Tag Archives: Ben Harrison

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS

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Finbourough Theatre

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS at the Finborough Theatre

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“Zajac’s performance is subtle and intense. Emotions flicker beautifully across his face”

The Tailor of Inverness tells the story of Mateusz Zajac (father of writer/performer Matthew Zajac) a Polish born tailor, who settled in Inverness after the Second World War.

The difficulty is that the story is simply presented as The Tailor telling us about his life. There is no mystery or dramatic question. A buried truth does come to light, and with it questions around the honesty of our narrator, but this happens so late in the play that it’s hard to care.

His life story is interesting, as with many of the stories of displaced Europeans in the 20th century. However, the structure is aimless and the details dense and lengthy.

That said, Zajac’s performance is subtle and intense. Emotions flicker beautifully across his face. He brings his father to life with a quiet complexity of accent and physicality. His accent – a Scottish-Polish hybrid – is maintained impeccably throughout, and a real sense of the man is evoked.

 

 

Ben Harrison’s direction is varied, working with the story to create light and shade. The storytelling style is broken with dramatic sketches of the past, and with song and poetry. Some of this is recorded with Magdalena Kaleta reciting in Polish. Harrison’s choices, along with sound design by Timothy Brinkhurst, work with the narration to create a strong picture of this man’s world. The piece is accompanied throughout by Jonny Hardy (in some performances it’s Amy Geddes) on the violin, bringing a haunting melancholy to the stage.

Much of the script is in Polish, and a little Russian, with subtitles projected onto the backdrop. The use of AV throughout is carefully and well crafted. A map accompanies the description of Zajac’s time serving during the war, flagging key cities and tracing the route. Photographs of the family are projected and flashes of memory are echoed with images. This works well with Kai Fischer’s subtly shifting lighting.

Ali Maclaurin’s set sees flattened and plastered clothing pasted against the backdrop, nodding to Zajac’s profession, while evoking the horrors of mass slaughter which he remembers. It’s a thoughtful and well executed idea.

While Zajac’s story is interesting, it felt too long a piece to coast on that. I was more interested in his time in Scotland, and the experiences of Matthew Zajac himself returning to Poland to uncover the truth of his father’s past (this made up the final third of the play) than the details of his father’s time in the war, during which I got a little lost.

 


THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS at the Finborough Theatre

Reviewed on 17th May 2024

by Auriol Reddaway

Photography by Tim Morozzo

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BANGING DENMARK | β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2024
FOAM | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2024
JAB | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2024
THE WIND AND THE RAIN | β˜…β˜…β˜… | July 2023
SALT-WATER MOON | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2023
PENNYROYAL | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | July 2022
THE STRAW CHAIR | β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2022
THE SUGAR HOUSE | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2021

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS

THE TAILOR OF INVERNESS

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page

 

PRISCILLA THE PARTY!

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HERE at Outernet

PRISCILLA THE PARTY! at HERE at Outernet

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“An incredible night out.”

β€œPriscilla The Party” is joyous, tremendous musical fun. Based on the 1994 Academy Award winner β€œThe Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert”, β€œPriscilla the Party” hails from Australia in 2006. It is a rip-roaring celebration of drag, queerness and camp musical theatre. Each scene is calibrated towards entertainment and intrigue from the start. The story follows β€˜Tick’ (Owain Williams) as he travels across Australia to reach his wife (Kimberly Blake) and his child (a stooge) as part of a fabulous trio of drag queens travelling in a bus they christen β€œPriscilla”. Adam (Reece Kerridge) and Bernadette (Dakota Starr) accompany Tick as he travels throughout Australia battling homophobia, transphobia, making allies, and delivering hit after hit. The show is an immersive experience (developed and directed by Simon Phillips), with staging and actors moving throughout the crowd on the dancefloor. The set (Brian Thomson and Justin Nardella) and direction make great use of the atmosphere of a club with an impressive line up of dance hits from β€œSay a Little Prayer” to β€œBorn This Way”. A tale of love, adversity and Aussie humour shines with amazing theatrical gravitas throughout.

Every cast member performs with outstanding energy, delivering a varied set of pop/dance songs in a jukebox musical for the ages. The quality of musical performance is high with remarkable talent on display throughout as Queens deliver ballads and romps with equal intensity and stage presence. Beautiful vocals draw us into the story and relay the emotions of the characters. The band are brilliant and you can tell they know they have the best gig in town (Musical Arrangements and Orchestration Stephen β€˜Spud’ Murphy). The stage management team work tirelessly to coordinate movement of stages as they weave throughout the crowd. The sound design (Ben Harrison) includes familiar hits, punctuated by topical music in the breaks that ensure a continuation of the party. The multi-media venue makes use of video backgrounds (also Thompson and Nardella) and vibrant club lighting (Per HΓΆrding). The show includes all the best parts of a drag show with all the precision and thought of a well-crafted musical (Musical arrangements and direction Steve Geere). A highlight are the fantastic costumes (Tim Chappel and Lizzy Gardiner) and wigs, delivering camp, classic and heightened drag in the best possible way.

Seated dining experiences are available, though dance floor tickets make up the bulk of audience members who get to join in the concert-like drag-show-esque party atmosphere. “Priscilla the Party” is stunningly unique and totally immersive, taking the audience on a hugely enjoyable road trip through Australia whilst delivering one spectacular party en route. The close to three hours playing time flies by as the colourful scenes progress in and around the gloriously camp ‘Cockatoo Club’. Arrive early to enjoy the full experience, as there are superb opening acts to enjoy. With drag queens and musical actors combining their strengths, β€œPriscilla The Party” makes for an incredible night out.


PRISCILLA THE PARTY! at HERE at Outernet

Reviewed on 24th March 2024

by Jessica Potts

Photography by Marc Brenner

 

 

 

 

Recently reviewed by Jessica:

HOSTAGE | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Etcetera Theatre | March 2024
APRICOT | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Theatre503 | March 2024
SARAH QUAND MÊME | β˜… | Drayton Arms | February 2024
AMUSEMENTS | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Soho Theatre | February 2024
WISH YOU WEREN’T HERE | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Soho Theatre | February 2024
TWO ROUNDS | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Jermyn Street Theatre | February 2024

PRISCILLA THE PARTY!

PRISCILLA THE PARTY!

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page