Tag Archives: Jermyn Street Theatre

Mad as Hell – 3 Stars

Hell

Mad as Hell

Jermyn Street Theatre

Reviewed – 9th February 2018

β˜…β˜…β˜…

“strong performances from all, coupled with an understated script full of humour and optimism”

 

Jermyn Street Theatre is one of those tiny studios with limited space. The ambience can make or break a show very quickly. If the audience is not on board then it’s off putting to actors literally toe to toe with the front row. Equally If any of the acting isn’t up to par there is nowhere to hide and the people in the seats will lose interest quickly.Β This evening the play hits the mark from the start and hooks in the auditorium from the beginning.

The show is based on both fact and fiction; the words of latter-day movie star Peter Finch and his third wife Eletha Barrett themselves, with ‘imagined’ dialogue from writer Adrian Hope and director/writerΒ Cassie McFarlane, based on the hell raising past of Finch and the social scandal of an interracial marriage at the time.Β Finch is a well known British/Australian actor who finds love with his ‘Ellie’. A romance that alters his lifestyle, calms him down and creates a supportive partnership, and is the thing that brings him the most happiness. Yet, a gradual accumulation of outright racism, ignorance and even ‘well meant’ prejudice fires him up and makes him ‘Mad as Hell’, and becomes the emotional source for his final and greatest film role.

Much of the play centres on Jamaican Eletha’s charm and charisma, and her influence on Finch.Β Vanessa Donovan brings this strong independent woman to the stage with a great portrayal of a determined, passionate and clever Ellie. Stephen Hogan seamlessly brings the womanising, hard-drinking Peter Finch to life with his sharp wit and unapologetic ego, yet convinces the audience he wants to be a better man, husband and father.

Alexandra Mardell manages to both shine as the brazen wannabe Debbie, and yet fades into the background as hesitant maid Daisy. I had to look closely to be sure it was the same actress!

The set is very simple. Different locations insinuated by the position of the props and the music between acts. These scene changes were done deftly by stagehands but I did find the prolonged blackouts, albeit with nostalgic music (from sound designer David Beckham), a bit of a distraction.

Luckily with strong performances from all, coupled with an understated script full of humour and optimism, this play is a funny, bittersweet but timely reminder of the past. It allows glimpses into the racial tensions across the globe in the 60s and 70s, through a couple striving for harmony at home.Β A lot has changed in half a century.Β Too much remains the same.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hinson

Photography by Eddie Otchere

 


Mad as Hell

Jermyn Street Theatre until 24th February 2018

 

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com

 

Woman Before a Glass – 4 Stars

Before

Woman Before a Glass

Jermyn Street Theatre

Reviewed – 19th January 2018

β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…

“beautifully delivered as a one woman tour de force by a brilliant Judy Rosenblatt”

 

Jermyn Street Theatre is a tiny but perfect venue that I must have wandered past for years before I knew it existed. Once I did, I was always intrigued by the descending stairs that disappeared into a mysterious curve, leaving the studio tantalisingly out of view. I was excited at the thought of finally finding out what magic lay at the bottom of the steps!

The real life of Peggy (Marguerite) Guggenheim, art collector, daughter, sister, mother, lover, wife, ex-wife, drinker and survivor, is peeked at in this play by Lanie Robertson. Set in one room of her villa in her beloved adopted home of Venice (design by Erika Rodriguez), Peggy lays bare her love of life, men and art. She reminiscences in her lounge or talks on the phone, she speaks to a person offstage as a matter of fact or as a passing aside, giving an insight into the strong woman she is. She was however, in an era that found independent women difficult to deal with, both notorious and scandalous; yet she was content with that, enjoying it more often than not.

Peggy’s amazing history, her losses and loves, and her discovery of contemporary art emerge as we hear her recount snippets of her life. We drift in and out of her thoughts as she fights to keep the significant pieces of art she has lovingly amassed as a single collection – this is herΒ  legacy for the future and it is her priority.

These pictures and sculptures are more ‘children’ to her than her flesh and blood, and as she battles for their future it becomes clear that many relationships in her life have taken second place to it, and there are consequences for that. Her stories are humourous, bittersweet, and sometimes tragic.

Directed by Austin Pendleton, this production of Woman Before a Glass is beautifully delivered as a one woman tour de force by a brilliant Judy Rosenblatt as Peggy. There is a great mix of audience acknowledgement, factual information, comic storytelling, sympathy, and understated sadness.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hinson

Photography by Robert Workman

 


Woman Before a Glass

Jermyn Street Theatre until 3rd February

 

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com