Tag Archives: David Guest

Autoreverse

Autoreverse

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Battersea Arts Centre

Autoreverse

Autoreverse

Β Battersea Arts Centre

Reviewed – 5th February 2020

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“the raw emotions being experienced by Cordeu as she performs are something that we can tune into whoever and wherever we may be”

 

The importance of remembering – and forgetting – and identifying where you truly call your home are key themes in a fascinating and powerful audio-visual theatrical experience at Battersea Arts Centre as part of an impressive Going Global spring season.

As much a general plea to listen to the stories of our forebears as it is a personal journey through her family’s life in South America (and, indeed, the tale of the country itself), Florencia Cordeu has created a captivating piece of performance art in β€œAutoreverse.”

Using extracts from cassette tapes stored at her family home in Chile, Cordeu learns about the past and rediscovers her present as she reflects on what she hears on the tapes, featuring voices of various family members who escaped the cruel Argentinian regime in the 1970s but were forced apart as a result.

An array of cassette players in a living room are used to play the various tapes (all credit to Elena Pena at the sound desk for making this so realistic), which stirs recollections of growing up, and evokes memories of a bygone age, feelings of safety and home.

The set (Rajha Shakiry) is so convincing the audience feels it has mistakenly wandered into someone’s apartment rather than into a performance in the Centre’s Members’ Bar.

What is poignant is that to anyone else these recordings mean little – as Cordeu herself admits they β€œcapture the banal, the everyday.” But we soon come to realise the importance of these tapes – love letters between family members living apart which capture moments in time to be played on other days in other places.

Director Omar Elerian allows the personal essence of the story to develop and flow naturally as Cordeu shares centre stage with the voices of the past, though references to the analogue reality of old cassette tapes (which have a limited life span) seem odd when it is clear that CDs or digitally recorded versions of the tapes are being played.

But it is easy to look beyond that as we picture a natural flow of thoughts and images falling onto the iron oxide of the tape, which allows a sense of β€œbeing there while not being there and seeing things with the ears.”

Not only do the recordings – and, by extension, the show – attempt to rescue and make sense of everyday life but serve a purpose of remembering what may have otherwise been forgotten.

A recurring motif of a tree – Cordeu brings on a bonsai, which she wishes could be planted outside rather than sitting on a table in a pot to allow it to grow freely and unconstrained – serves as a significant metaphor. She tends it with the notion that it is important to try to keep things alive, as important for plants as it is for memories.

With the first recording played serving as a narrative (the performer recorded it in her flat last year) there’s an intriguing question posed about looking to the future and being what you want to be – a publicity image for the production of a little girl dressed as Wonder Woman has relevance as the play continues.

The closing scene, which considers what is truly our home and how we build it up, adds depth to a show that is already thought-provoking.

The overall impact is touching, even where there’s a feeling another culture might find it difficult to share the experiences and fully understand the implication of all the memories. But the raw emotions being experienced by Cordeu as she performs are something that we can tune into whoever and wherever we may be.

 

Reviewed by David Guest

Photography by Helen Murray

 


Autoreverse

Β Battersea Arts Centre until 22nd February

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
How to Survive a Post-Truth Apocalypse | β˜…β˜…β˜… | May 2018
Rendezvous in Bratislava | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2018
Dressed | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2019
Frankenstein: How To Make A Monster | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | March 2019
Status | β˜…β˜…β˜…Β½ | April 2019
Woke | β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2019
Now Is Time To Say Nothing | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2019
Queens Of Sheba | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2019
Trojan Horse | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2019
Goldilocks And The Three Musketeers | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | December 2019

 

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First Time

FIRST TIME

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VAULT Festival 2020

First Time

First Time

Studio – The Vaults

Reviewed – 31st January 2020

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“Hall performs with such affable assurance and courage that he must surely be a name to be reckoned with in theatre beyond five star confessional solo shows”

 

Hope is the beating heart of an incisive and intelligent one-man show telling a personal story about living with HIV/AIDS which encourages everybody to be forward-looking, bold and proud.

β€œFirst Time” is an early offering in a ridiculously packed VAULT Festival season but it is already a production that will be hard to better 600 shows down the line.

Written and performed by an instantly likeable Nathaniel Hall β€œFirst Time” works on more levels than shows which have twice its running time. It is bravely autobiographical, relating how Hall contracted HIV the first time he had sex at the age of 16; it is tellingly informative, with a light-hearted quiz quickly clearing up misconceptions about HIV; it offers confident optimism to anyone living with any stigma of shame or fear; it never once sugar-coats the reality of a condition that has claimed the lives of 35 million people and has another 37 million living with it; and it is never afraid to treat what could be a harrowing subject with humour.

And those facts are all a surprise, not least the important truth that someone on HIV treatment whose viral load is β€œundetectable” is also β€œuntransmittable” and cannot pass the virus onto others. Even this information is handled with a naughty glint that suggests Hall might be flirting with likely audience members.

Festival style shows lasting 60-70 minutes are generally simply staged with as few props as possible. Hall makes everything difficult for himself by firing silly string into the audience, popping a streamer cannon, and spilling bowls of pills all over the stage. You can almost hear director Chris Hoyle relishing the task of allowing the show to stay busy and in your face.

For such a small production the set (Irene Jade) is bursting with life, with multi-coloured boxes, a bench, a duvet, a clothes rail, screens, a gin bottle, a mic stand, a heart balloon and clothing among the items strewn around the stage.

Lighting (Joel Clements) is also a crucial part of the performance, with the sort of fast cues and directed spots of which a major West End production would be envious.

Hall allows what must for many in the audience be an unfamiliar journey to be shared frankly. His mantra is β€œwhat a mess!” yet it is all too clear that he has made something of it, he has survived and he wants to inform others about it as well as paying tribute to the individuals that have helped him through.

It is not a comfortable journey. Alongside the laugh-out-loud moments (including a female audience member being dragged onto the stage to recreate his Prom Night dance with the head girl) Hall is in earnest as he speaks of the depression, the brushes with death, the homophobic abuse, the self-loathing, the ineffective drugs and above all the pain of trying to tell his family the truth about being HIV +.

In its way β€œFirst Time” is every bit as important and well-written and played as gay-themed dramas such as β€œThe Normal Heart,” β€œAngels in America” and β€œRent.” More than that Hall performs with such affable assurance and courage that he must surely be a name to be reckoned with in theatre beyond five star confessional solo shows.

 

Reviewed by David Guest

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

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