Tag Archives: Eamonn O’Dwyer

The Night Before Christmas
★★★

Southwark Playhouse

The Night Before Christmas

The Night Before Christmas

Southwark Playhouse

Reviewed – 30th November 2018

★★★

“This not-at-all-family-friendly Christmas tale is wickedly clever, and doesn’t fail to draw laughs”

 

It’s Christmas Eve, and Simon (Michael Salami) is less than thrilled to be called out of bed in the middle of the night. His friend, Gary (Douggie McMeekin), has caught an Elf (Dan Starkey) breaking into his warehouse. Or at least a man dressed like an elf. Elf claims he fell from Santa’s sleigh. Gullible Gary is inclined to believe him. Cynical Simon tells Gary to call the police. Elf begs to be let go, plying them with detailed information about Santa, including the Powdered Christmas Feeling (PCF) he gives to children (great high, no side effects).

Gary and Simon are still deliberating what to do when sex-worker Cherry (Unique Spencer) arrives, demanding the Power Rangers for her son Gary promised her in exchange for sex. Elf says he needs to get back to Santa’s sleigh, but when Cherry checks his arms, she finds track marks. Obviously a junkie. Elf protests, it’s just PFC! He’ll grant each of them one wish if they’ll just let him go…

This not-at-all-family-friendly Christmas tale is wickedly clever, and doesn’t fail to draw laughs. It’s also touching – surprisingly Christmas-spirited – as even the most jaded adults manage to rediscover the Christmas feeling.

Director Alex Sutton’s revival of Anthony Neilson’s play, which premiered in London in 1995, is as sweary and gritty (real cigarettes smoked on stage) as its “in-yer-face” author intended. Unfortunately though, the story has just got started when it’s dragged to a near-standstill by overly-lengthy expositional dialogue. Gary and Simon spend too long questioning Elf and not believing him. Their extended Q&A interrogates the rules of Santa’s operation to an unnecessary extent, and while Elf’s explanation is unique, it’s pure exposition. The performance feels stalled with Simon constantly threatening to call the police, and neither of them making a decision. When Cherry finally arrives on the scene, it’s like being yanked out of the mud. The pace falters again later with the characters’ circular debate over which wishes to choose. When a play has a 65-minute runtime, it’s not good for scenes to feel long.

McMeekin, Salami, and Spencer give high-energy, confident performances with skilled comedic timing. Starkey’s decision to play the elf straightforward – distressed and desperate – forgoes some of the potential comedy in the role. Designer Michael Leopold has made effective use of a sparse set, and delights the audience with some well-timed ‘Christmas magic.’

Considering Soho Theatre’s 2013 revival of The Night Before Christmas was a musical, there’s a question of whether this 2018 revival has anything to add to the original. The script provides an excellent premise, but it feels as though Sutton has missed an opportunity to address its flaws, and contribute a fresh perspective.

The Night Before Christmas is fun, silly, ‘alternative’ Christmas theatre, but this revival doesn’t lift the play above the original’s pitfalls.

 

Reviewed by Addison Waite

Photography by Darren Bell

 


The Night Before Christmas

Southwark Playhouse until 29th December

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Old Fools | ★★★★★ | March 2018
The Country Wife | ★★★ | April 2018
Confidence | ★★ | May 2018
The Rink | ★★★★ | May 2018
Why is the Sky Blue? | ★★★★★ | May 2018
Wasted | ★★★ | September 2018
The Sweet Science of Bruising | ★★★★ | October 2018
The Trench | ★★★ | October 2018
The Funeral Director | ★★★★★ | November 2018
Seussical The Musical | ★★★★ | November 2018

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

 

Alice in Winterland

ALICE IN WINTERLAND

Based on the books by Lewis Carroll

Adapted and directed: Ciaran McConville

Composer and Lyricist: Eamonn O’Dwyer

Designer: Tim Bird

Choreographer: Jamie Neale

 

7 Dec 2017 – 7 Jan 2018

Following the huge success of last year’s festive hit The Wind in the Willows, Rose Theatre Kingston’s most successful Christmas production to date, the theatre today announces its 2017 Christmas show Alice in Winterland. The play, based on Lewis Carroll’s much loved Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, is adapted and directed by Ciaran McConville, following his acclaimed productions of The Wind in the Willows, A Christmas Carol and The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, with music and lyrics by Eamonn O’Dwyer, and featuring a professional cast alongside a group of Rose Youth Theatre actors.

Alice has always been brought up to believe in wonder but her life takes an unexpected turn when she is sent to live with her stern auntie… until she is visited by a White Rabbit and propelled on a quest to save Winterland.

Follow Alice to the magically curious world of Winterland, a world of ice and imagination, of mad hatters and cruel queens, strong-minded dodos and friendly knights. A world inhabited by the mysterious Bandersnatch and the terrible Jabberwock, a world that lies in the shuffle of a pack of cards or in the lines across a chess board, where the impossible becomes possible…

This dazzlingly festive new stage production is based on Lewis Carroll’s timeless books, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. Step through the Looking Glass with Alice this Christmas and join her for this glorious adventure.

Ciaran McConville said today:

“Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland books are genius. They’re funny, clever, exciting and completely bonkers. I’m looking forward to the challenge of writing a festive adventure from such a mad melée of brilliant characters. Carroll’s work will always resonate because he writes about a child trying to make sense of the world and herself. She doesn’t always get it right, and there’s often a battle between head and heart, but she always stands up against injustice and she has faith in her own imagination – something we all need to remember at Christmas, I think.”

 

The production will once again be supported by Wahid Samady and CNM Estates, who have sponsored the Rose Theatre Kingston Christmas show since 2014.

Info

ALICE IN WINTERLAND

7 Dec 2017 – 7 Jan 2018

24-26 High Street, Kingston, KT1 1HL

 

www.RoseTheatreKingston.org

 

Box Office: 020 8174 0090

Monday – Saturday: 10am – 8pm (6pm non-performance days) | Sun: one hour before the performance

 

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE:

Thu 7 Dec 6pm

Fri 8 Dec 1pm, 6pm

Sat 9 Dec 6pm

Tue 12 Dec 6pm

Wed 13 Dec 6pm

Thu 14 Dec 6pm

Fri 15 Dec 1pm (school performance), 7pm PRESS NIGHT

Sat 16 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Sun 17 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Wed 20 Dec 11am (school performance), 5.30pm

Thu 21 Dec 5.30pm

Fri 22 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Sat 23 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Sun 24 Dec 11am, 4pm

Tue 26 Dec 1.30pm, 6pm

Wed 27 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Thu 28 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Fri 29 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Sat 30 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Sun 31 Dec 11am, 5.30pm

Tue 3 Jan 11am, 5.30pm

Thu 4 Jan 1.30pm (relaxed performance)

Fri 5 Jan 1.30pm, 5.30pm

Sat 6 Jan 11am, 5.30pm

Sun 7 Jan 11am, 5.30pm