The Improvised Shakespeare Show
Hen & Chickens Theatre
Reviewed – 14th October 2019
β β β
“Stick in some βthouβ and βhenceforthβ bits, and thatβs pretty much the Shakespeare done and dusted”
No set, no props, five actors and two musicians in front of black drapes, and some lines from audience members written on paper slips for future reference, and weβre off: βThe Improvised Shakespeare Showβ from ShakeItUp Theatre.
I saw a version of βMacbethβ in the Hen & Chickens Theatre a while ago, entitled βMacBeethβ; (βWhere the place?β βUpon the heath.β/ βThere to meet with β MacBeeth!β) and now it feels a bit wrong if the witches in subsequent productions donβt end their first scene with that perfect couplet. Other than that, I think Shakespeare has proved himself to be pretty much bulletproof. Whatever performers chose to do to Mr. Shakespeare or any of his works will outlive that interpretation, and no-one needs to worry about damaging his reputation. Which said β there are two aspects of this show, how Shakespeareyany is it, and how good is the improv? On the question of Shakespeare, it isnβt really. The prologue invites the audience to chose a history, a comedy, or a tragedy. We chose history. They asked for a name and a setting, and they picked a very un-Shakespearean name, Keith, and an un-Shakespearean setting, Slough, so βThe History of Keith XIII, King of Sloughβ. Which is funny, because it isnβt at all Shakespearean. Stick in some βthouβ and βhenceforthβ bits, and thatβs pretty much the Shakespeare done and dusted. A number of comedy troupes use Shakespeare as a sort of short-hand for Cultural Credibility, and ShakeItUp Theatre are prime examples of that.
Criticising improv is like writing about a tennis match; the important stuff is how quickly the gags get picked up, how well the actors deal with changes, how much humour they can draw out of surprising material, which is better experienced than described. These actors managed that pretty well. They developed a story on the fly, kept it going for sixty minutes, developed some running gags. It made for an entertaining evening. The task of keeping the action going fell a bit unevenly on two members of the five person troupe, which was a shame β part of the joy of group improv is watching the baton change hands fast, and the pace kept dropping. In addition, I would have liked a bit more from the two musicians, because the group improvised songs let them show a collective presence that got somewhat lost in the spoken story-telling.
This is an improv comedy group that name-checks Shakespeare as a high-culture beard for Olde Englishe shenanigans. That matters not at all to Shakespeare, and not much to their improv style. I do wonder if they benefit from the expectation that they will be riffing on actual plays and characters. Would that make it funnier? Spotting references makes the spotter feel clever, and that is an attraction that this show passed up by not referring to anything. Other than that β an hour-long themed group improv. That was funny. But not much to do with Shakespeare.
Reviewed by Chris Lilly
The Improvised Shakespeare Show
Hen & Chickens Theatre (further shows on 11th November and 5th December)
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Abducting Diana | β β β Β½ | March 2018
Hawk | β β β | December 2018
I Will Miss you When You’re Gone | β β Β½ | September 2018
Isaac Saddlesore & the Witches of Drenn | β β β β | April 2018
Mojo | β β | November 2018
No One Likes Us | β β β | August 2019
Not Quite | β β β | February 2019
Scenic Reality | β | August 2019
The Dysfunckshonalz! | β β β β β | May 2019
The First Modern Man | β β β | February 2019
Click here to see our most recent reviews