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Clown-Hearted

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Online

Clown-Hearted

Clown-Hearted

Online via Applecart Arts until 23rd October

Reviewed – 22nd October 2020

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“The show is something you fall into enjoying, like a warm bath”

 

Anxiety. Depression. Paranoia. Little could ClodHopper Theatre, the creators of Clown-Hearted, know when devising the piece just how relevant its themes would be in the pandemic-hit atmosphere of late 2020.

Like many current shows, Clown-Hearted is about mental health. The stage is initially set with one down-hearted clown (Leonie Spilsbury) in a highly covetable cloud-patterned onesie, surrounded by scattered boxes representing the various positive and negative pieces of her mental life.

A theatrical exploration of mental health is something that could easily become very dark or clichΓ©d, but this is a work that offers something altogether different. Our clown begins by shuffling the boxes about, making some light gags and setting up a few visual metaphors. The piece takes a little while to fully get into, but soon after the entrance of the second clown (Owen Jenkins) it really gets into its swing.

Asking for help from an omniscient virtual assistant (subtitles are provided), the two clowns take a journey into self-care. The only dialogue coming from either Alexa or Siri is nice ironic contrast to the open simplicity of the characters. Through limited but effective props and their own actions (movement directed by Julia Cave) the clowns experiment with several mood-boosting activities, including exercise, meditation, and exploring nature.

Devised by Spilsbury and Jenkins, the show’s structure may seem a little formulaic, but it works – leading the way into an emotional odyssey that is wonderfully and entirely unpretentious. The performance doesn’t labour over the metaphors set up early on, but instead moves forward into each joyful skit with new energy, ending in a place that is far more wholesome than expected.

The show is something you fall into enjoying, like a warm bath, although there are enough witty and on-trend references from the virtual assistants to make the audience realise the work is clever, too. And of course it is funny, but in a welcoming rather than exclusionary way, with humour everyone can enjoy.

The work of the actors is complemented by the sound and lighting (Will Alder) and most significantly by the musical choices. Many familiar songs feature – from Ponchielli’s β€˜Dance of the Hours’ to β€˜Under the Sea’ from The Little Mermaid – and each of these tunes perfectly suits the play’s comforting and uplifting tone. There are also some advantages that come from having had the show filmed, as the camera work (Joseph Ed Thomas and Peter Moreton) gives us some nice close-ups of the actors’ facial expressions that serve to emphasise some of the jokes.

Watching Clown-Hearted is almost an act of self-care in itself; the capers of the clowns are soothing and easy to watch, and there is real warmth brimming out from both of the performers. While you sometimes wonder if some of the clowning would be better if it was more exaggerated, perhaps it is the very easy-going nature of the two characters that makes the show work so well.

In a time when so many of us know what it feels like to struggle with mental health, the play is the perfect pick-me-up and well worth spending the time watching.

 

 

Reviewed by Vicky Richards

 


Clown Hearted

Online via Applecart Arts until 23rd October

 

Previously reviewed from Dazed New World Festival 2020:
Imaginarium | β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2020

 

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Imaginarium

Imaginarium

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Online

Imaginarium

Imaginarium

Online via Applecart Arts until 23rd October

Reviewed – 15th October 2020

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“The audience is the performance. The bedroom, the stage”

 

Through the back weeks of October, Applecart Arts present the Dazed New World Festival – an online only showcase of new narrative forms which explore a range of social and environmental issues; all against the backdrop of β€œthe new normal” of life within a pandemic.

Running for three shows; Imaginarium is the debut production of Out of the Blue Theatre. The show is inspired by the social seclusion of Lockdown and uses audience members’ bedrooms as the stage for a guided exploration of space and the possibilities of imagination. Like the rest of Dazed New World Festival, Imaginarium is β€œLivestreamed” through Vimeo, accessible only at ticketed times. The term β€œLivestream” here, being a slight misnomer for what appears to be pre-recorded content.

The content and form raise interesting questions for theatregoers and academics alike. Theatre & performance is a couplet term for a collection of ever-evolving, ever-flexible art forms that intrinsically reflect societies norms and mores. That they should migrate online, seems an increasingly appropriate development. However, one metric used to delineate theatre from its innumerate modern cousins is the concept of liveness- Things that happen at a certain moment and only thern. How Imaginarium deals with this concept seemed to be the foundation of which the show’s success rested.

Director Haylin Cai tackles the problem of liveness through the imagination and physical body of each participant. The audience is the performance. The bedroom, the stage. We are asked to position ourselves in our room; to have a glass of water to hand, and to use headphones. Voice Actor, Harry Dean then takes control and begins to lead us on a journey…

First, the context of the performance is set- We spend too much time online with other people’s opinion swirling through our underused and under-explored minds. We are then invited to imagine our bedroom anew; we are told that the everyday objects around us can now be explored with fresh eyes. We are encouraged to create a new language for them, to talk to them and to explore how they might feel and relate to one another. In other words, we are live and active participants on our solitary stage. Later, we are asked to imagine ourselves as supple 8-year olds playing hide and seek within the space. It’s within these moments that the show lives up to the billing of creating a live performance based on imagination.

Moments of participation are however, interspersed with Dean taking us on a variety of journeys through time, space and imagination, aided always by confident and apt sound design of Tingying Dong. We are in one moment holding our glass of water, the next imagining the journey of that water through the vast annuls of space and time. It is in these moments when the shows liveness unfortunately disappears, and the β€œperformance” takes on the guise of a form of guided meditation or audio book and sadly things fall slightly flat.

2020 is an exciting and testing time for theatre makers to represent. Out of the Blue’s debut production confidently meets these challenges head on with an audio journey filled with imagination and play. I’m excited to explore more of Dazed New World Festival and look forward to more of Out of the Blue theatre.

Reviewed by Euan Vincent

Main image courtesy Out of The Blue Theatre Company – this is a rehearsal image of actor Harry Dean, director Haylin Cai and sound designer Tingying Dong

 

Imaginarium

Imaginarium

Online via Applecart Arts until 23rd October

 

Previously reviewed by Euan:
The Glass Will Shatter | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Omnibus Theatre | January 2020
Aamira And Gad | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | The Vaults | February 2020
Blitz! | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Union Theatre | February 2020
The Incident Room | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | New Diorama Theatre | February 2020
Woyzeck | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Theatro Technis | September 2020

 

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