Tag Archives: Dominica Plummer

Solstice

★★★★

Battersea Arts Centre

SOLSTICE at Battersea Arts Centre

★★★★

“Solstice may be a small show, but it has a large heart”

Wild Rumpus’ show Solstice, now running at the Battersea Arts Centre, is an easy winner if you are looking for a show for young children this holiday season. It’s just big enough in space and long enough in time for kids and their carers to enjoy a specially curated experience that brings the magic of the outdoors, indoors. There’s a light trail, storytelling, larger than life puppets, and activities designed to enchant the littlest audiences. Solstice isn’t just about the winter solstice, either. There’s a room in the show for every season, including a space where kids can gather to create their own intentions for “their next turn around the sun.”

Wild Rumpus is better known as an outdoors festival producer, where it has gathered an impressive reputation for creating immersive woodland events. Such events can last several days and include camping near the site, as well as getting involved in literature, music, dance, comedy, costumes and make up. Solstice indoors—and in a big city like London—loses some of Wild Rumpus’ original intent, which is to “provide family arts in the wild”. Solstice is so well designed and carefully thought out, however, that everyone will enjoy a brief trip to the world outdoors, even if it is inside. And Solstice is a timely reminder that the natural world is all around us if we know where, and how, to look.

Solstice is no mere light trail like so many others that are currently on offer around London. Each part of the experience merges seamlessly with the next, and there’s a story linking every space in the show. Solstice is about a quest to find and comfort the winter wolf who is missing his hibernating friends from the warmer seasons. The quest begins in spring, with a space filled with dragon sized eggs (some already cracked open!) and a beautiful larger than life sized, light filled dragonfly. Children are given activity sheets at the beginning of Solstice to draw, count, classify and create as they move through the rooms. I don’t want to spoil the surprises that follow meeting the dragonfly, except to say that the skills of storyteller George are a good preparation for the most magical encounter of them all—meeting the winter wolf. If parents are concerned that any of these experiences may be too overwhelming, kids can step out and take a break at any time. Every performance is relaxed, and the Battersea Arts Centre has also put aside a chill out space if needed.

Solstice may be a small show, but it has a large heart, perfectly sized to introduce kids to the world outdoors. Wild Rumpus and the Battersea Arts Centre have teamed up to create a lovely space where families can pause and reflect on the passing of the seasons.


SOLSTICE at Battersea Arts Centre

Reviewed on 5th December 2023

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Harry Elletson

 


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

Little Red Riding Hood | ★★½ | December 2022
Tanz | ★★★★ | November 2022
Hofesh Shecter: Contemporary Dance 2 | ★★★★★ | October 2022

Solstice

Solstice

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page

 

A Woman Walks Into a Bank

★★★★★

Theatre503

A WOMAN WALKS INTO A BANK at Theatre503

★★★★★

“there’s lots of laughs. In a doleful, what-can-you-expect-this-is-Russia kind of way”

Roxy Cook’s A Woman Walks Into A Bank is a thoroughly delightful—yet pointed, in the way that Gogol’s Dead Souls is pointed—portrait of a corrupt and brutal society drunk on its desire for easy money. In this play the society under the microscope is Moscow in 2018, just after a very successful World Cup. But don’t go to Theatre503 in Battersea expecting elaborate sets and a cast of thousands. Cook and her talented cast of three manage to pull off this wide ranging satirical tale in a box set of a theatre. A box set that contains the enormous energy of this piece like some unstable star, threatening to blow its energy right off stage and take us with it.

As Cook explains in the introduction to the script of A Woman Walks Into A Bank, the play had a lengthy development period, starting with a workshop at the Park Theatre, and then a protracted gestation during lockdown. Recognition from playwrights’ awards such as The Women’s Prize for Playwriting, Brentwood and Verity Bargate prizes no doubt also helped writer and director Cook produce it. And Theatre503 is the perfect place for its premiere. If you think a small theatre with a small stage is an obstacle to putting on epic dramas that have important things to say about late stage capitalism, prepare to be astonished by A Woman Walks Into A Bank. And like all good Russian stories, there’s lots of laughs. In a doleful, what-can-you-expect-this-is-Russia kind of way.

The plot is quite straightforward. An old woman—and much of the dialogue contains a repetition of these three words as a way of introducing a new point in the narrative—an old woman walks into a bank. It is this simple act of walking into a bank that precipitates a free wheeling picaresque tale about three characters: the Old Woman, an ambitious young Banker, and a Debt Collector. Oh, and Sally, the Old Woman’s cat. The Old Woman walks into a bank because, as the narrative wisely observes, old women everywhere always need money. She is attracted by a picture of a friendly young man offering bank notes as an enticement to taking out a loan. In the bank she meets the Young Banker (a newly promoted clerk) who sets her up. In every sense of the word. The complicating factor in all this—apart from the fact that these loans are deliberately targeted at vulnerable people who have no means to repay them—is that the Old Woman does, in fact, have money. But she has stashed it in hiding places around her flat, and has, as an additional obstacle, forgotten that she has it.

You can see where all this is headed. And you’d be right—except that, through the adventures of the Old Woman’s cat Sally, the audience meets a whole range of Russian characters, human and feline, in A Woman Walks Into A Bank. We also get to see the adrenaline fuelled life of a cat living on the fifth floor of a high rise building in Moscow. As I said, it gets complicated. Through the energetic words of Cook’s script, her just-in-time style of direction, the precise, choreographed movements of her cast (Sam Hooper), and the intimate setting of Theatre503, the audience gets to experience all this as though they were also on stage.

The show belongs to that school of dramas where the action emerges spontaneously out of a narration, often told in the third person. This is a thing on London stages at the moment, and it is not always successful. It’s a way of staging that runs the risk of becoming just an act of telling a story, with little else for the actors to do. Fortunately for us, Cook and her talented team are skilled enough to avoid this pitfall. Actors Guilia Innocenti (The Old Woman), Sam Newton (The Banker) and Keith Dunphy (the Debt Collector) bring such inventiveness to the range of their roles that the energy on stage rarely flags. They are particularly effective when playing the same character at the same time. The set designed by David Allen, covered in carpet with all kinds of cut outs —rather like an advent calendar — reveals its secrets as the play progresses, and it’s another visual delight. Cook instructs her actors not to use Russian accents—again, a wise decision. But sound designer and composer Hugh Sheehan doesn’t hesitate to add a backdrop of Russian pop music and that helps to anchor the play in its Moscow setting.

A Woman Walks Into A Bank is not a Christmas play by any means, despite references to the (Russian Orthodox) Christmas Eve, but it’s a great way to start your holiday season theatre going. Book it while you can, because tickets are going to sell out fast.

 

A WOMAN WALKS INTO A BANK at Theatre503

Reviewed on 28th November 2023

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by David Monteith-Hodge

 


Previously reviewed at this venue:

Zombiegate | ★★★ | November 2022
I Can’t Hear You | ★★★★ | July 2022
Til Death do us Part | ★★★★★ | May 2022

A Woman Walks Into a Bank

A Woman Walks Into a Bank

Click here to see our Recommended Shows page