Tag Archives: Dom Coyote

Kneehigh’s Ubu! A Singalong Satire

★★★★

Shoreditch Town Hall

Kneehigh’s Ubu! A Singalong Satire

Kneehigh’s Ubu! A Singalong Satire

Shoreditch Town Hall

Reviewed – 6th December 2019

★★★★

 

“unabashedly uncool, in turn giving credence to its audience to be the same”

 

Besides overly confident children who’ve yet to be beaten down by the world, I’m going out on a limb and stating confidently that I don’t think anyone actually likes audience participation. The performers come stalking through the crowd, “Can I have a volunteer?” and everyone promptly stares intensely at their shoes or, armed with a child, pushes them to the front, sacrificing them in their stead.

Despite this, somehow Kneehigh’s Ubu manages to succeed in whipping the entire audience in to a giddy frenzy, belting out Bowie and Britney alike, eagerly volunteering for team games, cheering and booing with immense gusto.

The plot, originally written by Alfred Jarry, and turned upside down and inside out for this production by Carl Grose, is nearly irrelevant, just something to hang the evening’s entertainment on: The land of Lovelyville is lovely, ruled over peacefully by President Nick Dallas (Dom Coyote) and his teenage daughter Bobbie Dallas (Kyla Goodey), that is until one day Mr and Mrs Ubu (Katy Owen, Mike Shepherd) climb their way out of the sewers and start wreaking havoc.

Performances are consistently silly and melodramatic, and costumes follow suit: Mop heads serve as hair, spring coils as breasts and dunce hats as crowns (created under the supervision of Megan Rarity). There is zero effort to suspend any disbelief- in fact, there’s an active push in the other direction. At one point, on presenting a long stick, Mrs Ubu states, “This is more than a stick, this is a genuine African blow dart. Suspend your disbelief is you don’t believe me.”

The whole evening feels like complete chaos: aside from the constant breaks into song, one side of the audience is called upon repeatedly to act as a zoo; our host for the evening, Jeremy Wardle (Niall Ashdown) keeps interrupting scenes to give yellow cards for bad language; at some point a bear shows up… Multiple times throughout, I find myself admitting I have absolutely no idea what’s going on, but it doesn’t matter. And in fact, the nonsensicalness of the show is perhaps what allows everyone to let go of any manners or restraint and really lean in to the madness. The bar is also open throughout the evening, which no doubt aids in the audience’s loosening up.

The band (The Sweaty Beaurocrats) remains on stage throughout, as does a giant toilet, taking centre-stage, providing a handy entrance or a humiliating exit. An additional promenade stage (designed by Bill Mitchell) allows the standing audience to crowd around, like a benign mob, singing on cue whenever words appear on one of three giant screens. There is seating, but most of the audience is stood throughout, eager to join in the ruckus.

Regardless of whether you can carry a tune, or whether you even know the words, there is something incredibly freeing about belting your heart out in a big crowd, arms around strangers, caring not a hair that you’ve somehow been turned into an audience participant. Kneehigh’s Ubu, as co-directed by Carl Grose and Mike Shepherd, is unabashedly uncool, in turn giving credence to its audience to be the same. This is exactly what a Christmas show should be. Overwhelmingly silly and senseless, and one of the best nights out in London this December.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Photography by Steve Tanner

 


Kneehigh’s Ubu! A Singalong Satire

Shoreditch Town Hall until 21st December

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Madhouse re:exit | ★★★½ | March 2018
The Nature of Forgetting | ★★★★ | April 2018
We can Time Travel | ★★★ | April 2018
Suicide Notes … The Spoken Word of Christopher Brett Bailey | ★★★½ | May 2018
These Rooms | ★★★★★ | June 2018
Busking It | ★★★★ | October 2018
Shift | ★★★★ | May 2019
Gastronomic | ★★★★★ | September 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

We Can Time Travel – 3 Stars

Travel

We Can Time Travel

Shoreditch Town Hall

Reviewed – 26th April 2018

★★★

“supernaturally quirky and rather quite endearing”

 

Humankind’s fascination with the notion of time travel has been endless. Particularly through literature and film, have we explored the idea of being able to revisit the past, or taken a look at what our future has in store for us. Whether it is with a flux capacitor, time holes, or mind control, there have been many different theories on how we could voyage through the years. However, one conclusion most time travelling adventures have in common, is that meddling with your past, present or future can never bring the satisfaction you are looking for. If anything, it brings more problems than it’s worth. So Dom Coyote also finds out in his current solo piece, We Can Time Travel. He has discovered the key to travelling through time, yet he will find that being back in the present is the best place to be. Combining storytelling with the atmosphere of an intimate gig, this multi-faceted show is supernaturally quirky and rather quite endearing.

Dom knows how to time travel, and he wants to take you with him, and prove that his makeshift time machine works. But first, he must explain how and where it all began. Since childhood, Dom received various recordings from his grandfather. Whilst listening back to them on his old Casio tape deck, Dom notices an odd sound. A sound, that is like a mysterious voice. Through his own detective work and the help of H.G. Well’s 1895 novel The Time Machine, Dom finds out the importance of this voice and consequently the way to move through time. Revisiting the moment his grandfather mysteriously died, as well as an unpleasant encounter with Dom’s elderly self in the future (rendering him into wanting to change his ways within the present) makes this tale, at times, feel like a sci-fi retelling of A Christmas Carol. When an issue with getting back home occurs, Dom begins to realise and value the importance of making the most of the present.

With analogue synthesisers, keyboards, looping machines, cassette players and microphones taking up most of the dingy basement performance space, this futuristic, musical paraphernalia, with all its knobs and dials, create the appearance of Dom’s DIY time machine. Coyote has composed the accompanying music and soundscape to his dystopian world and it works rather well. It is too unique and technology-driven to be put under the ‘musical’ category, which is why it lies closer to being like a gig with accompanying storytelling. Coyote’s gravelly, impassioned, singer-songwriter vocals are haunting to listen to, adding to the abstract dimensions in which the story roams. The music does seem the strongest part of the production, however, there are certainly some inventive moments where both the storytelling and lighting design (created by Chris Swain) shine.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

 

Shoreditch Town Hall

We Can Time Travel

Shoreditch Town Hall until 5th May

 

 

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