The Indecent Musings Of Miss Doncaster 2007
Lion and Unicorn Theatre
Reviewed – 10th August 2019
β β β Β½
“Some lines are stellar but the occasional too-easy joke could be lost without ill effect”
2007 was a big year. The first iPhone hit the shelves, as did the last Harry Potter book. We got Gordon Brown as PM. And, in Doncaster, our βMiss Donnyβ is crowned Miss Doncaster, with the sash and tiara to prove it. A starry start indeed β but The Indecent Musings of Miss Doncaster 2007 shows what happens next. And, spoiler alert: this is where the glamour ends.
The one-hander, written and performed by Annabel York, spans confessional, spoken word and stand-up, and although just how biographical it is isnβt clear, itβs hard not to see it as intimate. Staging (design by Elle Loudon) supports this; lighting and choreography are exceptional. The sound design (Jacob Welsh) is terrific; scenes of Donny dancing work brilliantly, with clever and thoughtful music choices and just the odd scene where the sound levels are awry and we struggle to follow Yorkβs quickfire delivery.
Sound effects are also strong. The gentle hiss and suck of Donnyβs fatherβs ventilator in the quieter moments she spends beside him (and the staggering silence that follows once itβs turned off) are particularly poignant. Given that the use of props is almost non-existent, effects do the hard yards in giving us a sense of place.
In the same vein, Rebecca Loudonβs skill in direction is clear, especially in the detail that sets up each scene – the clever little adjustments to the office chair height that tell us that Donny is once again slouched at the desk at her ghastly office job, for example.
Naturally in any solo show all eyes are on the performer, and the clearly-talented York doesnβt disappoint. Primarily a comic piece, almost all scenes are played for laughs. This is perhaps a shame, as Yorkβs excellent and nuanced acting gets a fuller airing in the few emotionally-charged scenes. Make no mistake, though β York is incredibly funny, and throws herself around to terrific effect. Weβre introduced to a cast of characters through her, not least the pageant queen persona, Miss Doncaster 2007, herself.
Garbed in the full regalia of evening gown, pink sash and twinkly crown, itβs this version of Donny that opens and closes the production. This deadens the nightβs impact just a little; the opening scene is one of the weakest of all and the all-smiles characterisation of Donnyβs showbiz embodiment is less affecting and harder to like. After the journey Donny has gone on, it feels reductive, too, to return to the crown and fixed grins at the end.
Generally, the whirlwind of Donnyβs chaotic life can risk feeling a bit one-note; exploration of the emotional impact of some of her fraught sexual encounters, for example, including ones where her datesβ behaviours are downright abusive, is lacking. These disastrous, drunken dates are suggestive of Donnyβs vulnerability but that gets lost when theyβre unrelentingly played for laughs. This is a pity, as a message about female fragility and strength is suggested throughout (it canβt be an accident that empowering tracks by feminist superstars Lizzo and Janelle MonΓ‘e feature).
Scripting could also stand to be just a touch tighter. Some lines are stellar but the occasional too-easy joke (βI call a spade a spade… unless itβs a shovelβ) could be lost without ill effect, and a little more light and dark introduced into those more frenetically active scenes.
Raw emotion does come, though, as we see grief take over from nights out on the town, and itβs here that the performance really sings. Our Donny may not be the darling of Doncaster, crown and all, any more. But a new kind of stardom may just beckon β and sheβll be ready.
Reviewed by Abi Davies
The Indecent Musings Of Miss Doncaster 2007
Camden People’s Theatre until 10th August as part of Camden Fringe 2019
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
The Absolute Truth About Absolutely Everything | β β β | May 2018
A Fortunate Man | β β β Β½ | June 2018
Le Misanthrope | β β Β½ | June 2018
Ouroboros | β β β β | July 2018
Did it Hurt? | β β β | August 2018
Asylum | β β β | November 2018
George | β β β β | March 2019
Mojave | β β β | April 2019
Human Jam | β β β β | May 2019
Hot Flushes – The Musical | β β β | June 2019
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