Tag Archives: Gabriel Chernick

THE LAST MAN

★★½

Southwark Playhouse Elephant

THE LAST MAN

Southwark Playhouse Elephant

★★½

“could do with some refinement to truly earn its survivor status”

‘The Last Man’ – a one-person Korean rock musical – bursts onto the stage in its English language world premiere. After sell-out runs in Korea and China, this newly reimagined version feels like it’s still finding its rhythm.

A mysterious virus wipes out humanity – except for one survivor, sealed in a bunker beneath Seoul. As time stretches on, supplies run low and resolve cracks. But things aren’t all they seem.

Jishik Kim’s book, with dramaturgy by Jethro Compton, opens strongly, skewering zombie apocalypse tropes with sharp, self aware humour. The one person dialogue has real drive early on, though leans into telling over showing as it unfolds. The main weakness is the twist doesn’t quite land, partly because the show feels like two contrasting halves, and partly because the final scene raises more questions than it answers. With clearer development and a more focused ending, the piece could hit much harder.

Jishik Kim’s lyrics mostly land, though a few clunky lines seem to have snuck through translation. Seungyeon Kwon’s music – with Gabriel Chernick’s supervision and arrangements, and Amy Hsu’s musical direction – has many smart touches that amplify the score’s emotion. However bolder contrasts and a more distinctive sound would help each beat land more clearly. The five piece band – Hsu, Charlie Laffer, Jon Cox, Rhys Davies and Elizabeth Boyce – is superb.

Direction by Daljung Kim, with assistant Yujeong Kim, has many clever moments such as the teleporting teddy. The phone video adds a ‘Blair Witch’ style claustrophobia, though the glitching stream breaks the spell, especially when the actor’s focus is on the phone. A more defined mental decline would give the two acts a stronger connection, and movement choices could be bolder to create more momentum. A few choices strain the internal logic of an apocalyptic setting, such as throwing away precious resources, and the depiction of the character’s mental state doesn’t always ring true.

The design work shines. Shankho Chaudhuri’s realistic, versatile set makes full use of space, from the opening dash across an upper gallery to the austere yet homely bunker below. Cheolmin Cho’s lighting is absolutely stunning, shaping each scene with gorgeous precision. Anna Kelsey’s costume design is suitably apocalyptic with just enough personality to root us in the survivor’s world. Liam McDermott’s sound design creates a wonderfully eerie atmosphere, though the zombie ‘roars’ don’t quite land and the mix sometimes swallows the lyrics, especially in the opening number.

Tonight’s cast features Lex Lee as The Survivor, sharing the role with Nabi Brown. Lee commands focus throughout a demanding one person musical, delivering standout vocals that shift effortlessly from intimate moments to full throttle rock. Lee’s comic timing and emotional grit shine, though a few moments could open up even more.

I doubt this is the last we’ll see of ‘The Last Man’ in the UK, as tonight’s response shows there’s clearly an audience. However, it could do with some refinement to truly earn its survivor status.



THE LAST MAN

Southwark Playhouse Elephant

Reviewed on 13th May 2026

by Hannah Bothelton

Photography by Rich Lakos


 

 

 

 

THE LAST MAN

THE LAST MAN

THE LAST MAN

Operation Mincemeat

Operation Mincemeat

★★★★★

Southwark Playhouse

Operation Mincemeat

Operation Mincemeat

Southwark Playhouse

Reviewed – 18th August 2021

★★★★★

 

“simply unmissable, irresistible, audacious and adorable; intelligent and invigorating.”

 

Midway through “Operation Mincemeat”, the musical from Spitlip, one of the characters quips that ‘you couldn’t write this!’. Based on true events, it embodies the truth-is-stranger-than-fiction adage. However, there is nothing strange about the truth that this show is unmissable, irresistible, audacious and adorable; intelligent and invigorating. That reads like the closing tagline of a review, so I’m wondering where I can go from here. On a Musical Development timeline, “Operation Mincemeat” is still a fairly young sapling, having premiered at the New Diorama Theatre only in 2019. They, too, must be asking where they can go from here. Because quite simply put, it’s already there! It’s got it all.

Based on the Allied invasion of Sicily in the Second World War, it tells the story of how two members of the British intelligence service managed to deceive Hitler by (dubiously and possibly illegally) obtaining the corpse of a Welsh tramp who died eating rat poison, dressing him up as an officer, planting false documents in a briefcase handcuffed to his wrist, and dropping him into the waters off the southern coast of Spain. The following morning it was dredged up by a fisherman. Although Spain was technically neutral, the documents still found their way into German hands. These documents detailed the Allies’ plans to invade Sardinia, when in fact it was Sicily all along. The Germans fell for it hook, line and sinker and, to cut a long story short, the liberation gathered speed. Yes – you couldn’t write it!

Outlandish as it is, SpitLip manage to embellish it further with a goldmine of quirky ideas, characters and scenarios, beautifully and joyously crafted songs, more laughs than you can really handle in one evening and even the odd, serious message thrown in for good measure. The multi rolling, gender-blind ensemble adopt a host of personalities amid a whirlwind of scenes and songs. The score is eclectic, encompassing rap, rock, swing, sea shanties, dance, dubstep, hip-hop and ballads to name a few; with leitmotifs recurring in perfect rhythm to the showstopping numbers that drive the show.

The writing and composing credits are attributed to SpitLip, which comprises David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson and Zoe Roberts. Cumming, Hodgson and Roberts make up the cast joined by Claire-Marie Hall and Jak Malone. I could exceed my wordcount reeling off the individual attributes of each cast member but, in truth, none needs to be singled out. Hagan, the Musical Director, is on keys with Ellen O’Reilly on bass and synth bass and Lewis Jenkins on drums and percussion. It would be a crime not to mention Sherry Coenen’s lighting and Mike Walker’s sound design. This is a show where each ingredient (not forgetting Jenny Arnold’s choreography and Helen Coyston’s costume) blends together to produce the perfect concoction. With parts this great it’s hard for the sum to be greater – but it manages.

The real-life Operation Mincemeat was a success. One that changed the course of history. Although Spitlip’s “Operation Mincemeat” probably won’t change the world, it will make its mark in the world of musicals. Every note, sung or spoken, in this show serves a purpose. Even the throwaway adlibs and asides. I’ve already used up my closing tagline, but it doesn’t hurt to repeat. “Operation Mincemeat” is simply unmissable, irresistible, audacious and adorable; intelligent and invigorating. I wish I had a few more hundred words to play with here, but if you want the detail, just go and see it. It’s unmissable. Did I say that already…?

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Matt Crockett

 


Operation Mincemeat

Southwark Playhouse until 18th September

 

Previously reviewed at this venue this year:
You Are Here | ★★★★ | May 2021
Staircase | ★★★ | June 2021

 

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