Tag Archives: Christmas in Leicester Square

Briefs: Close Encounters – 3 Stars

Briefs: Close Encounters

Briefs: Close Encounters

Christmas in Leicester Square

Reviewed – 14th November 2018

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“These boys from Oz are indeed gorgeous, but they could raise the roof if they got their freak on!”

 

There was a glittery, glitzy, festive buzz in the Leicester Square Spiegeltent last night. Drinks were flowing and people were clearly out to welcome these ‘seriously gorgeous guys from Oz’ and have a good time. We were promised ‘world circus skills, drop dead gorgeous drag, raucous comedy and trademark punkish swagger’ and the audience appetite was keen.

Briefs: Close Encounters opens with a couple of cute and cheeky dance routines, drawing on and camping up old-school twenties and thirties burlesque traditions – top-hatted gents and chorus girls with flirtatious palm fronds – before we are officially welcomed by the fabulous Shivannah, our emcee for the evening. She is a terrific hostess – with the gorgeous combination of warmth, sass and glamour that characterises the best drag – and her improvised interludes provide some of the highlights of the show. Briefs’ overall conceit (reminiscent of Parliament-Funkadelic’s futuristic mothership) is a little chaotic – ‘someone get these guys a dramaturg’ is one of Shivannah’s best asides – but it really doesn’t matter, given the playful nature of the whole event.

That said, a little tightening-up of the mechanics wouldn’t go amiss. The transitions between acts are often unnecessarily clumsy, and there are too many empty-stage moments, which slow down the pace of the evening, particularly in the first half. Part of the fun of this type of show is that the acts come fast and furious, and there should be a slightly frenetic quality to proceedings for the audience to become caught up in. This momentum starts to build in the second half, post-interval, but should have been there from the get-go. It’s true to say, however, that the performers have only had a few days to get a feel for their audience, and things will almost certainly become faster, bigger, bolder and more raucous as time goes on.

The skill and athleticism of the acrobatics – special mention here to some awesome aerial work from Thomas Worrell – is a delight throughout, and, thanks to some splendidly cheeky costume design, there is plenty of sizzle and sauce to please the punters. The ‘magic’ routine was decidedly under par however, and the evening is full of moments that aren’t pushed to their full potential. Shivannah tells us of Briefs’ origins in a little club in Brisbane ten years ago, and it often feels as if the constraints of a small venue and a more parochial crowd -‘the West End of Brisbane is an industrial estate, not the West End of London’ – are still in place. The queerest performance of the night came from Harry Clayton-Wright, who brought a welcome whiff of mild anarchy to proceedings, and there was also a slight edge of danger to Dale Woodbridge-Brown’s Wonderland-inspired rabbit, but all-in-all, despite the dressing, Briefs feels rather safe and old-fashioned.

Captain Kidd performs his LED hula-hoop routine, towards the end of the show, to Die Antwoord’s tune ‘I fink u freeky’:

Sexy boys

Fancy boys

Playboys

Bad boys

I fink u freeky and I like you a lot.

These boys from Oz are indeed gorgeous, but they could raise the roof if they got their freak on!

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Kate Pardey

 


Briefs: Close Encounters

Christmas in Leicester Square until 3rd January

 

 

 

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Review of Black Cat Cabaret – 5 Stars

Cabaret

Black Cat Cabaret

Christmas in Leicester Square – Spiegeltent

Reviewed – 11th November 2017

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“each is a short and quirky tour de force that tickles your palate and then vanishes before it overstays its welcome”

 

A drag queen, a sort of robot geisha and a man in a particular state of undress, to name a few, skulk amongst the audience. The tent is half-illuminated by the glow of soft lighting on the haze of smoke machines. Suddenly, the sound of a violin. Like the Pied Piper of Hamelin, or his seedier brother, the violinist summons the performers to the stage. We are no longer in Leicester Square, but somehow in vintage Montmartre, ready for whatever titillation that the Black Cat Cabaret has in store for us.

The show comprises mostly standalone performances from a variety of performers, each bringing a new artistic discipline in a unique and often surprising way. To say too much of any one act would risk spoiling it, as each is a short and quirky tour de force that tickles your palate and then vanishes before it overstays its welcome. Some have subversive twists; others are spellbinding enough played straight. Each performer is clearly an expert in their craft, and it is fantastic to see the Black Cat Cabaret draw artists of this calibre to the heart of Leicester Square. You will have a favourite, though it may take you a while to decide who.

If one area of the show fails to maintain this very high standard, it is the compère, Dusty Limits. For all the humour and the androgyny, he risks being a little toothless. Picking on audience members between acts is done out of a sense of duty and quickly dropped, while his songs, despite being glorious in the moment, are not particularly memorable. He is, however, a charming presence on stage and a very efficient host. I just wonder if, in the interests of efficiency, Dusty Limits robs himself of the opportunity to truly let rip.

The Black Cat Cabaret is certainly an adult show, but shies away from risking causing offense; despite its apparent eroticism and naughtiness, the nudity is tasteful and the jokes inclusive. This is high-class cabaret at its most polished – so polished that, for better or for worse, some of the sleaze has rubbed off altogether. This is by no means a bad thing, though, if the emphasis is put where it should rightly be: on the quality of the acts themselves.

 

Reviewed by Matthew Wild

 

 

BLACK CAT CABARET

is atΒ Christmas in Leicester Square until 31st December

 

 

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