Tag Archives: Arts Depot

MORAG, YOU’RE A LONG TIME DEID

★★★

Arts Depot

MORAG, YOU’RE A LONG TIME DEID at the Arts Depot

★★★

“There is an openness and gentleness in their performance and they make the audience feel welcome and safe.”

It all starts the moment you step into the theatre: a simple set (Robbie Thomson & Wladimiro A. Woyno R.), consisting of a piano, a music mixer stand, some hangers with costumes (Jessica Oostergo) and Claire Love Wilson, who walks around with a mic in her hand creating sounds. With a child-like curiosity and excitement, she is preparing us for what will follow, what she and Sally Zori have in store for us. These two multidisciplinary artists have created a piece of performance that is experimental, musical, magnetising.

Wilson (the writer of the show with Peter Lorenz (who also directs)) plays Sam, a Canadian woman who is prompted to explore her Scottish roots when she inherits the piano that belonged to her grandmother, Morag. No one in the family can explain the peculiar letter she finds in the piano, a letter containing ballads and affectionate words, and when she turns to her grandfather for answers, or at least some indication about Morag’s character, he refuses to reveal any details. Sam’s mind is suddenly filled with ballads, questions and an irresistible urge to find out what the story of a grandparent she never got to meet is. And on the way, she realises that they’re more similar than what she thought.

Let’s make one thing clear: this is not a show for people who wish to watch a traditionally constructed fleshed out story. There are some prose specific scenes, but the majority of the performance is like an acoustic fairy tale, made of live recorded sounds and songs (Claire Love Wilson, Rory Comerford & Sally Zori), with some interesting touches of audience participation. Not a big fan of audience participation myself, but I have to admit that learning some ceilidh, singing a song and having a boogie are too good to resist, even if one detests audience participation in the theatre.

Through this musical installation, which combines more traditional sounds with modern pop beats, we delve into a discussion on heritage, uncovering family secrets ‘never to be told’, and finding patterns that make us feel less alone in a world where we all need to know who we are and where we belong. Wilson and Zori, who is also the musical director, bring their beautiful voices together and are delightfully playful to watch onstage. There is an openness and gentleness in their performance and they make the audience feel welcome and safe.

The set has only items that are absolutely necessary for the story, with some beautiful lighting that contributes in creating a sense of place that shifts constantly, from a club to a hospital room and many others. If only the eerie atmosphere the show began with lasted longer before turning into a pop concert, the show would have an even more magical effect. Some details could have been developed further, like Morag’s mental health issues and the effect on the family (especially the grandfather), the obsession that urges Sam to put together the pieces of the puzzle or the hints of similarities between Morag and Sam.

Overall, it was an enjoyable show that underlines the importance of the past and its connection to the present. If you’re a music lover, you’re guaranteed to have a good time and if you are intrigued by the exploration and reconstruction of what has come before, then Morag, You’re a Long Time Deid is the show for you.


MORAG, YOU’RE A LONG TIME DEID at the Arts Depot

Reviewed on 25th September 2024

by Stephanie Christodoulidou

Photography by Sarah Darling

 


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

TRIFFIDS! | ★★★★★ | March 2022

MORAG

MORAG

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Triffids!

Triffids!

★★★★★

Arts Depot

Triffids!

Triffids!

Arts Depot

Reviewed – 19th March 2022

★★★★★

 

“manages to follow the arc of Wyndham’s original tale, and yet not get bogged down in all the intricacies of a full length novel”

 

As a huge fan of John Wyndham’s classic sci-fi story The Day of the Triffids, how could I not journey all the way to North Finchley to review this adaptation by multi-media company Platform 4? It’s not only a welcome trip down memory lane, it’s timely. Triffids! has more than a few resonances for those living during a pandemic, and this imaginative adaptation manages to take an iconic work from the past, and fix it firmly in our present. Wyndham’s story is about flesh eating plants which can uproot and move, taking advantage of humans suddenly incapacitated by blindness. The Day of the Triffids has more than a few creepy connections to our own time, with humans sidelined by a new virus, and at the mercy of disappearing supply chains. Dystopian themes aside, there are so many unexpected, and unusual, things to enjoy about Platform 4’s Triffids! that it is impossible to do the show justice in so few words. But I will try.

Platform 4 is not a new company. They’ve been around for twenty five years or so, based in Winchester. In these years, they have created performance works that are “highly visual and musical, often intimate in scale and process.” Triffids! is, therefore, pretty uncategorizable, in traditional theatre terms. The show is organized, not in scenes, but in “triffid movements.” In performance type, it settles somewhere between an old-timey radio show with lots of music, accompanied by a mix of instruments that rely heavily on electronic augmentation — and a stripped down narrative that is tweaked to suit our modern era. But the whole experience is much more complex than that suggests. The narration moves easily among classic 1950s film and broadcast clips, projected onto a small cyclorama, and modern presentation in 1950s costumes. Triffids! plays with the paradoxical. It’s an incredibly layered, yet spartan mash up, all presented on a bare stage crammed with microphones and musical instruments. There is a sly nod to the triffids themselves in a lone cactus in a pot. A cactus that also plays its part as the show proceeds. And did I mention the cyclorama at the back—rich and colourful, constantly changing, and also an essential performer in the show?

Triffids! manages to follow the arc of Wyndham’s original tale, and yet not get bogged down in all the intricacies of a full length novel. It’s true that some of the story might seem too spare in detail, but if you’ve read the novel, you will enjoy remembering all your favourite moments as Platform 4 refreshes your memory with haunting sound effects, and original music that sets a powerful mood. At any moment, you can be immersed in the 1950s, or listening to a song reminiscent of the B-52s, or 1990s acid house. Or the sound can be uncategorizable, emanating from a violin bow being drawn across the spines of a cactus. You will watch performers Jules Bushell, Catherine Church, Jill Dowse, Laurence Hunt and Matt Tarling move easily between instruments. Catherine Church and Jill Dowse do the lion’s share of the narration, but all the performers have serious musical talent, and it shows. Platform 4’s intricate work is evident off stage as well. The music is composed by Pete Flood and the company, Barret Hodgson provides the digital work, and Simon Plumridge is the dramaturg and designer. Additional voiceovers come from the community of Winchester’s Highcliffe Allotment, and the sound is engineered and mixed by Jules Bushell. Triffids! is indeed a “unique cross-arts participatory project.”

In essence, if you have a chance to see the work of Platform 4—even if it means braving the frustrations of traveling on the Northern Line to North Finchley to a small black box theatre at the artspace—take it, and go. Your journey will still be easier than battling triffids all the way to find a safe haven on the Isle of Wight in some nightmarish, dystopian future (for humans, at least) where vegetables rule the earth.

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Andi Sapey

 


Triffids!

Arts Depot

 

Reviewed by Dominica this year:
The Forest | ★★★ | Hampstead Theatre | February 2022
When We Dead Awaken | ★★★★ | The Coronet Theatre | March 2022
Legacy | ★★★★★ | Menier Chocolate Factory | March 2022
Cock | ★★★ | Ambassadors Theatre | March 2022

 

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