Tag Archives: Edinburgh Festival

ELVIS MCGONAGALL: GIN & CATATONIC?

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

ELVIS MCGONAGALL: GIN & CATATONIC? at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“like all good whiskies, McGonagall’s lines slip down smoothly with just the right amount of burn”

The fabulous tartan-jacketed Elvis McGonagall is holding forth at the Patter House for this year’s Festival Fringe, and you do not want to miss his latest show, Gin & Catatonic?. For sixty minutes, you can relax from the Fringe mayhem outside the Gilded Balloon as this wannabe Laureate delivers poems on a great variety of subjects. A veteran of innumerable poetry slams, McGonagall is never short of inspired invention. He’s also a well-read man, and the way he puts together the comedy, with more serious subject matter, provokes both laughter and moments that make you go “hmmm”, when you remember them on the bus home.

Much of the material takes the form of rants against well known politicians, but since McGonagall is a poet, these rants have to rhyme. This works well for poems about the King’s latest speech, promising better times for working class folk. Rhyming “nouveau riche” with “quiche” would make any king’s speechwriter wish she or he, had thought of that one first. Brexit is also up for merciless lampooning of course, and the metaphors are as richly inventive as the lies we were told to “get Brexit done.” A poem inspired by the late Adrian Mitchell entitled “Sorry ‘bout that” sums up McGonagall’s thoughts on one prime minister in particular. And it’s not just the ingenious poems, but the memorable one-liners that emerge like the finest of single malts. Once our poet gets warmed up, quips like “a Goldman Sachs glove puppet that shrunk in the wash” emerge with speed and precision. And like all good whiskies, McGonagall’s lines slip down smoothly with just the right amount of burn.

Mixed up with the political satire are nods to Brecht (“The Resistible Rise of the Milkshake Martyr”) and Evita, all shaken together in a combustible commentary on a certain newly elected politician with ultra right wing views. When you tire of politics, though, McGonagall is happy to reminiscence about the good old days during lockdown, relaxing with his rescue cats. They are just as opinionated as he is, apparently. Gin & Catatonic? is a delightfully put together show that isn’t your standard stand up, and is much more than a poetry reading.

Gin & Catatonic? offers comfort for lingering epidemics, unwanted substitutions in your online supermarket list, and thoughtful suggestions for a new national anthem. Enjoy!


ELVIS MCGONAGALL: GIN & CATATONIC? at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Gilded Balloon Patter House

Reviewed 4th August 2024

by Dominica Plummer

 

 


ELVIS MCGONAGALL

ELVIS MCGONAGALL

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BELLRINGERS

★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

BELLRINGERS at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★

“Paul Adefeya and Luke Rollason command the small space of the Roundabout Theatre without difficulty”

Daisy Hall’s Bellringers is a vividly imagined take on climate change, set somewhere in a possible future for the Cotswolds. A shortlisted play for the Women’s Prize in Playwriting, Bellringers is another coproduction by Atticist and Ellie Keel Productions, the same team that brought the luminous SAP to the Roundabout Theatre in 2022. Director Jessica Lazar is also on board once more, which means the show is in good hands. Despite all the supporting talent, however, and the competence of performers Paul Adeyefa and Luke Rollason, it doesn’t provide much of a journey for its leading characters. Set in a bell tower to the accompaniment of ceaseless rain and a gathering storm, two bellringers debate the world’s fate, and their own.

Bellringers takes place in an apocalyptic future where uncertainty about the world’s climate has driven scientific knowledge to the margins. In the place of radar and reliable weather reports, humans watch their environment for portents. They are keenly aware that they are living on borrowed time, as the sea moves inland and covers once productive land. Two monkish figures, Aspinall and Clement, have been assigned the task of ringing the bells. But it’s never clear whether they are supposed to ring the bells to warn their neighbourhood of an oncoming storm, or use the sound to drive the storm away. The two friends are also aware that ringing the bells could mean instant annihilation. The ceaseless rain has soaked everything, including the bell ropes.

It’s a dramatic situation, and the two friends are sympathetic characters. But there’s only so much one can do to pass the time waiting for a storm to strike the bell tower. Clement, the skeptic, and Aspinall the believer, spend a certain amount of time arguing like medieval philosophers, except that Clement can still remember a world where humans figured out what was going on by using the scientific method. Aspinall prefers the prophecies of his mother’s almanac. Both are afflicted by bad dreams, and an invasion of mushrooms.

Under Jessica Lazar’s assured direction, Paul Adefeya (Aspinall) and Luke Rollason (Clement) command the small space of the Roundabout Theatre without difficulty. Natalie Johnson’s set defines the boundaries with benches and bell ropes. But it’s sound designer Holly Khan and lighting designer David Doyle who create an experience so intense that one is never quite sure whether that is a real storm outside the Roundabout’s tent, or the sound and lighting effects of this talented team. Doyle and Khan use the limitations of the venue to maximum effect. All that Adefeya and Rollason have to do is to take that claustrophobic atmosphere of impending doom and run with it. Nevertheless, the script labours to maintain the suspense, even for seventy minutes. The mushroom theme reminds us that we have visited apocalyptic futures of renegade vegetable life before.

Bellringers offers no solution for our troubled bellringers, or any hope that they can somehow save what’s left of humanity in their village below. Daisy Hall’s vision is a bleak one, despite the wit and humour in the sparring between the two friends. Its visionary quality does offer a respite from overly naturalistic dramas, though. So if you like theatre that stretches the imagination while remaining firmly rooted in contemporary ecological issues, Bellringers is an easy pick at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe.


BELLRINGERS at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Roundabout @ Summerhall

Reviewed on 2nd August 2024

by Dominica Plummer

 

Bellringers will be at the Hampstead Theatre from 27th September to 2nd November

 

 

 


Bellringers

Bellringers

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