Tag Archives: Flora Doble

Art Heist

★★★½

New Diorama Theatre

Art Heist

Art Heist

New Diorama Theatre

Reviewed – 18th October 2019

★★★½

 

“very slick with not one word, sound effect or movement out of place”

 

Imagine you’re trying to steal a painting. How would you manage it? Which picture would you choose? Why are you doing it? Art Heist, the newest play from Poltergeist Theatre and written and directed by Jack Bradfield, has its three protagonists consider these very questions while also exploring notions of value, identity and capitalism.

An experienced art thief looking for one last hit (Serena Yagoub), a lost soul who finds comfort in art (Rosa Garland), and a man obsessed with achieving the notoriety of the great art thieves of the past (Will Spence) all have their eye on one particular painting and will do anything to get their hands on it. From a desk positioned outside the stage space, the quick-witted Alice Boyd narrates and provides sound effects for the trio’s every move. Game or real, it’s not entirely clear, and this is further muddled by Boyd’s appearance on stage as a guard with a penchant for the trumpet.

The performance’s opening scenes are fast-paced and highly amusing as the three thieves and the guard establish their backstories and motivations to steal the painting. Yagoub is particularly strong here and gets huge laughs from the audience for her over the top but character-appropriate delivery. A scene in the museum’s gift shop is also delightfully playful.

The set (Shankho Chaudhuri) is entirely white apart from the occasional prop and the gilded frame of the painting in question on the back wall. Three plinths – amusingly marked Poltergeist I, II and III respectively with museum-style descriptions – and the frame are enough to establish that we are in an art gallery. A white frame sits around the whole stage which the characters either walk over or around which also aids in confusing reality and fiction. The lighting (Lucy Adams) is very well done and a scene in the gallery of sculptures where the stage is plunged into darkness except for Boyd’s flashing torch is masterful.

The use of multimedia is the production’s most impressive feature. After opening gambits, Boyd switches on two screens either side of the stage which are linked to two portable cameras. One camera is initially positioned high-up on the wall like a security camera while the other captures more mundane scenes such as Garland making a sandwich. These cameras eventually move around and are used in various clever ways. Spence sits on the floor, his feet against the stage’s frame and films his feet edging along as if he is walking along a building ledge. Yagoub positions the camera at an angle to make it appear as though by wiggling across the floor on her stomach that she is in fact scaling a building. At one point, an audience member even becomes a camera man!

There is meaningful commentary to be found in Art Heist, but it is not frequent enough to really pack a punch. Spence tells the play’s most interesting anecdote about how it was the theft of the Mona Lisa in 1911 that catapulted this previously relatively unknown portrait into fame. The painting’s gold frame is also used excellently at the performance’s end to drive home ideas about narrative and how much more there is so much more than what we can see. Unfortunately, moments of reflection were often quickly abandoned in favour of jokes or moving the increasingly chaotic plot forward.

Art Heist is very slick with not one word, sound effect or movement out of place. Poltergeist undoubtedly know how to put on a show, but a better balance between the serious and comedy in their newest endeavour would elevate it to a new level.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

Photography by The Other Richard

 


Art Heist

New Diorama Theatre until 26th October

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Close Up | ★★★ | February 2018
It Made me Consider | ★★★ | February 2018
Trap Street | ★★★★ | March 2018
Left my Desk | ★★★★ | May 2018
Bitter | ★★★ | June 2018
Taking Flight | ★★★ | June 2018
4.48 Psychosis | ★★★★ | September 2018
Boys | ★★★★★ | November 2018
The War Of The Worlds | ★★★½ | January 2019
Operation Mincemeat | ★★★★★ | May 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Smashing It

Smashing It!

★★

Bread and Roses Theatre

Smashing It

Smashing It!

Bread & Roses Theatre

Reviewed – 12th October 2019

★★

 

“a fun concept but it will take a lot of changes for Bowie to win big with this lacklustre gameshow”

 

Smashing It! is an interactive comedy gameshow about the trials and tribulations of living under a capitalist patriarchy. Written and hosted by Helen Sulis Bowie, Smashing It! aims to expose and explore the inherent problems with a capitalist patriarchal system all while playing catchy theme music. The show is highly interactive with the audience shouting out answers and joining in on stage.

There are three games in total. The first is ‘Say My Name’ (with the famous song by Destiny’s Child acting as the theme music) in which the audience must identify the famous man based on descriptions of them in relation to their wives. The second game is ‘I think you’ll find…’ – in tribute to obnoxious men inserting their opinion when it isn’t desired – where two audience members are challenged with speaking for one minute about a random topic without apologising or playing down their knowledge.

The final game is (very) loosely based on the 1990s television gameshow Supermarket Sweep. Bowie’s version has an audience member answer riddles about several items on stage that represent the pressures and horrors of the capitalist patriarchal system from a pack of Teatox tea to help people lose weight to a cheap jumper made in a Bangladeshi sweatshop.

Despite this line-up of games, a lack of polish means that none of these activities really feel like segments on a gameshow but rather like someone trying to entertain their family in the living room on a lazy Sunday afternoon. The bland stage did not help this. Some more decoration would have been appreciated here such as a sparkly sign with ‘Smashing It! The capitalist patriarchy gameshow’ on the back wall.

There were some notable fun extras. Handmade paper booklets with a word search and a board for a game of ‘Capitalist Patriarchy Bingo!’ are available in the lobby and, with a declaration that we can all help change the world, Bowie hands out chocolates from a box of Heroes. It is nice that there are also small prizes for participants, but they are neither particularly funny nor relevant to the show which just makes them a bit naff.

Bowie is a decent host and is good at encouraging the audience to participate. She did however not always seem too confident on stage and audience members at times outshone her. Bowie is at her strongest at the performance’s end where she removes her neon pink wig and succinctly breaks down many horrible aspects of capitalist patriarchy.

The show is in fact as a whole strongest when it lingers on the dark and harsh realities of such a system. The murder of Reeva Steenkamp by her boyfriend Paralympian Oscar Pistorious, the murder of Anne Shortall at the hands of Roy Webster after she asked him to fund an abortion, and the mere necessity of a rape alarm are some important topics mentioned. There is also some thoughtful commentary about companies encouraging punters to ‘treat themselves’ by buying new products for World Mental Health Day. More moments like this will go a long way in improving the production.

Smashing It! is a fun concept but it will take a lot of changes for Bowie to win big with this lacklustre gameshow.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

 

Clapham Fringe 2019

Smashing It!

Bread & Roses Theatre as part of Clapham Fringe

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Two Of A Kind | ★★★ | January 2019
Just To Sit At Her Table, Silver Hammer & Mirabilis | ★★★ | April 2019
Starved | ★★★★★ | April 2019
The Mind Reading Experiments | ★★★ | May 2019
The Incursion | ★★½ | July 2019
Coco’s Adventures | ★★★ | September 2019
Room Service | ★★★★★ | September 2019
The Bacchae | ★★★ | September 2019
Trial Of Love | ★★★½ | September 2019
The Gravy Bunch | ★★½ | October 2019

 

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