Tag Archives: Flora Doble

Important Art

★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

Important Art

Important Art

Crypt – The Vaults

Reviewed – 16th February 2020

★★★

 

“has potential both in concept and its players”

 

Important Art is the final show in an extensive line-up at the VAULT Festival 2020 from the improvised comedy syndicate Free Association. Packed with a mock showcase of the very best of high culture, Important Art satirises the inaccessible world of art and its clichés.

The show is split into three parts which have varying degrees of success. The first section is some so-called French-prov, that is, improvised ‘sneak peeks’ from a new French film which is performed by Amanda Stauffer and Clemence Billoud almost entirely in French. Graham Dickson (also the turtleneck-clad host for the evening) and Sophie Broido then take to the stage to perform a supposed snippet of a lost play from the famed American playwright Tennessee Williams. The show closes with Alex Holland and Chris Gau attempting to do some serious improv skits.

Dickson is a great host and both the production’s strongest comedian and actor. In his scenes with Broido, who also does well throughout, Dickson jumps between two very different roles with ease, before returning confidently to his hosting role.

Stauffer and Billoud are clearly both very talented but their French comedy will perhaps be lost on certain audiences. With little to no French, one would struggle to keep up with what’s happening on stage, and several rather blank stares from audience members unfortunately confirm this.

Their scenes would have been far more accessible if they had thrown in the odd French phrase or word but spoken in heavily accented English for most of their performance. It is unclear what point they are trying to make with this bit as though conversations about caca suggest that this is unlike a typical pretentious French art film, a pretty high level of understanding is still required to fully enjoy this part of the production.

Dickson and Broido lead the show’s best section, the theme of which is vaguely prompted by two nouns given by the audience. Even those unfamiliar with Williams’ work can understand, appreciate and laugh at the ridiculous tropes of fiction about small town American life. Broido and Dickson also have great chemistry and bounce off each other well.

The final section by Holland and Gau is amusing but their slapstick comedy won’t be for everyone. The duo establish that they are keen to do improv that covers serious topics, but their scenes always descend into physical fighting complete with smashing plates and ripping clothes. The premise is fun but gets old quickly, though the duo does manage to hit a sweet spot in terms of performance length.

The stage is void of any props other than two chairs which are joined by a table for Holland and Gau’s performance, and the music does well to create a feeling of faux sophistication.

Important Art has potential both in concept and its players, but it needs to reassess how it can appeal to and draw in those who may have initially been alienated by the show’s snooty title and borderline elite content.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

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The Six Wives on Henry VIII

★★★

King’s Head Theatre

The Six Wives on Henry VIII

The Six Wives on Henry VIII

King’s Head Theatre

Reviewed – 13th February 2020

★★★

 

“has a lot of spirit and is sure to have the audience laughing with its self-referential and anachronistic humour”

 

The Six Wives of Henry VIII is the very first show from theatre group Living Spit, consisting of comic actors Howard Coggins and Stu McLoughlin. First premiering in 2012, Coggins and McLoughlin have since written and performed a further fourteen shows, and the pair’s most recent run of The Six Wives of Henry VIII (directed by Craig Edwards) at the iconic King’s Head Theatre marks their first London tour.

Coggins and McLoughlin admit early on that their show is in fact a rather elaborate response to a devastatingly harsh one-star review criticising the duo’s lack of commitment to historical accuracy. It helps, of course, that Coggins also looks remarkedly like the infamous Tudor monarch Henry VIII who he plays for most of the performance. McLoughlin, on the other hand, plays pretty much every other character from all six of Henry’s ill-fated wives to the Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas Cranmer as well as many more.

With admittedly very little research informing the script, the audience is taken on a whistle stop tour of Henry’s life, meeting his unfortunate queens along the way. Musical interludes and reality TV show parodies abound, this rather silly play demonstrates just how fun (and funny) history can be if you just fill in the blanks.

The performance takes a little while to get going but about halfway through, the actors seem to find their feet and the play whips by at a much more engaging rate. This is then unfortunately punctuated by a scene in which Coggins and McLoughlin pretend to have a massive falling out which leaves the former to act out Henry’s conversation with his final wife Catherine Parr alone. There is a playful rivalry established in the duo’s dynamic early on, but this faux argument goes frustratingly too far in upsetting the action on stage.

One does have to admire how much Coggins and McLoughlin attempt to do in a show that is little over an hour. The songs are not particularly memorable, but they are a fun addition to the performance and split up the scenes nicely. The strongest song is performed by Anne of Cleves and Henry VIII in which the two dance robotically as colourful lights flash around them as if they are in a techno nightclub.

The stage (Fiona Trim) consists of a sofa (which doubles as a bed in some scenes), a throne and a small area for the musical performances where two guitars and a ukulele hang on stands. There is some amusing prop work which demonstrates the pair’s wit. Particularly notable is the decision to have Anne Boleyn being originally played by a Barbie doll which Coggins passionately kisses, and a homemade lie detector fashioned from a bicycle helmet and pliers used on Catherine Howard to prove her adulterous ways.

The lighting (Octavia Penes) is fairly tight. For example, in a dream sequence with Henry VII’s ghost, the whole stage is lit up in red at the exact moment McLoughlin clicks his fingers. The costumes are pretty basic – a new character most often signalled by a different hat – but this is understandable considering the amount of changes McLoughlin has to make in quick succession.

The Six Wives of Henry VIII has a lot of spirit and is sure to have the audience laughing with its self-referential and anachronistic humour. However, some more focus on Henry’s fascinating love life rather than the fake drama between McLoughlin and Coggins will no doubt help to better engage the audience with the farcical world of Tudor Britain and its iconic King.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

Photography by Farrows Creative

 


The Six Wives on Henry VIII

King’s Head Theatre until 7th March

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
How We Begin | ★★★★ | August 2019
World’s End | ★★★★ | August 2019
Stripped | ★★★★ | September 2019
The Elixir Of Love | ★★★★★ | September 2019
Tickle | ★★★★ | October 2019
Don’t Frighten The Straights | ★★★ | November 2019
The Nativity Panto | ★★★★ | December 2019
Candy | ★★★★ | January 2020
Falling in Love Again | ★★ | January 2020
Happily Ever Poofter | ★★★★ | January 2020

 

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