Tag Archives: Evelien Van Camp

TWO ROUNDS

★★★

Jermyn Street Theatre

TWO ROUNDS at Jermyn Street Theatre

★★★

“a tear-stained love letter to mothers and daughters”

Two Rounds explores the legacy of womanhood through two generations of four women in a tender and contemplative story. The first group we meet is a tea-party of housewives living in 1960s Italy. Translated from its original Italian debut and written by Cristina Comencini, the piece is a long conversation between four mothers. In the second act the actors play their respective daughters. Nothing happens to the characters beyond what they simply reveal dramatically to each other and events described off-stage. Beatrice, a vision in pink, (Daria Mazzocchio) is pregnant with her first child. Claudia (Natalie Cutler) in a green poodle skirt is uptight and traditionalist and consistently reminds Beatrice to expect even more pain in childbirth than whatever she imagines. Briskly dealing cards for the game is Gabriella (Flora Sowerby), in blue mid-length trousers. She criticises the nature of their housewife role with dry humour and knowing looks. Lastly, in matching purple headband and trousers is Sofia. She wins often at cards, but feels she has not won at life. Sofia (Saria Steyl) laments her life and delivers philosophical rants whilst chain smoking (around a pregnant woman…it’s definitely the 60s!) with pithy delivery.

Permeating the emotional moments is bright and dreamy lighting with vibrant pinks and an occasional flickering hanging lamp (Han Sayles). The set consists of a living room decorated with a somewhat kitsch collage of black and white photos of brides, mothers and families with the costumes doing heavy lifting in evoking the time period (Evelien Van Camp). Further punctuating the drama in the women’s conversation is a light piano score and Italian music (Hattie North). At the change to the next generation the home is draped in sheets and with cooler more sombre lighting and some Nokia ringtones to garnish its 90s setting.

“it is performed with quiet strength from the cast in both acts”

The relationship between mother and daughter is captured through the dual roles of the performers. Beatrice, pregnant with her daughter Giulia tells us she adored her mother who died. Directly mirroring these events in the 90s, Giulia (Mazzocchio) gathers her childhood friends after a funeral. Claudia, who idolised her mother, discusses the value she places in her role as a parent. In the second act, her daughter Cecilia (Cutler) is desperate to be pregnant. Gabriella, who feels lonely and side-lined proclaims she will teach her daughter Sara to play piano. Sara (Sowerby), a concert pianist, wishes her husband were more assertive in their marriage, disliking how he emasculates himself. Sofia feels dispassionate about her role in her daughter’s life. A doctor, Rossana (Steyl), who keeps an unlit cigarette in her mouth (it’s a metaphor) discusses balancing a career and family life. The women in the 90s generation discuss their problems with feminism and to some extent seem to dislike some of the freedoms they have that their mothers didn’t. The women of the elder generation casually admit to adultery, loneliness and resentment with their respective daughters supposedly in the room next door. Conversely, none of the daughters have become mothers in the second half and have made their own choices in their work and love lives.

Overall it is performed with quiet strength from the cast in both acts. Steyl’s performance enamours the audience to a regretful and bitter Sofia. Mazzocchio is endearing as Beatrice and Giulia, showing range. Directed by Aida Rocci, the scenes weave through the tea party and funeral but avoid over-the-top melodrama with expertly placed jokes by Cutler and Sowerby. However in lieu of conflict, expositional dialogue takes up the entire runtime. It is a tear-stained love letter to mothers and daughters.


TWO ROUNDS at Jermyn Street Theatre

Reviewed on 8th February 2024

by Jessica Potts

Photography by Giulia Delprato

 


 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

THE BEAUTIFUL FUTURE IS COMING | ★★★★ | January 2024
OWNERS | ★★★½ | October 2023
INFAMOUS | ★★★★ | September 2023
SPIRAL | ★★ | August 2023
FARM HALL | ★★★★ | March 2023
LOVE ALL | ★★★★ | September 2022
CANCELLING SOCRATES | ★★★★ | June 2022
ORLANDO | ★★★★ | May 2022
FOOTFALLS AND ROCKABY | ★★★★★ | November 2021
THE TEMPEST | ★★★ | November 2021

TWO ROUNDS

TWO ROUNDS

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The Swell

The Swell

★★★★

Orange Tree Theatre

THE SWELL at the Orange Tree Theatre

★★★★

The Swell

“The play is a fiendishly clever piece of writing, served brilliantly by a formidable company”

 

They say it’s the quiet ones you have to watch out for’, or ‘never trust a smiling cat’. Although not perfect in their analogy, it would be a similar phrase that describes how we feel walking away from Isley Lynn’s new play “The Swell”. Lynn’s writing is deceptively artful and astute, crafty yet judiciously crafted. She has that rare gift of duping us into thinking we are on safe ground, but then abruptly pulling that ground away from under our feet.

Conceived five years ago as part of Hightide’s summer writing festival, director Hannah Hauer-King has helped steer the piece towards its premiere at the Orange Tree Theatre. Her close attachment shows up in the crisp and sensitive staging of the text. Specifically played in the round there is nowhere really to hide; a challenge that is embraced. When not directly involved in in the action, the characters are still ever present; in shadows, watching, chanting or silently echoing the unfolding drama centre stage.

The “Swell” in the play’s title refers variously to the crest of a wave, the metaphorical rush of blood to the heart when in love, or the rising of a chorister’s chest. But also, to the swelling in the brain of a blood clot that can cause a stroke – which informs the bulk of the brilliantly executed shifts and twists that shape our understanding of the characters’ journeys; their motives, relationships and deceptions.

The action shifts between then and now. Annie and Bel are seemingly in love, preparing for their wedding. Until Flo – a childhood friend of Annie’s – crashes into their lives with predictable results. Suffice to say the wedding never takes place. Jessica Clark fires Flo’s spirit with an energy that races ahead of her bubbly free spirit. Saroja-Lily Ratnavel, as the young Annie, veils her emotional scar tissue with taut jitteriness that borders on violence, while Ruby Crepin-Glyne’s rootless Bel is caught in the slow dance of domesticity, aching for the tempo to change. Sophie Ward, Shuna Snow and Viss Elliot Safavi are the girls thirty years later. The extraordinarily accomplished performances tease out the intervening backstory with an understated intensity that boils beneath the gentle simmering. It feels like a caress, but all along it is scorching us.

The play is a fiendishly clever piece of writing, served brilliantly by a formidable company of actresses. You cannot avoid the fact that queerness runs through it like marble. However, like Brokeback Mountain for example, the fears and prejudice sadly still experienced are addressed without coming across as a piece of queer writing. Sexual identity is not being scrutinised, yet questions and assumptions of personal identity are thrillingly exposed and cannily upturned.

The literal and the figurative walk hand in hand. Imagine them walking through a rather predictable romcom, but then they turn a corner and are ambushed by a psychological thriller. One in which lies come in all shades of white, and betrayal can be the kindest act. The mood is underpinned, though not particularly enhanced, by Nicola T. Chang’s a Capella vocal score. The essence lies within the dialogue and the drama, and swells into a fine fusion of writing and performance.

 

 

Reviewed on 29th June 2023

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Ali Wright

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

 

Duet For One | ★★★★ | February 2023
Rice | ★★★★ | October 2021
The Solid Life Of Sugar Water | ★★★★★ | October 2022
Two Billion Beats | ★★★½ | February 2022
While the Sun Shines | ★★★★ | November 2021

 

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