Tag Archives: Camden Fringe 2019

The Death Of Ivan Ilyich

★★

Lion and Unicorn Theatre

The Death Of Ivan Ilyich

The Death Of Ivan Ilyich

Lion and Unicorn Theatre

Reviewed – 5th August 2019

★★

 

“The cast work hard to portray a group of well-off people unprepared for tragedy and though this is occasionally comic, the point is not clear”

 

An audience of around twenty, respectable for a Monday night fringe show, were perhaps intrigued by the idea that a Tolstoy novella about the terrors of a life lived without meaning could work as light comedy. For Unmasked Theatre’s adaptation, bourgeois life around 19th Century St Petersburg is replaced with a technology-distracted Surrey milieu where we find self-satisfied, career ladder-climbing lawyer, Ivan Ilyich (Kevin Cherry), moving with his family into the splendid new home earned by his latest promotion. He then experiences a minor tumble from an actual ladder whilst hanging curtains. The resulting mysterious pain around his kidneys ineluctably becomes a terminal illness, giving him a grim, new perspective on friends and family. As mortality shifts the focal length of his moral lens, those closest to him appear superficial next to the authenticity of those he had previously considered least important, namely Gerasim (Tyrone Purling), his lower-class carer, and his youngest child, Vasya (George Todd).

The play follows the structure of the book, starting with the news of Ivan’s death and the reactions of his peer group. Then, after the respects are paid and sympathies relayed amid the banality of funeral arrangements, Ivan’s personal effects are boxed up for all eternity, at which point we head back to the start of the story. The strength of this chronology is that we know Ivan’s fate throughout and, at least in Tolstoy’s version, feel the ensuing horror of Ivan’s living death, as he slides, tormented, towards the inevitable.

However, Unmasked Theatre declare their version to be not about death, not even about Ivan, but about those who must witness dying. The cast work hard to portray a group of well-off people unprepared for tragedy and though this is occasionally comic, the point is not clear.  Deprived of Ivan’s subjectivity, the characters’ behaviour seems normal. Dealing with death does indeed involve carrying on, trying to be cheerful, adapting to new realities and hoping for a cure, so it seems perverse to find it superficial or amusing.

The performances suit the topsy-turvy nature of the venture, with Kevin Cherry as Ivan starting weakly but getting better as he deteriorated and Sarah Widdas as his wife, Praskivya, creating just enough empathy to destroy the satire of her supposed insincerity. George Todd appears too old to be the tiny, overlooked Vasya with black rings around his eyes depicted in the novella, while Seerche Deveraux as Lisa is too slight a presence to resemble a brazen socialite. Even Tyrone Purling and Matt Turpin, who fare better with the two slippery doctors, are only successful because these characters are transplanted directly from the 19th Century when medics had to cover their cluelessness with bombast, so their emergence as comedy archetypes is fortuitous.

Like Ivan Ilyich, the enterprise is doomed from the start, but Pip O’Neill and Luke Oldfield co-direct to create a fluid production and provide a unique prism through which to experience Tolstoy’s late religious angst. Seen upside down, from another century, something of the original cautionary tale remains.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography by Pip O’Neill

 

Camden Fringe

The Death Of Ivan Ilyich

Lion and Unicorn Theatre until 6th August as part of Camden Fringe 2019

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
How to Make me Happy | ★★★★★ | July 2018
Hummingbird | ★★★ | August 2018
In the Wake of | ★★★ | August 2018
The German Girls | ★★★ | August 2018
The Cut | ★★ | November 2018
BackPAGE | ★★½ | February 2019
Like You Hate Me | ★★★ | April 2019
Mama G’s Story Time Roadshow | ★★★★★ | May 2019
River In The Sky | ★★½ | May 2019
Euan | ★★★★ | July 2019

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No One Likes Us

★★★

Hen and Chickens Theatre

No One Likes Us

Hen and Chickens Theatre

Reviewed – 2nd August 2019

★★★

 

“here’s something so heartfelt and earnest about this piece that you can’t help but be drawn in”

 

Everyone knows a Spider. By which I mean the central character of Andy Rothery’s two-hander, rather than any sort of actual arachnid. Spider is the kind of middle-aged working class white man you’d expect to find at your local Wetherspoons, complaining about the ‘bloody immigrants’, and insisting that ‘Brexit means Brexit’. And indeed, that is the initial impression we are shown of Spider, until No One Likes Us starts peeling back the anxieties and insecurities hiding underneath the bravado of the bile.

Left with only a handful of months to live due to cancer, Spider (Paul Dewdney) is full of resentment and defeatism – carting around an IV drip in his unkempt house and substituting Fosters for milk in his cereal. To make matters worse for him, his new nurse Jolana (Jennifer Evans) is not a proper English nurse, but instead Eastern European. Although at first this brings out a tirade of venom and vitriol from Spider, Jolana’s care and determination allows an unlikely friendship to form between the two. This dynamic facilitates a story full of guilt, fear, and redemption, that’s told with heart and humour thanks to a bold script from Rothery (also undertaking directorial duties) that firmly punches through any discomfort with the subject matter to create an atmosphere that invites the audience in rather than repels them.

Dewdney’s performance as Spider is astonishing – the initial acidity of his prejudices is slowly deconstructed to reveal a scared little boy, displacing his frustrations at a system that allowed his family to be split apart onto anyone who isn’t English, and Dewdney captures the complexity of his journey with a confidence and gravitas that keeps the audience firmly in the palm of his hand, even through some of the play’s more far-fetched and convenient plot points that occur in its second half. Dewdney coaxes out both laughter and tears at all the right moments, leaving nary a dry eye by the play’s climax.

Evans, too, does a sterling job, but is given considerably less material to work with, instead being relegated to just listening to Spider and feeling sorry for him for the majority of the play. The extent to which Jolana is under-written is only made more noticeable by how well-developed Spider is, and leaves you yearning for more balance in the piece. Her only plot thread – her need to get a good recommendation from Spider for her boss to help with achieving her nursing qualification – is dropped without mention about twenty minutes in, leaving her only to exist as a vehicle for Spider’s redemption.

There’s an argument to be made that No One Likes Us shouldn’t be sympathising with and excusing the attitudes of racists, and it certainly shouldn’t be the responsibility of those being persecuted to help said racists see the error of their ways. And yet, there’s something so heartfelt and earnest about this piece that you can’t help but be drawn in to its (slightly misguided) hopes of a kinder and more compassionate society.

 

Reviewed by Tom Francis

 

Camden Fringe

No One Likes Us

Hen and Chickens Theatre until 3rd August as part of Camden Fringe 2019

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Abducting Diana | ★★★½ | March 2018
Isaac Saddlesore & the Witches of Drenn | ★★★★ | April 2018
I Will Miss you When You’re Gone | ★★½ | September 2018
Mojo | ★★ | November 2018
Hawk | ★★★ | December 2018
Not Quite | ★★★ | February 2019
The First Modern Man | ★★★ | February 2019
The Dysfunckshonalz! | ★★★★★ | May 2019

 

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