Tag Archives: Auriol Reddaway

How to Start Your Own Cult

How to Start Your Own Cult

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The Bill Murray

HOW TO START YOUR OWN CULT at The Bill Murray

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How to Start Your Own Cult

“each comedian individually has some very funny moments”

 

Cults are a rich and potentially comic goldmine, so it was a slight surprise when it became quickly clear that this show has nothing to do with its title.

How to Start Your Own Cult is a series of character monologues performed by three comedians. In a witty voiceover, the audience is welcomed to a seminar: how to start your own cult, and told that we will have to work hard to find the link between the monologues and the seminar itself. This is a comic way of admitting that there is little to no through line between these sketches. It is funny, but leaves the show feeling disjointed and a bit random. Each of the nine monologues is introduced by its tenuous link to the seminar, for example: people in cults have neighbours, here’s a sketch about neighbours. It’s a fun way to attempt to link the pieces, but it falls a bit flat.

This show is a work in progress, and so shouldn’t be judged as a completely finished product. There are some technical glitches, a few forgotten lines and some nervous pauses, but none of that matters. What does matter, is the issue of a lack of cohesion and coherence.

It is crucial to say, each comedian individually has some very funny moments. Ben Goldsmith does a series of sketches about biblical figures, each with an increasingly outlandish accent. My favourite is his vision of the tiger, awaiting her turn on Noah’s arc, getting her nails done. His sketches are funny, slick and work well together. Though they feel a tonally a bit off with the other comics’ work.

Kate Davison re-enacts her character’s gritty, but out of touch documentary about modern Britain. This is a great idea, and the character she has built is a great blend of satire and self-ridicule. There are moments she could turn it up a few more notches, it doesn’t have the confident ridiculousness of Goldsmith’s sketches, but there is definitely a gem of something, and with a bit of polishing it will work really well.

The third comic, Chris East, performs three very different monologues, combining music, audience interaction, and control over silence. He makes quietly waiting for the correct intro music a golden comedy moment. His sketches are not interlinked with one another, though they all demonstrate his taste for amping up a familiar situation into something weirder, and more surreal. They need a bit of tightening up, and there are some pacing issues, but all three have glittering flashes of comic gold.

Each of the sketches is enjoyable, and it is a broadly amusing hour of comedy, especially for a work in progress. The issue is that the show would work better if there was a stronger link between the pieces, or even no attempt at a link at all.


HOW TO START YOUR OWN CULT at The Bill Murray

Reviewed on 26th August 2023

by Auriol Reddaway

 

 

 

 

More Camden Fringe 2023 Reviews:

 

Invasion! An Alien Musical | β˜…β˜… | Camden People’s Theatre | July 2023
This Girl: The Cynthia Lennon Story | β˜…β˜… | Upstairs at the Gatehouse | July 2023
Glad To Be Dead? | β˜…β˜… | Hen & Chickens Theatre | July 2023
Maybe I Do? | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Hen & Chickens Theatre | July 2023
Flamenco: Origenes | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Etcetera Theatre | August 2023
All That Glitters | β˜…β˜…Β½ | Rosemary Branch Theatre | August 2023
Dead Souls | β˜…β˜…Β½ | Etcetera Theatre | August 2023
Kate-Lois Elliott: Gentrif*cked | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Museum of Comedy | August 2023
Improv The Dead | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Hen & Chickens Theatre | August 2023
Avocado Presents | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Hen & Chickens Theatre | August 2023
Sarah Roberts : Do You Know Who I Am? | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | The Bill Murray | August 2023
End Of The World Fm | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Cockpit Theatre | August 2023
Ashley Barnhill: Texas Titanium | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Museum of Comedy | August 2023
The Vagina Monologues | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Canal CafΓ© Theatre | August 2023
Not Like Other Girls | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | The Queer Comedy Club | August 2023
Improv Death Match | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Aces and Eights | August 2023
Theatresports | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Museum of Comedy | August 2023
My Body Is Not Your Country | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Cockpit Theatre | August 2023

How to Start Your Own Cult

How to Start Your Own Cult

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MY BODY IS NOT YOUR COUNTRY

My Body is not Your Country

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Cockpit Theatre

MY BODY IS NOT YOUR COUNTRY at the Cockpit Theatre

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MY BODY IS NOT YOUR COUNTRY

“Bonito is an intense, captivating performer”

My Body is Not Your Country is a piece that exists on the intersection between theatre and performance art. There are multi-media elements and there’s movement, song and spoken word. There are some deeply striking visuals, and phrasing. Both the poetic, lyrical monologues and the powerful physical images are, at times, both beautiful and evocative.

This one-woman show is produced and presented by Marta Bonito, in collaboration with Amanda Gatti and Laura Padilla. It explores the themes of home and belonging. It questions how to define home and weaves in different perspectives and stories of migration. Parts of it tell Bonito’s own story. But other voices, piped through into the auditorium, tell other women’s stories. Bonito switches between a microphone, and her own voice, which differentiates the stories, slightly. She brings two women on stage at the end, who are presumably the voiceovers we hear throughout. They are clearly deeply moved by the performance, and the strength of their emotion is powerful.

Bonito is an intense, captivating performer. She puts her entire heart, soul and body into it. It is wonderfully performed, and she is energetic, bold and confident in the space. There is a moment where she sprints, mostly naked, in circles around the stage, while still monologuing, which is a deeply impressive feat. She does a bit of everything, and proves herself to be well-rounded and multi-talented.

The difficulty is that the piece is trying to do too much. It’s exploring so many themes, and so many stories, that the message, and the point, are lost. The narrative is deliberately muddled, mixing multiple women’s stories, and experiences – but it has a confusing effect. The piece’s fragmentary nature tries to echo the characters’ own fragmented senses of self and identity. But it makes the piece itself hard to follow. The stories, which should be centred in this narrative, become garbled and intertwined, which lessens their power. The voiceovers are also hard to hear, perhaps adding subtitles to the screen could allow a chance for the beauty of the language to be appreciated. It’s difficult to know what to focus on. The rolling film of the beach, the gyrating performer, wrapping herself in a thin tulle scarf, or the voiceover, telling the story of a fleeing woman. It’s a shame, because some moments are stunning, but the overall effect is overcomplicated.

The lighting design is simple, if a little underused. The team opt to use a set of battery powered mini lights on stage, rather than the overhead lights, which does not seem to add much, but is a fun addition to the set.

The set works well; chairs, scarves, books and boxes are strewn about. Bonito hops over books like lily-pads, she clambers on the boxes, contorting herself through them. A microphone in the corner creates a separate section where different stories can be explored. It creates worlds, characters and stories through beautiful imagery. It is a sadness that the piece itself is not more pared down, so it could also succeed in this.

 


MY BODY IS NOT YOUR COUNTRY at the Cockpit Theatre

Reviewed on 20th August 2023

by Auriol Reddaway

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

End Of The World Fm | β˜…β˜…β˜… | August 2023
999 | β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2022
The Return | β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2022
Love Goddess, The Rita Hayworth Musical | β˜…β˜… | November 2022
L’Egisto | β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2021

My Body is not Your Country

My Body is not Your Country

Click here to read all our latest reviews