Tag Archives: Edinburgh24

LONG DISTANCE

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Edinburgh Festival Fringe

LONG DISTANCE at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

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“the dialogue is funny, elastic and fizzles with energy”

Contemporary living, for most, has become inextricably intertwined with technology. It crops up in more and more places, knitting segments of our lives together. In Long Distance, the phone is the connective tissue between two young queers – and the lens through which we understand them and their relationship to each other. As the play travels from meet-cute to breakup, the pair exchange text messages at significant moments in their relationship, slowly discovering more about each other.

Strong writing by playwright and director Eli Zuzovsky keeps the pace up and drops tantalizing details at appropriate intervals. The play leads its audience along the contours of the relationship, structured well to maintain an interest. Despite its static staging – the two characters never touch and look out at the fourth wall for most of the play – the dialogue is funny, elastic and fizzles with energy. Texting’s pitfalls are well documented by awkward misreadings, cringey innuendo, and awkward silences.

That energy is ably parried by the two lead performances. Jonathan Rubin crafts a stunning journey throughout the play, creating a fully formed character despite his dialogue being limited to text messages. It is a performance filled with depth and intention, and admirably executed in so much silence – each gasp, tremble, or knitted brow shares more and more about the character. Freddie MacBruce, stepping in last minute to help the show go on, is a remarkable foil – assured yet unconfident, he holds all the tensions of his character at once. The textures of the actor’s voices create a beautiful quality to the play – Rubin’s flitting vulnerability crashes into and hugs MacBruce’s nonchalant solidity. Though their dynamic starts to sink into stereotype by the end of the play, both performances remain strong, detailed, and truthful throughout.

The play has mined the possibilities of presenting text messages on stage – one of its most interesting elements is the tension between the inherently nondescript act of texting and the detail that live theatre, with all its elements, provides. Occasionally the tension jars – in translating texts for the stage, some believability is lost. There are incongruous transitions into monologues which reveal further interiority but clash against the naturalism the play seems to strive for – the drawn-out silence and resultant confusion created by a phone dying, our reliance on emojis and gifs and memes to communicate how we feel.

Long Distance is an interesting and evocative meditation on our phones and how they help and hinder us in communicating with each other. The play deliberately obscures the central relationship, limiting the couple’s interaction to the online realm. We never experience how, or if, the two interact in person. The play asks whether that is a problem at all. Is authenticity obstructed by an online setting? Perhaps not, but what the play does make clear is our increasing reliance on digital communication to connect us to those we love – and it is a timely reminder to reflect and reassess how we think about that mode of communication in our lives. A thought-provoking and timely play, Long Distance is a sobering and affecting experience.


LONG DISTANCE at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – ZOO Playground – Playground 1

Reviewed on 22nd August 2024

by Theo Chen

Photography by Lidia Crisafulli

 

 


LONG DISTANCE

LONG DISTANCE

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ASSEMBLY HALL

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Edinburgh International Festival

ASSEMBLY HALL at the Edinburgh International Festival

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“The dancers lose themselves among a host of ambiguous landscapes. It’s all mesmerizing to watch, and to listen to.”

Fans of Kidd Pivot’s work will delight in Assembly Hall. This piece has all the hallmarks of choreographer Crystal Pite and playwright Jonathon Young’s earlier work in Resizorβ€” a reimagination of Gogol’s Government Inspectorβ€”which I reviewed in early March 2020 at Sadler’s Wells. Assembly Hall isn’t based on another play, although it is about the way we create dramas. This piece is a dance/drama about a group of medieval re-enactors who are desperately trying to remain in the game. Presented as part of the 2024 Edinburgh International Festival at Edinburgh’s Festival Theatre, Assembly Hall is another aptly chosen production for this year’s festival slogan, β€œRituals that Unite Us.”

The show begins in a shabby and dilapidated assembly hall as the title suggests, at the group’s annual general meeting. If that doesn’t sound too promising a beginning, stick with it. What Kidd Pivot do with this mundane situation literally propels us into different spaces, different times. They do it with a highly original fusion of words and movement, set in a space that is always many places at once. There are times when we are not quite sure when we are, or where, in this ever changing narrative about a never ending game.

On one level, Assembly Hall is a dance about the well meaning fanaticism of cosplayers and re-enactors who go to extraordinary lengths to maintain a game in a world that isn’t real. Even when they have to hold annual general meetings that include voting whether the group can continue. There are already disturbing hints of past violence at the beginning of the show, which opens with the body of a man sprawled on an overturned chair. Is he asleep? Dead? The ambiguity that infuses all of Kidd Pivot’s work is alive and well in Assembly Hall. The meeting is accompanied with a sound design that incorporates both realistic dialogue and distorted sounds. (Composition and sound design by Owen Belton, Alessandro Juliani and Meg Roe). The dancers mime the words while their bodies take on an increasingly stylized interpretation of board members at a mundane meeting that is anything but. As the group gets increasingly fractious, the sounds and the movements fracture into a fight between medieval knights, equipped with armour, weapons and banners. Snatches of classical music emerge to accompany all this violence. It’s extraordinary to see performers literally transform from people in everyday clothing into medieval warriors. The Kidd Pivot company dance their way through all these transformations as though it were perfectly normal to go from nerdy looking committee members with glasses, to faceless warriors moving from one stylized battle scene to another. (Lovely costume design by Nancy Bryant.) We are forced to awareness of the choreography of the battlefield. It is paradoxically both beautiful to look at, and horrifying in its implications. While the game has become real for the re-enactors, the dancers lose themselves among a host of ambiguous landscapes. It’s all mesmerizing to watch, and to listen to.

Another feature of Pite and Young’s work is that when you think everything is about to reach some kind of dramatic conclusion, it both does, and doesn’t. We watch the story in which Assembly Hall begins its descent into violence, and we see, at various points, how the participants reappear to try to continue their meeting and force a vote. Do they continue as medieval re-enactors, or do they dissolve? It all comes down to one voteβ€”a vote from the player we saw lying inert on stage at the beginning of the show. Does he vote yes or no? No one can decide. It is a fitting end to the piece because regardless of how these players decide in their own time, the dance of medieval re-enactors is, in some sense, eternal. Even the audience ends the show so caught up in the dance that Kidd Pivot has created, that we ourselves cannot decide whether it is over. We wish it could continue forever. But we clap enthusiastically, gather up our coats and belongings, take ourselves out of the past, and into our futures, mundane or otherwise. The return to reality is both saddening, and oddly comforting.

 

ASSEMBLY HALL at the Edinburgh International Festival – Festival Hall

Reviewed on 22nd August 2024

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Michael Slobodian

 

 


ASSEMBLY HALL

ASSEMBLY HALL

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