019
Th’Importance Of Bein’ Earnest | β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2019
The Problem With Fletcher Mott | β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2019
Queer Trilogy | β˜…β˜…β˜… | March 2019
Staying Faithful | β˜…β˜… | March 2019
Stream | β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2019
The Bald Prima Donna | β˜…β˜…β˜…Β½ | June 2019

 

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