Tag Archives: Dominic Gettins

Tobacco Road

Tobacco Road
★★★★

VAULT Festival

Tobacco Road

Tobacco Road

Network Theatre

Reviewed – 13th February 2019

★★★★

 

“the onstage members create five well-delineated characters and enliven a familiar genre with some fluid story-telling”

 

Where better to stage a tale of London’s 1920s criminal underworld than in a venue hidden behind anonymous double-doors down a service road below Waterloo Station (yards from where eight men were killed in a 1927 riot between the McDonald and Sabini gangs)? It’s here, as part of the VAULT Festival, that the suitably-named Incognito Theatre Company tell, with immense vitality, a story of two small-time East End gangs. One, all-male, is a group of pals recently demobbed and desperate for the good life; the other is an all-female team who delight in duping drink-sodden gents as they roam London’s clubland in search of a good time. Tiring of the petty rewards to be gleaned from fixing fights and picking pockets, respectively, the brawn and brains realise that they could be better together and form a powerful alliance. Led by the ambitious Felix Vance (George John) they grow into a syndicate of successful felonious enterprises, enjoying glamour and excess to the point where they feel, mistakenly, ready to take on London’s most dominant and vicious gang.

There is another gang at work here in the team of old school friends who founded this now independent theatre group. As well as exuding rambunctious esprit-de-corps, the onstage members create five well-delineated characters and enliven a familiar genre with some fluid story-telling. Angus Castle-Doughty is perfect, attacking the role of pugilist Tom Carlisle with fierce commitment while still creating empathy. Jennie Eggleton inhabits the hard-as-nails Elsie Murphy with chilling accuracy. All display impressive accents and movement, not to mention the stamina necessary when dialogue is woven into a continuous sequence of beautifully lit moments of physical theatre. The non-stop pace allows few pauses for breath with audibility suffering slightly, but even at full pelt the cast manage to invest unlikable characters with redeeming qualities.

The high point is an illegal boxing scene in which bandages are used ingeniously to evoke the ring from various angles, including the vertigo-inducing perspective of the Tom as he takes his dive. Credit goes to Director, Roberta Zuric, Choreographer, Zak Nemorin and Fight Choreographer, Lisa Connell but also to Sound and Lighting by Oscar Macguire and Freya Jefferies. The script sags when the mob reach the height of their infamy as, with nowhere to go, the characters reflect, row, dance and drink together without further exploration of their lives, relationships, or anything else. But that is a minor reduction in the voltage of this energetic display.

The company’s all-female management have clearly inspired a team ethic, as off-stage and on-stage creatives work throughout to create an hour of relentless entertainment. Their slick yet punchy show proves that gangs work well in the West End too.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography by Tim Hall

 

Vault Festival 2019

Tobacco Road

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

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Fool Britannia
★★★

VAULT Festival

Fool Britannia

Fool Britannia

The Vaults

Reviewed – 23rd January 2019

★★★

 

“Built on the irresistibility and sheer gall of the two contrasting comics they achieve a good degree of buy-in from the audience”

 

In its maze of neon and graffiti clad theatres and bars spreading like a psychedelic moss beneath Waterloo station, VAULT Festival is the perfect emblem of a London creative culture clinging to any unclaimed surface and proliferating in every crevice. This year the festival reaches new heights of aspiration with digital screens, airport style announcements of performances about to begin and earnest figures with ear pieces and tablets directing the subterranean human traffic. Apocalyptic train sounds and dank smells arguably add to a unique fringe atmosphere, whose spirit and energy come from breakthrough acts, experimental theatre and promising new comedy shows like Fool Britannia, the surreal comedy vehicle of Neil Frost and Dan Lees.

The show opens with Dan Lees in gown and mortar board, standing before a hand-made school lectern (motto: Ludum est fun) delivering a faintly silly start of term address. Neil Frost then appears as a gurning man-child supply teacher, and between them they embark on educating the audience on an utterly nonsensical history of the British Isles. Firstly, they change into cartoon cavemen brandishing inflatable clubs, then Hadrian and his builder (with inflatable hammer), then Vikings, rowing a hand drawn boat with wooden spoons singing ‘We’re Viking’s – and so on. Each period is simplified to nothingness, reaching a peak with Neil Frost as Shakespeare wearing a hand-folded paper ruff simply enjoining the audience to say ‘Shakespeare’. Occasionally they digress for sketches of affable randomness until the whole timeline and premise of the show is abandoned for some more school-based sketches, audience participation and a smattering of improvisation.

Their act is a classic comedy duo blending Pete and Dud with the dodgy props and wild invention of Vic and Bob, plus a suggestion of Lee and Herring and even, for aficionados, The National Theatre of Brent. The difference is that, apart from a Dan Lees ballad about St George and The Dragon, there’s not much sense in this show that any of the sketches have actually been written. It’s more a sequence of first thoughts on the back on an envelope. Sounds terrible? Yes, but the lack of bother, point or preparation is the joke and the Pythonesque method of undermining each premise as soon as it’s established succeeds in keeping the audience engaged, never knowing what to expect and not knowing where any gag is going. Built on the irresistibility and sheer gall of the two contrasting comics they achieve a good degree of buy-in from the audience. In any case, as they breezily acknowledge in asides while sidling around the stage as Vikings, ‘it’s not for everyone’.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography courtesy Mad Etiquette

 

Vault Festival 2019

Fool Britannia

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com