Tag Archives: Camden Fringe Festival 2023

Improv the Dead

Improv the Dead

★★★★

Hen and Chickens Theatre

IMPROV THE DEAD at the Hen and Chickens Theatre

★★★★

Improv the Dead

“at one point the whole cast go down a water slide, which is a delightful moment of silliness”

 

Improv, when it’s done well is a complete joy – the cast are having as much fun as the audience and everyone is getting involved and having a laugh. This is very much the case with Improv the Dead, a show which is carefully crafted and orchestrated for maximum fun, and maximum energy.

Right from the beginning the mood is set – we arrive in the space and nearly trip over a dead body, sprawled at the top of the stairs. On stage there are zombies feasting on intestines (which look suspiciously like spaghetti) and a couple of audience members are looking distinctly undead.

The gang launches in with a few short form games, warming up and setting the mood. The team are a cast of filmmakers, keen to act out some scenes from their most memorable genre films – what a coincidence that the audience are super fans and can supply all the titles! Then the show begins properly – it’s a zombie flick, set across two locations, supplied by the audience. There’s a huge cast, which mostly works really well, everyone is quick-witted and full of energy, ready to jump in at any moment. There is a bit of a tricky element of people standing at the edge, waiting to jump in, but everyone gets their chance in the spotlight, which is impressive given the size of the cast. There is lots of fourth wall breaking, with directors, producers and stars jumping out of the scene to get more audience suggestions. This stops things from slowing down, keeps the momentum going and keeps the laughs coming. Cast members also call out to flashback or cut to different scenes, which allows everyone a chance to get involved and stops anything from becoming stale.

Particular stand outs (at the time of writing, cast details were unavailable) are evil butler Jeeves who has worked in the castle for centuries and has the confidence to keep that joke going throughout. Also ‘fourth in line’, a little sister with her own nefarious subplot and Proty-Jay, who struggles with the pressure of wanting to save the world from the impending zombie apocalypse. There’s physical comedy as well as quips; at one point the whole cast go down a water slide, which is a delightful moment of silliness.

Structuring it as a zombie apocalypse movie works really well, it gives the piece stakes – and everyone a chance to be a ridiculously over the top member of the undead.

Any time the energy flags, someone cuts out and grabs an audience prompt, or a flashback or cutaway, which shows the strength of the cast. Everyone can sense the mood and play off each other really well. It’s a complete team effort, and no one is left out.

Improv the Dead is part of a regular improv night, on the second Tuesday of every month, and is well worth a trip to – especially as it’s a different show every single night.

 

 

IMPROV THE DEAD at the Hen and Chickens Theatre

Reviewed on 3rd August 2023

by Auriol Reddaway

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

 

Glad To Be Dead? | ★★ | July 2023
Maybe I Do? | ★★★★ | July 2023
Lautrec | ★★★½ | August 2022

IMPROV THE DEAD

IMPROV THE DEAD

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Flamenco: Origenes

★★★★

Etcetera Theatre

FLAMENCO: ORIGENES at the Etcetera Theatre

★★★★

Flamenco: Origenes

“The costumes are dazzling and thoroughly authentic”

 

It’s been a particularly wet and cool summer so far in London, and if you’ve not had a chance to escape the rain, let me suggest a trip to Flamenco/Orígenes. This show is currently playing at the Etcetera Theatre as part of the 2023 Camden Fringe Festival. There, for a brief hour, you can sit and imagine yourself, without much difficulty, in Seville, perhaps, or any other Spanish city fa-mous for its small dark spaces where you can crowd in to see authentic flamenco. It’s a treat to climb the steep stairs at the Etcetera Theatre, and be part of an enthusiastic sold out house that knows how to appreciate good music and good dancing.

Flamenco/Orígenes, presented by the Lourdes Fernandez Flamenco Company based here in London, is not just about the dancing. There’s a story attached to the seven pieces performed in this show as well. Each dance, or palos, presents a piece of the history of flamenco. From its earliest origins in India and North Africa, the Company moves through the contributions of the indigenous peoples who gave us what we now recognize as flamenco. There’s even several changes of costume to emphasize the visual component. It’s quite a feat to pull this off in such a small space (and there is a moment when a spinning shawl catches a music stand and it goes flying) but the Company manages the whole show with style and confidence. By the time the show ends with a bravura presentation of modern day flamenco, it is not just the dancers and musicians who are clapping and stamping their feet with enthusiasm. The audience has caught the energy as well, leaping to their feet with applause and cries of “Olé!”

“You are about to be transported to the warmth of another world”

This talented company consists of two dancers including Lourdes Fernandez herself, and a very accomplished band of singer, drummer, violinist and guitar. Singer Mónica García in particular captures the unique sound of flamenco, and she is very ably supported by the other musicians. The costumes are dazzling and thoroughly authentic, including the brightly coloured shawls that the dancers manage so adroitly. In short, there’s plenty of feast the eyes and ears in this show, even if it’s sometimes hard to see the footwork when seated more than a couple of rows back. I suggest sitting in the front rows, and as Lourdes herself recommends, placing your drink well back under your seat so it doesn’t get upset in all the excitement.

Flamenco/Orígenes is well worth sixty minutes of your time. It’s a welcome escape from Lon-don’s shivery summer, for an absolute bargain of a price. You may need an umbrella to get to the 2023 Camden Town Fringe Festival, but once you are inside the Etcetera Theatre, fold it up. You are about to be transported to the warmth of another world that is the unforgettable beauty of flamenco!


FLAMENCO: ORIGENES at the Etcetera Theatre

Reviewed on 2nd August 2023

by Dominica Plummer

Photography – Lourdes Fernández Flamenco Company



 

 

More shows reviewed by Dominica:

 

Caligula And The Sea | ★★½ | VAULT Festival 2023 | March 2023
Dance Of Death | ★★★★★ | The Coronet Theatre | March 2023
Farm Hall | ★★★★ | Jermyn Street Theatre | March 2023
The Net Kill | ★★★★★ | VAULT Festival 2023 | March 2023
666 Hell Lane | ★★★★★ | The Vaults | February 2023
Dance Me | ★★★★★ | Sadler’s Wells Theatre | February 2023
Oklahoma! | ★★★★ | Wyndham’s Theatre | February 2023
Police Cops: Badass Be Thy Name | ★★★★★ | The Vaults | February 2023
Women, Beware The Devil | ★★★★ | Almeida Theatre | February 2023
Intruder | ★★★★ | VAULT Festival 2023 | January 2023

Flamenco: Origenes

Flamenco: Origenes

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