Cinderella and the Beanstalk
Theatre503
Reviewed β 7th December 2018
β β β β
“It is controlled chaos; precise and extremely clever, but there is a joy in witnessing them teetering on the edge of losing that control”
Like the rules of cricket, but even more so; explaining the quintessentially British affair known as βPantoβ to the uninitiated usually meets with an expression of wide-eyed alarm and amused confusion. But letβs take this one step further. Explaining the rules of βThe Sleeping Treesβ β the company that have brought βCinderella and the Beanstalkβ to Theatre 503 this Christmas β is a complete non-starter. You think you know Panto? Oh no you donβt!
The first thing you read in the promo material about this show is that βThe Sleeping Treesβ are not performing. The award winning, three-piece, comedy trio are far too busy doing other stuff. Theyβve done it before anyway. So, theyβve booked a forty-strong cast and musicians this year. Maybe itβs because of the slightly early start time of 7pm, but weβre perilously close to βbeginnersβ and there is only a lone guitarist on stage.
A pause. One that engenders expectation. Builds suspense. No. It is because nobody remembered to book the cast. If a slightly obvious opening gag, it is the only element of predictability in the show. What follows is two hours of offbeat, off-centre, unconventional, way-out, high-spirited, hilarious entertainment that puts a smile on your face so wide it threatens to do permanent damage to your facial muscles.
After the producers have acknowledged their error in forgetting to employ their actors, they take on the task of performing all the roles themselves. Louise Beresford, Severine Howell-Meri, Amanda Shodeko and Anna Spearpoint (the self-acclaimed only all-female panto team in London) take on all the stalwart characters, and more. It is controlled chaos; precise and extremely clever, but there is a joy in witnessing them teetering on the edge of losing that control. Which is the appeal too. These girls are clearly having so much fun it is thoroughly infectious.
Beresford, Shodeko and Spearpoint handle most of the multi-rolling with some wonderfully bizarre interpretations and mashing up of the fairy tales. If Sondheim had dropped acid and hung out with βMonty Pythonβ he would have probably come up with this instead of βInto the Woodsβ. Howell-Meri plays the βhired musicianβ who has wandered into the scenario with a bewildered expression, much like those celebrities who were unwittingly press-ganged into a Morecambe and Wise sketch show. There are so many wonderful homages to our unique strand of comedy that stretches back through the decades; from The Goons, through to The Comic Strip and French and Saunders, Wood and Walters; with elements of Reduced Shakespeare and the βPlay That Goes Wrongβ. Yet these four add a distinctive contemporary touch too and make it their own with their individualism and idiosyncratic energy.
Carla Kinghamβs direction keeps the fevered pace, challenging the stamina of the actors, not to mention the costume changes, with hilarious results. There is little point in supplying you with any hint of the narrative thread, except donβt be fooled by the title. Yes, it does centre on Cinderella and Jack (and the cow); and we do have the prince (though not as we know it) and the ugly sisters, but thereβs alsoβ¦ oh, just pick your favourite panto character and they will be in there somewhere. Maybe not instantly recognisable but I defy anybody not to be in stitches at these portrayals. And if youβre one of those who would run a mile at the merest suggestion of βaudience participationβ; believe me, youβll be singing along and holding hands with the stranger next to you long before interval.
Cinderella and the Beanstalk is completely bonkers but probably the most fun you will have this Christmas. If you embrace the festive season this is definitely the show to catch. If youβre a Scrooge, disparagingly looking down on the βPantoβ artform over your horn-rimmed spectacles; then look again. This is also definitely the show for you β you will be converted.
Reviewed by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Claudia Marinaro
Cinderella and the Beanstalk
Theatre 503 until 5th January
Last shows reviewed at this venue:
Her Not Him | β β β | January 2018
Br’er Cotton | β β β β β | March 2018
Reared | β β β | April 2018
Isaac Came Home From the Mountain | β β β β | May 2018
Caterpillar | β β β β | September 2018
The Art of Gaman | β β β β | October 2018
#Hypocrisy | β β β Β½ | November 2018