Tag Archives: Colin Grenfell

The Time Machine – A Comedy

★★★★

Park Theatre

THE TIME MACHINE – A COMEDY at the Park Theatre

★★★★

“There is a playfulness that fits the season perfectly. Like a Christmas jumper. It is great fun, but any other time of the year you could never get away with it.”

Yes, it’s that time of year again. Time for normal rules to be put on the back burner. Sparkly and ridiculous clothes are worn without embarrassment or comment, and behavioural patterns stray from the straight and narrow. Usually induced by festive merriment and alcohol, social barriers are pulled down and liaisons instigated (a polite euphemism) that would normally be questionable. It is the time that, in the grey, sober light of a January, many of us will look back on with a touch of regret.

Suffice to say, Dave Hearn, Amy Revelle and Michael Dylan, who comprise ‘Original Theatre’, will look back with befuddled amazement at their antics at the Park Theatre. But there will be no regret whatsoever, such will be the triumphant success of their seasonal yet anarchic take on H.G. Wells’ “The Time Machine”. I say success maybe prematurely – time will tell – but if there’s any justice in the world, my prediction will be right.

It is also timely. ‘Time’ is a trending topic at this moment in time. With Doctor Who’s 60th anniversary occupying our screens and far too many column inches in our media. And with ‘The Time Traveller’s Wife’ soaring into the West End. Time travel has always fascinated us – it is a weighty issue that is usually treated with reverence and intellectual respect. ‘Original Theatre’ are having none of that. Apart from making it one of the most hilarious explorations of the theory, they also bring it riotously into the realms of reality. Almost.

“The trio take us on a delightful tour in H. G. Wells’ time machine, taking liberties with wild abandon and fuelled by reckless and irreverent gags”

Dave Hearn has adopted the surname Wells, claiming to be the great great grandson of the prolific writer and social critic Herbert George Wells. He has taken it upon himself to convince us that his great great grandfather’s novel was, in fact, science fact rather than fiction. After all, he found the original, ink-stained manuscript in his aunt’s attic to prove it. What ensues is a high energy romp through plays within plays within plays (that inevitably go wrong), with much emphasis on the three main paradoxes that render time travel theoretically illogical. The tone is set from the outset. It is bold and heightened, which is a good thing as it needs the chutzpah to overcome a few clichés before it gets into its stride. The pseudo under rehearsed conceit is over-egged, while the dramatic interruptions veer close to predictability. Sometimes the subject matter is at odds with the delivery, but once the concept is fully established, the chaotic, over-the-top humour falls into place. The trio take us on a delightful tour in H. G. Wells’ time machine, taking liberties with wild abandon and fuelled by reckless and irreverent gags.

In the second act, the plot appears to be irrevocably lost, but by now we are absorbed in the personalities and the human touch. A subliminal message of friendship, loyalty and hope is glimpsed somewhere beneath the mayhem, melodrama and histrionics. Writers Steven Canny and John Nicholson have cleverly pulled the characters out of the story and seemingly left them high and dry. It is shrewdly scripted but the performances convince us of the disarray. The audience are invited to help save the show – and perhaps save a life. It could all go horribly wrong, but Orla O’Loughlin’s sprightly direction inspires reassurance, mixed with some Hitchcockian suspense and Buster Keaton style daring – courtesy too of Fred Meller’s set design.

Hearn, Revelle and Dylan have a natural ability to connect with an audience. Yes, the big questions are either glossed over or pebble-dashed into puzzlement, but such concerns are drowned out by the laughs. There is a playfulness that fits the season perfectly. Like a Christmas jumper. It is great fun, but any other time of the year you could never get away with it.


THE TIME MACHINE – A COMEDY at the Park Theatre

Reviewed on 5th December 2023

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Manuel Harlan

 

Reviewed this year at the Park Theatre:

Ikaria | ★★★★ | November 2023
Passing | ★★★½ | November 2023
The Interview | ★★★ | November 2023
It’s Headed Straight Towards Us | ★★★★★ | September 2023
Sorry We Didn’t Die At Sea | ★★½ | September 2023
The Garden Of Words | ★★★ | August 2023
Bones | ★★★★ | July 2023
Paper Cut | ★★½ | June 2023
Leaves of Glass | ★★★★ | May 2023
The Beach House | ★★★ | February 2023
Winner’s Curse | ★★★★ | February 2023
The Elephant Song | ★★★★ | January 2023

The Time Machine

The Time Machine

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Four Woke Baes

★★★★

Underbelly Cowgate

Four Woke Baes

Four Woke Baes

Underbelly Cowgate

Reviewed – 16th August 2019

★★★★

 

“a clever, awkward and incredibly tense comedy”

 

Four Woke Baes, written by Jonathan Caren, directed by Teddy Bergman and presented by Hidden People; the show features the true story of four men on a stag party drinking beers and barbecuing out in the woods. Everything changes, however, when an alluring female approaches their campsite.

The show builds in awkward tension and uses the breaking of this tension to create most of its comedic moments. None of the guys are particularly good at holding a conversation with Emma (Lyndsy Fonseca) not just because of her ravishingly “symmetrical features”, but because of her vastly superior intellect and ability to dissect each of the guys’ behaviour. So a large amount of this performance sits you in a pool of awkwardness, begging to be alleviated by someone. Oftentimes, Boardman (Quincy Dunn-Baker) is the person that provides this. Dunn-Baker’s performance has the audience in hysterics as his heavy-handed comments land at almost perfect moments to assuage the tension in the room. However, some of the more pure comedy for comedies sake moments aren’t as sound and serve, in the context of the quality of the performance, to feel slightly cheapening.

Consistent brilliance shines from each of the actors as they work through a well-written story to hook you in. Learning about each of the guys’ lives through Emma’s diagnosing of them helps to build a strong connection to each character. When the show reaches its precipice, a do it or don’t do it moment, you can hear a pin drop… it’s skin-crawlingly tense.

Emma’s soothingly calm yet aggressively inquisitive demeanour often has the guys on the back foot and being very defensive. Though the conversation is not often elevated into any form of argument, you can feel the unwillingness of the four men to allow themselves to be read by, or to learn from, a woman. The piece’s overall tone appears to be one of a feminist nature, and achieving this with a male-dominated cast is incredibly impressive.

Colin Grenfell’s lighting and Jeff Gardener’s sound design are a highlight of the play, being integral in creating a natural feel to the performance. Together, they ease the piece through time and slowly travel from a sunset evening into the dead of night. It is done so carefully and concisely you almost don’t notice it happening, such understated and considered tech is hard to come by.

Four Woke Baes is an exceptionally interesting piece. Knowing that the story is true, you feel as if you’re watching some of the most intimate moments of a person’s life, which is quite a unique feeling. It’s a clever, awkward and incredibly tense comedy but overarchingly is a thought provoking piece of theatre.

 

Reviewed by Craig Unadkat

 


Four Woke Baes

Underbelly Cowgate until 25th August as part of Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2019

 

 

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