Dirty Crusty
The Yard Theatre
Reviewed – 28th October 2019
β β β β
“as completely random and unexpected as it is, it makes me inexplicably happy”
I feel slightly ill-equipped to properly appraise a show that employs so many different contrivances. Dirty Crusty, written by Clare Barron, begins with a plain white origami dollβs house lit from within, accompanied by a voice-over conversation between house mates. Jeanine (Akiya Henry) then appears on the upper stage followed by Victor (Douggie McMeekin) both of whom are holding giant CBBC style microphones. They deliver their conversation half facing the audience, a giant glowing moon projected behind them, and then suddenly they break in to song. They then clamber down to the main set, cast off their microphones and resume a sort of normal narrative.
I say βsort ofβ because Jay Millerβs direction goes on to use (amongst other things) dance, voice-over narration, another musical number, and strange employment of time. Scenes in entirely different venues, often on different days, overlap: Jeanine and Victor are entangled in bed as Synda (Abiona Omonua) starts her dance class with Jeanine, and vice versa, as Victor initiates conversations about sex fantasies with Jeanine in his flat, whilst Jeanine and Synda are still dancing together in Syndaβs rehearsal space.
But whilst the production itself attempts to animate the audienceβs disbelief in a myriad of ways, the dialogue and its delivery are painstakingly true to life. Jeanine is thirty-one, and sheβs at a difficult juncture. Feeling she hasnβt achieved enough for her age, she looks for ways to improve herself and expand her experiences. She tries to be sexually bolder with her (sort of) boyfriend Victor, and she decides to take up ballet lessons with dance teacher Synda. Her relationships with both are complicated. Sometimes they feed her enthusiasm and sometimes they crush it. Many of the conversations are so close to the real thing that it seems near impossible that they should be scripted. McMeekinβs delivery in particular – every hesitation, every stress – paints such a whole character, full of flaws and good intentions. This seems to be Barronβs particular expertise, having created similarly dimensional characters in her previous work, Dance Nation.
The stage (as designed by Emma Bailey) is built like a wide-set puppet show box, with heavy curtains concealing different sets: One is Victorβs flat, with meticulous Muji furniture; another, Syndaβs sparse room, with not much more than a yoga mat for decoration. And a third, hidden for most of the story, is Jeanineβs clothes-covered mess of a hoarder’s room. The ever opening and closing curtains, along with all the other quirky production devices, provide a dream-like quality to the story, somehow magnifying the dialogueβs nuance and conviction.
But just when you think the plot has settled into a more conventional rhythm, (slight spoiler coming up, my apologies) the show ends with a childrenβs ballet recital- like, actual children ballet dancing. But as completely random and unexpected as it is, it makes me inexplicably happy. And that summary might be applied to the entire play: Completely random, but it makes me inexplicably happy.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by Maurizio Martorana
Dirty Crusty
The Yard Theatre until 20th November
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
48 Hours: | β β | January 2019
Call it a Day | β β β | January 2019
Hotter Than A Pan | β β β β | January 2019
Plastic Soul | β β β β | January 2019
A Sea Of Troubles | β β β β β | February 2019
Cuteness Forensics | β β Β½ | February 2019
Sex Sex Men Men | β β β β β | February 2019
To Move In Time | β β Β½ | February 2019
Ways To Submit | β β β β | February 2019
Armadillo | β β β β | June 2019
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