Tag Archives: Darren Clark

THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON

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Ambassadors Theatre

THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON at the Ambassadors Theatre

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“every member of the ensemble cast is a vital cog in the intricate mechanism of this fine piece of theatre”

Five years ago, โ€œThe Curious Case of Benjamin Buttonโ€ unveiled itself to little fanfare at Southwark Playhouse. Jethro Comptonโ€™s and Darren Clarkeโ€™s adaptation of F Scott Fitzgeraldโ€™s fantastical short story used just five actor-musicians to tell the tale in a chamber music fashion. I described it at the time as โ€˜a sensational piece of musical theatreโ€™. I was not alone. Acoustic and intimate, the only way for it to go was to grow, until last year it replayed at the larger โ€˜Elephantโ€™ at Southwark, with more cast, more instruments and much more of a marketing push behind it. I felt it had lost something of the original. Nevertheless, itโ€™s course was pre-determined. As per one of its narrative leitmotifs: โ€˜Time and tide waits for no manโ€™. Itโ€™s West End premiere, bigger and better still, has remarkably, and unquestionably, recaptured the sheer magic and emotional charm of its humble beginnings.

Fitzgerald was inspired to write the story, in 1922, by Mark Twain who lamented the fact that the best part of life came at the beginning and the worst part at the end. Fitzgerald, in an attempt to turn this idea on its head, discovered that youth and old age are mirrors of each other. A witty and insightful satire it tells the story of Benjamin Button who is born an old man and mysteriously begins ageing backwards. At the beginning of his life, he is withered and worn, but as he continues to grow younger, he embraces life, falls in love, goes to war, has children, and eventually, as his mind begins to devolve again, returns to the care of his nurses, and eventual oblivion. It is a fantasy. A dark fairy tale but one that is slightly clinical and lacking in pathos. The genius of this musical adaptation partly lies in how much it is transformed into a heart-wrenching love story. Liberties are taken with the original text, but entirely necessary ones.

We are no longer in the US seaport of Baltimore, but on the Cornish coast. Compton โ€“ not content with writing, directing and co-writing the lyrics, is also the creative force behind the set. Evocatively shambolic, it recreates the small fishing village. You can almost smell the salty sea air. With the crash of a wave, we are introduced to the characters that inhabit this backwater with a poetic lyricism that echoes Dylan Thomas; and a musical accompaniment that pulls us right into the heart of the story, stronger than the moon at the highest tide. The folksy, Celtic tunes have a musical theatre veneer but are delivered with sublime energy and virtuosity by the twelve strong cast, layered with Chi-San Howardโ€™s expert and clockwork choreography. Swapping instruments like relay batons, they keep the score alive, guiding it through the haunting ballads right up to the soaring anthems. The thirteenth cast member, who never picks up an instrument (until the encore) stands apart. The oddball. The title character โ€“ Benjamin Button. John Dagleish gives us a hangdog and tender portrayal that is also defiant and powerful. We are not long into the show when our hearts are already breaking. Rejected by his mother (beautifully and tragically portrayed by Philippa Hogg) there are shades of Kafkaโ€™s โ€˜Metamorphosisโ€™ as Button is kept in the attic โ€“ a shameful secret. Hoggโ€™s rendition of โ€˜The Krakenโ€™s Lullabyโ€™ leaves a lasting, tearful impression as she echoes the line โ€˜I pray you wonโ€™t wake from your sleepโ€™.

Yet he continues to do so, for the next sixty-nine years. It is a miraculous backwards journey that extends beyond the curiosity of a life running in reverse. Time is a constant refrain, and woven into the fabric of time are the inextricable links, and twists of fate, that snowball into life-changing moments. He meets the important characters in his life twice. Notably โ€˜Little Jackโ€™ (brilliantly played by Jack Quarton), a young fisherman whom Button befriends but later horrifies when he is young, and Jack is older. But it is Clare Fosterโ€™s Elowen who lights up the stage. The love of his life. Sassy and flirtatious in youth, heartbroken yet forgiving in love and vulnerably stoic in her tragic later years, her journey as she and Button travel in opposite directions is a masterstroke. When she sings โ€˜We have Timeโ€™, we can hear the crack of a thousand hearts throughout the auditorium.

Mark Aspinallโ€™s musical direction and orchestration accentuate the dynamics, each crescendo and diminuendo highlighted by Luke Swaffieldโ€™s crisp sound design. While Zoe Spurrโ€™s lighting guides us from night, back into day; from the moon to the sun and even into the depths of the sea. Each shade pinpointing each pivotal moment.

Just as every moment counts, every member of the ensemble cast is a vital cog in the intricate mechanism of this fine piece of theatre. The harmonies sweep us away leaving us slightly breathless. Yet the emotional punch doesnโ€™t completely conceal the cleverness of Compton and Clarkeโ€™s interpretation. Relocating it to Cornwall is an inspired choice, as is shifting the narrative forward to take in most of the twentieth century. The shifting tides and manโ€™s fascination with the moon play an important role, taking on a metaphorical and literal reality with the 1969 Moon landing. An event that confirms the protagonistsโ€™ belief that anything is possible. We get the sense that they donโ€™t quite fully accept that optimism. And most of the time, neither do we. But the battered belief abides. And this show affirms it. From start to finish, it is a triumph. Or is that from finish to start?


THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON at the Ambassadors Theatre

Reviewed on 6th November 2024

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Marc Brenner

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE ENFIELD HAUNTING | โ˜…ยฝ | January 2024
ROSE | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | May 2023
MAD HOUSE | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | June 2022
COCK | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | March 2022

THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON

THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON

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The Wicker Husband

The Wicker Husband

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Watermill Theatre

The Wicker Husband

The Wicker Husband

Watermill Theatre

Reviewed – 16th March 2020

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“a performance of enormous range and sparkling energy”

 

Thereโ€™s something remarkable happening at the picturesque Watermill Theatre in Newbury. On the night that London theatres closed and coronavirus gloom descended upon the nation, I was privileged to be part of an evening of pure enchantment, as a musical over eight years in the making made its debut on this most creative of stages.

First, forget whatever other associations the title The Wicker Husband may conjure. This has nothing to do with the film The Wicker Man. Second, prepare to be transported into a bright and delightful mythic world that is based on a short story by Ursula Wills-Jones and wonderfully adapted for the stage by Rhys Jennings (book) and Darren Clark (music and lyrics).

This sweet and affecting story is profoundly moral in an entirely natural way. It is a very English tale of the trees and water that somehow seems to draw both on Yorkshire mystery plays and American musical theatre. It asks the questions that social media so often gets wrong. Where does beauty really reside? And whatโ€™s it like to be an outsider, shunned by all the pretty people?

A multi-talented company of 12 are joined on the Watermillโ€™s tiny stage by a number of wicker puppets made and operated in the exposed Japanese โ€˜bunrakuโ€™ style (think Warhorse). These extraordinary and beautiful creations by Finn Caldwell and team are brought to life by Eilon Morris, Yazdan Qafouri and Scarlet Wilderink. Qafouri (a winner of BBC One’s Let It Shine) has one of the many fine voices in this show. He is more than matched by Laura Johnson as the Ugly Girl, for whom the wicker husband is created. Here is a performance of enormous range and sparkling energy.

Julian Forsyth has a pivotal role as the Old Basketmaker whose weaving gives new life to the willow withies, sea grass and blackthorn. He has an impressive stage presence and a fine singing voice. Other members of this cracking and committed cast are Jack Beale, Angela Caesar (who as well as being an actor is also an opera singer and one of three fine violinists in the show), Claire-Marie Hall, Stephen Leask and Zoรซ Rainey.

The show interweaves puppetry with some two dozen catchy ballads, several dance routines (Steven Harris) and any number of opportunities for the castโ€™s instrumental skills to shine, with some highly effective lighting by Hartley TA Kemp, clean and effective design by Anna Kelsey and inspired direction by Charlotte Westenra.

As the programme describes, this production is the result of several dedicated years of workshops, competitions and mentoring. It is a fine testimony to the enormous creativity of the British stage and a highly recommended antidote to much else that besets us now.

 

Reviewed by David Woodward

Photography by Johan Persson

 

The Wicker Husband

Watermill Theatre until 4th April

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Murder For Two | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | February 2019
Macbeth | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | March 2019
Amรฉlie | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | April 2019
The Importance Of Being Earnest | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | May 2019
Assassins | โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… | September 2019

 

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