Tag Archives: Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2019

Hitler’s Tasters

★★★★

Greenside Infirmary

Hitlers Tasters

Hitler’s Tasters

Greenside @ Infirmary Street

Reviewed – 2nd August 2019

★★★★

 

“Hitler’s Tasters is innovative and powerfully original. The whimsical blend of past and present is risky, but ultimately an effective choice.”

 

Hilda, Liesel, and Anna are typical teens. They love to gossip, dance, talk about boys, and gush over film stars. There is one important difference though. Their job is to taste Hitler’s food to make sure it isn’t poisoned.

Written by Michelle Kholos Brooks and directed by Sarah Norris, Hitler’s Tasters is the Mean Girls/Third Reich crossover we never knew we needed. It’s enthralling, unbelievable, and inescapably relevant. Although the play is set in 1940s Germany, and based on the real young women selected to taste Hitler’s food, Brooks and Norris tell the story with a modern spin. The girls – Hilda (MaryKathryn Kopp), Liesel (Hallie Griffin), Anna (Kaitlin Paige Longoria), and Margot (Hannah Mae Sturges) – are Gen Z: American accents, dialogue peppered with likes and oh my gods, iPhones ever-present. The concept is totally unique; Brooks’ razor sharp humour pulls laughter from an astounded audience.

With Kopp as the Regina George reminiscent ringleader, the girls braid each other’s hair, take selfies, squabble, and hope to catch a glimpse of Blondi (the Fuhrer’s dog). They discuss what an honour it is to serve the Fatherland in such an important capacity. They’re lucky… aren’t they? The more time they spend together, the more chinks begin to appear in their conditioning. Brooks uses an intuitive sense of pace to draw us into the power dynamics and drama of girl-world, enticing us to forget where we are; but the second we do, it’s mealtime again. All giggling, arguing, or daydreaming abruptly halts at the ominous sound of the guards’ approaching footsteps.

Hitler’s Tasters is innovative and powerfully original. The whimsical blend of past and present is risky, but ultimately an effective choice. “This job sucks!” Sturges whines (and perhaps no one has ever been more justified). Ashleigh Poteat (costume) deserves special commendation for clothes that are somehow seamlessly H&M meets Third Reich. Although the dialogue is a bit choppy at times, and the characterisations may not be the most sophisticated, the girls’ familiarity as Gen Z-ers is an eye-opening reminder that a society complicit in atrocity isn’t just a historical, safely distanced phenomenon. People today – people with Starbucks and Instagram – are letting it happen all over again. Brooks is clever about weaving in the modern references: “The Fuhrer is going to Make Germany Great Again!” “They’re separating children from their parents.” The urgency of this story is cutting. Its relevance stings.

Norris and the design team – Ashlee Wasmund (choreography), Christina Tang (lighting), and Carsen Joenk (sound) – expertly manage the balance between the frivolous characters and their chilling context. The lights cut as guards enter with torches. They shine the lights into the girls’ faces and upturned hands: inspection. Sequences of puppetry-like movement to a contemporary soundtrack carry them through the Russian Roulette that is their breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Then it’s back to celeb crushes: Frank Sinatra, Fred Astaire, Cary Grant.

Because of the madness of the Edinburgh Festival, it’s the fate of many shows to slip from people’s memories. You’ll remember this one.

 

Reviewed by Addison Waite

Photography by Hunter Canning

 


Hitler’s Tasters

Greenside @ Infirmary Street until 24th August as part of Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2019

 

 

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Collapsible

★★★

Assembly Roxy

Collapsible

Collapsible

Assembly Roxy

Reviewed – 2nd August 2019

★★★

 

“will need a more powerfully unique identity to make a lasting impression”

 

Essie has lost her job, her girlfriend, most of her savings, and she’s just one more interview away from losing her mind. Written by Margaret Perry, performed by Breffni Holahan, and directed by Thomas Martin, Collapsible is a one-woman show about a world overflowing with information, but short on meaning.

If you missed Collapsible at VAULT Festival earlier this year, you have a second chance to catch it at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. One of several HighTide productions in Edinburgh this summer, Collapsible has instances of very good writing, but it’s missing the innovation it needs to stand out above the crowd of shows about middle-class problems.

Alison Neighbour’s set is striking. Echoing a demolition site, there’s rubble on the ground, and broken metal beams framing the space in a triangle. Holahan sits high up on a short, jagged slab of concrete supported by a pole. She remains on this perch for the duration of the show. Her precarious position, surrounded by the remains of a collapsed building, provide effective, creative visual reinforcement of the play’s themes. Holahan, confined to a block just a couple feet square, gives an impressive performance. She holds nothing back in communicating the depth of Essie’s sadness.

The play explores Essie’s narcissism, depression, and experience of depersonalisation as she goes back through her list of contacts (including old teachers and ex-partners) to try to better understand herself. Because narcissism dominates the story, it quickly overwhelms it. The constant rumination on who Essie is precisely – what kind of person she is – makes the scenes more insular than relatable. It results in the show feeling very long for its sixty-minute runtime. The writing is stronger when it moves away from Essie’s quest to define herself. The descriptions of depression (being filled with stones) and depersonalisation are more compelling.

Regrettably, especially in Essie’s relationships with her family, the story is very much in the shadow of Fleabag. Perry may well be giving an authentic account of her own experience, but because something so similar has already been done on such a large scale, the edge is lost. The scenes between Essie and her sister, her friend, and her dad feel derivative. There’s a nagging sense throughout that we’ve seen and heard it all before.

Middle-class emptiness is well-trodden territory; it’s too easy for shows like this one to get lost in the shuffle. Collapsible will need a more powerfully unique identity to make a lasting impression. As it is, Neighbour’s set is the most singular part of the production.

 

Reviewed by Addison Waite

 


Collapsible

Assembly Roxy until 25th August as part of Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2019

 

 

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