Tag Archives: Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2024

AUSTENTATIOUS

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

AUSTENTATIOUS at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“they really lean into the jokes of each moment, which makes it just really, really funny”

Austentatious: An Improvised Jane Austen Novel does pretty much exactly what it says on the tin. A group of talented improvisers, with support from a pianist and lighting operator, improvise a brand new Austen-esque novel every night, based on a title suggestion from the audience. In today’s show, “Ghouls and Gumption” and “Dungeons and Darcy’s” were politely dismissed, before settling on “The Poisoned Petticoat” for this afternoon’s title. Whilst attempting to stick to the tropes of 19th century romance novels, improvised, sometimes-muddled plots and characters make the perfect ingredients for chaos.

The loose plot of today’s show involves Margery returning to Bath having been away for an entire month. Having left a girl, she is now a ‘fully grown woman’ and must find a man, crucially to avoid the fate of her cousin (also sister?) who at the ripe old age of five-and-twenty has missed the boat for romance. She meets the slimy Captain Whirligig, who seems to have a history of spinning women to death… and there’s also something about vomit. Oh, and there’s a petticoat maker, Miss Smith, who possibly makes a poisoned petticoat… or maybe it’s just biodegradable. Honestly the whole thing was so chaotic it’s hard to remember how consistent the plot was, and that’s sort of the fun of the whole thing, as the actors find themselves with increasingly farcical twists and turns in the stories which they have to try and get out of to reach each next bit.

There doesn’t seem much point reviewing the plot as you’ll get a completely different show each night, but what I can say is that these are improvisers at the absolute top of their game. Each scene starts with mostly two or three of the actors coming onto the stage and as the lights go up, the scene begins. Sometimes whoever turns up makes the scene feed nicely into the plot. Other times, they just have to sort of work out why they’re there. They do a great job at finding motifs and recurring gags which they bring back again and again throughout the story. The highlight from today’s was perhaps the ‘meeting room bookings’ which kept going wrong, and a very funny bit involving two of the actors camouflaging themselves to the wall, which had great comic payoff in a later scene. It’s hard to pick a standout performer as it’s such an ensemble effort, but today Cariad Lloyd and Lauren Shearing were particularly on their A-Game with the way they interacted with the others and helped to move the plot along.

What’s really interesting about the performance style is that the actors don’t shy away from pauses; in fact, it sort or becomes part of the style of the whole show, as they’re stuck in a scene working out what to say or do next to move the situation forward. They don’t tend to focus too much on plot narrative (although it does come up a little bit in each scene), but rather they really lean into the jokes of each moment, which makes it just really, really funny. We enjoy watching them struggle a bit, and sometimes an offstage actor will pop in just to throw an extra challenge to them.

There was a bit about two thirds through today’s show where the plot really had been forgotten and there were a few scenes that felt a little dry, but the lighting operator was quick to end these scenes with a blackout, which really helped to keep the pace up.

It’s a hugely entertaining show, and I’d even say you don’t really need to be much of an Austen fan to appreciate it. I would gladly go again and again and would definitely encourage it to be high up on your watch list if you’re after some top quality improv.

 

AUSTENTATIOUS at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Underbelly – Bristo Square

Reviewed on 11th August 2024

by Joseph Dunitz

Photography by Paul Gilbey

 

 


AUSTENTATIOUS

AUSTENTATIOUS

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KAFKA’S APE

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

KAFKA’S APE at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“Kafka’s Ape is a powerful opportunity for a solo performer. Tony Bonani Miyambo takes it, and delivers”

The Noma Yini Company from Johannesburg, under the direction of Phala Ookeditse Phala, brings an extraordinary adaptation of a short story by Kafka to this year’s Edinburgh Fringe, and you have to put it on your “must see” list. Kafka’s Ape is a tour de force performance by actor Tony Bonani Miyambo, and he ended today’s performance in tears. I’m pretty sure we were all crying inside as well.

Kafka’s Ape is adapted from the Czech author’s 1917 short story A Report To An Academy. In it, an ape named Red Peter gives a lecture to an academy about his transformation from an animal to an “evolving man”. He describes how he was shot at, and then captured, by a group of hunters. He is placed in a cage on a ship that takes him far away from his home. Red Peter is in such excruciating discomfort in the cage that, in an effort to distract himself, he begins studying the humans around him. He knows he cannot get free from his cage; instead he looks for a more philosophical “way out” of his predicament. His way out is to imitate human behaviour so successfully that, at the time of giving his lecture, Red Peter can barely remember what it was like to be an ape. He tells us, his audience, of learning to drink alcohol; to smoke, and to wear clothes. Despite the tragedy of his situation, Red Peter is certain that “experience is not what happens to one, but what one does with what happens to one.”

The power of Tony Bonani Miyambo’s performance lies in taking these words, and showing us, in a very physical way, how Red Peter reaches this state of “evolution”. From the moment he enters the performance space in The Demonstration Room (ironically a former lecture theatre of the school of veterinary studies) at Summerhall, Miyambo focuses our attention. As Red Peter, he moves in a curious hybrid way morphing between ape and human as the situation demands. In just one example, Miyambo cleverly uses a lectern on stage to show how challenging it is for an ape with a bullet wound in his hip to pull himself upright to speak. As Red Peter does so, the process in his metamorphosis from ape to “evolving man” could hardly be made more clear. (And one is reminded of another of Kafka’s stories where the process goes the other way, from man to insect.) In Kafka’s Ape, Miyambo involves the audience right from the start. He delivers the lecture directly to us. And not just as an “evolving man.” We are inspected for fleas, as any conscientious ape would do. Are we also an audience of apes, or of “evolving men” ourselves? In true Kafkaesque form, Miyambo allows us to wonder about that, and to feel the ambiguous state that Red Peter himself is in.

Despite Red Peter’s intelligence and courage, Miyambo shows us the great tragedy in Kafka’s Ape. No longer anything quite recognizable, Red Peter is alienated from everything he left behind. He can no longer form relationships with other apes, because he is no longer one of them. He feels both shame and alienation from himself as well as others, despite being an “evolving man”. The adaptation of Kafka’s short story, with its echoes of apartheid, and the slave ships, carries added tragic meaning when performed by a black South African theatre company. This is a very moving production to watch, and to listen to.

Kafka’s Ape is a powerful opportunity for a solo performer. Tony Bonani Miyambo takes it, and delivers. See this show while you can.


KAFKA’S APE at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Summerhall – Demonstration Room

Reviewed on 11th August 2024

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Zivanai Matangi

 

 


KAFKA’S APE

KAFKA’S APE

CLICK HERE TO SEE ALL OUR REVIEWS FROM EDINBURGH 2024