Tag Archives: Dominika Fleszar

Confessions Of An Ex-Drag Queen



Chapel Playhouse

Confessions Of An Ex-Drag Queen

Confessions Of An Ex-Drag Queen

Chapel Playhouse

Reviewed – 16th November 2019

 

“Lyrics are hard to digest and undeniably cringe-worthy”

 

Watching Confessions of an Ex-Drag Queen is akin to being stuck at a really bad carnival themed party for far too long.

The story itself has, admittedly, some potential underlying deep under metric tons of kitsch. The terribly unlikable main heroine, Kristen (Lauren Wilson) wakes up hungover on Denise (Bethany Milton) and Spencer’s (Daniel McCaully) wedding day. The issue is, Spencer (or, as the drag fam knows him, Sarah) is missing, leaving behind but a ‘goodbye’ in a mysterious glittering notebook. Kristen vows to find him and searching for clues, stumbles upon a few dubious characters (also played by Milton and McCaully) from Spencer’s past.

The potential lies in the fact, that it might have been reasonably entertaining if it was fifteen minutes long. Every character Kristen meets is naïve and cartoonish, their stories subtle as a brick through a window, like in a horrid version of The Little Prince, except not meant for children. There’s a little bit of everything – lost dreams, friendly freaks, feuding ladies, flirting gentlemen – bar actual drag. It is genuinely beyond my perception, how such a bottomless pit of inspiration remains completely untapped, reduced to a guy wearing lipstick and Disneyish theme of acceptance and love. Spencer might have well been a plumber, leaving behind his pliers and spanners for Kristen to find. It wouldn’t really change a thing, and had the entire show been called Confessions of an Ex-Plumber, it would have at least had faint potential not to treat itself so seriously.

And, for goodness sake, everyone – everyone gets to sing. Lyrics (by Jack Stone) are hard to digest and undeniably cringe-worthy but, as Denise with cheerful repetitiveness sings: “I’m getting married/ It’s all about meeeee today!”, you cannot say you did not grasp the message. It really is all about this tacky little monster of a show today.

The actors really cannot sing, and except Milton, they do not even seem to try. Wilson’s throat is so terribly constricted, it is actually astounding that there’s some sound at all; she also, for the life of me, can’t hear her own pitch whatsoever. All three of them have horribly underdeveloped voices and slide from note to note, instead of properly hitting them. Funnily enough, Lukas McCabe’s score itself is not bad – it’s pretty repetitive and sort of tedious, but overall quite pleasing to the ear. The problem is, without proper orchestration it simply cannot work. For chamber musicals, this score is too big. For the big stage, this story is too small. It just doesn’t belong anywhere.

The whole production is obviously on a budget, hence small set design, unimpressive arrangement and virtually non-existent staging. But here’s the thing: no budget can buy you creativity.

 

Reviewed by Dominika Fleszar

 


Confessions Of An Ex-Drag Queen

Chapel Playhouse until 17th November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Blood Tales | ★★½ | March 2019
Connecting | ★★★★ | March 2019
Freak | ★★ | March 2019
The Passion Of The Playboy Riots | ★★★★ | July 2019
Fit For Work | ★★ | August 2019

 

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Shadows

★★★★★

The Coronet Theatre

Shadows

Shadows

The Coronet Theatre

Reviewed – 6th November 2019

★★★★★

 

“absolutely mesmerising and completely enthralling”

 

Jon Fosse is an exceptionally interesting author. While highly acclaimed and very famous in continental Europe, including his native Norway, he remains relatively unknown to the British audiences. Unwilling to get pigeonholed, his theatre (as well as poems and novels) is very much his own, created in a particular, quasi-Joycean style. Shadows only now has the UK premiere, a whole ten years after its Norwegian debut.

The storyline in Shadows is difficult to even grasp, let alone understand. Children (via a video projection) seemingly voice the thoughts of elderly actors who eerily mope around the stage. They talk about being “here”, meeting one another “here” after so many years – where the “here” really is, how many years have passed, if any at all, is up to audience’s own interpretation.

Jon Fosse has never been really interested in the story per se. His works, including thousands of pages long novels, rarely even have any plot whatsoever. Cryptic language reveals very little about characters, if anything truly – Fosse prefer to explore their emotions and feelings rather than dwelling on the context. Indeed, context in Shadows is close to non-existent: what we know is but a glimpse of their relationships with one another and their feelings.

His word choice tends to be exceptionally laconic and repetition cocoons the core of each dialogue. To say that characters even talk is an overstatement: they seem to be posing the questions instead, hoping for someone to respond. They speak in Norwegian (with English surtitles) with no regard for punctuation marks or logical train of thought. It is peculiar, really – but then to know more would be to spoil the mystery.

Shadows is almost impossible to rate using traditional criteria. Scenic design is naïve and very simple. There is music but its placement is tightly connected to the onstage stream of consciousness and void of any external logic. There are, in fact, no actors – the entire story is revealed via video projections and live actors are not much more than mannequins. And yet, the interconnectedness and internal logic of this play as a whole is truly uncanny.

Shadows is absolutely mesmerising and completely enthralling. The enigma itself constitutes its magic. What it is really about is a mystery – mystery of life perhaps, and mystery of experience. It is intricate, yet not complicated – very simple, in fact.

 

Reviewed by Dominika Fleszar

 


Shadows

The Coronet Theatre until 9th November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
A Christmas Carol | ★★★★ | December 2018
The Dead | ★★★ | December 2018
The Lady From The Sea | ★★ | February 2019
The Glass Piano | ★★★★ | April 2019
Remember Me: Homage to Hamlet | ★★ | June 2019
The Decorative Potential Of Blazing Factories (Film) | ★★★ | June 2019
Three Italian Short Stories | ★★★★ | June 2019
Winston Vs Churchill | ★★★★★ | June 2019
Youth Without God | ★★★ | September 2019
Sweet Little Mystery – The Songs Of John Martyn | ★★★★★ | October 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews