Tag Archives: Dominic Gettins

Tony’s Last Tape
★★★★

Omnibus Theatre

Last Tape

Tony’s Last Tape

Omnibus Theatre

Reviewed – 4th April 2019

★★★★

 

“through this richly observed production it’s poignant to realise the heady positions of influence reached by Benn”

 

It was occasionally said of Tony Benn that he could make something you passionately disagree with sound perfectly reasonable. The charm with which he expresses his controversial convictions has been fulsomely archived in thousands of hours of recordings, nine volumes of diaries not to mention his own one man shows. So, Andy Barrett’s one man play Tony’s Last Tape imagining how the last of Benn’s home recording sessions might have proceeded, sits in a curious space, fictionalising the well-documented. Commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse in 2015, a year after Benn’s death, it is likely to have originated as a homage and Rachael Jacks’ detailed set design sustains the theory. A loving reconstruction of Benn’s study, featuring a desk covered in papers, pipes and an array of recording devices is surrounded by boxes, cabinets and bookshelves laden with memoirs and projects, all awash with nostalgic blue-yellow light (Martin Curtis).

The portrayal of the doddery 88-year-old himself, in slippers, dressing gown and Poll Tax demo tee-shirt, is affectionate and masterfully delivered. Philip Bretherton manages to capture Benn’s contorted splay of elbows and thumbs as he starts his pipe, the finger-wagging and chin-jutting, to perfection. The script just as skilfully renders Benn’s vocal style, a combination of moral certainty and loquacity. For those unlikely to find time to listen to hours of original ‘Benn tapes’ the play provides a handy biography. Running at seventy five minutes it fits in details of Benn’s private life, the loss of his brother in wartime and his wife to cancer amongst a comprehensive range of his greatest hits, career achievements, memories and meetings by means of an apparently rambling but supremely well-constructed narrative.

Giles Croft’s direction simplifies and amplifies his subject, sometimes reducing him to a sardonic figure, other times hectoring. While it’s possible to suggest that Benn may have ended up privately disillusioned in this way, the script itself doesn’t. Nevertheless, it’s an absorbing show; by accident or design, these performances coincide with daily vilifications of Benn’s modern-day counterpart, Jeremy Corbyn, which add topical resonance to the audience experience. The parallels are unavoidable in their principled dislike of the EU and as well as their subversive style. Indeed, Corbyn was involved in the incident cited in the play where the pair ‘vandalised’ the Houses of Parliament chapel with a plaque commemorating suffragette Emily Wilding Davison.

It remains to be seen whether Corbyn ends up like Benn, a National Treasure, but through this richly observed production it’s poignant to realise the heady positions of influence reached by Benn, despite being reviled.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography by Robert Day

 


Tony’s Last Tape

Omnibus Theatre until 20th April

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
The North! The North! | ★★★ | March 2018
Gauhar Jaan – The Datia Incident | ★★★★ | April 2018
The Yellow Wallpaper | ★★★★ | June 2018
Blood Wedding | ★★★ | September 2018
Quietly | ★★★ | October 2018
To Have to Shoot Irishmen | ★★★★ | October 2018
The Selfish Giant | ★★★★ | December 2018
Hearing Things | ★★★★ | January 2019
The Orchestra | ★★★ | January 2019
Lipstick: A Fairy Tale Of Iran | ★★★ | February 2019

 

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How Eva Von Schnippisch Won WWII
★★★★

VAULT Festival

How Eva Von Schnippisch Won WWII

How Eva Von Schnippisch Won WWII

The Vaults

Reviewed – 7th March 2019

★★★★

 

“an irrepressible seductress with a majestic survival instinct and unstoppable line of filthy wit”

 

Who doesn’t like an hour of vintage hedonism and moral decay after work? Reliving the Weimer republic of 1920s Germany at the VAULT festival is Eva Von Schnippisch, one of a number of Variety Show personas created by comedian and events producer, Stephanie Ware. The show is the confected musical backstory of Eva, a character that has already worked the UK’s club and ‘luxury event’ circuit for six years as a hireable ‘Madame of Ceremonies’. Billed as setting history straight, the evening commences with a stage set with a dressing screen festooned with feather boas and period millinery on one side, Sally Bowles’ chair and accoutrements on the other, with Eva (or is it Stephanie at this point?) clad in silk dressing gown, warming up the crowd as they arrive.

As she slips out of the gown and into character, Eva tells of her hair-raising rise from blow jobs in Berlin to threesomes with the big H (the child-friendly matinee version of the show must either be very different or very short). In between, she is enrolled by British Intelligence, parachuted into occupied France, captured by the Russians, before receiving her ultimate mission to infiltrate the social scene at Berchtesgaden. Throughout her various assassinations and assignations, Eva pines for a purer life in a Bavarian log cabin, giving a welcome glimpse into Eva’s softer side, but most of the time she is an irrepressible seductress with a majestic survival instinct and unstoppable line of filthy wit.

Stephanie Ware’s script sizzles like a frankfurter and Oliver Collier’s music matches her numerous on-stage skills adroitly. She can narrate while she gyrates, crack gags under interrogation, mix manic costume changes with Germanic ad libs while still retaining enough breath to sing like Brunhilde. As a persona, Eva’s true back story as an imperious handler of late-night crowds leaves her bereft of depth and complexity. The blurb for Eva’s compere services says that she can be fine-tuned between secret agent and Cabaret act as desired, but then, not being too particular is Eva’s style. Her forte is pleasing crowds, and the crowd joined in the audience participation whenever they were asked, or, more accurately, commanded.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography by Stuart Hendry

 

Vault Festival 2019

How Eva Von Schnippisch Won WWII

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

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