Tag Archives: Jessica Lazar

 

As Steven Berkoff’s East continues to get rave reviews at the King’s Head Theatre, we talk to its director,

Jessica Lazar

Lazar

Can you give a brief synopsis of Steven Berkoff’s East?

East premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe in 1975 and then transferred to the King’s Head Theatre. It’s inspired by Berkoff’s experience of growing up in the East End, and we’re thrown into the lives of five characters … but it’s not a linear narrative, so it’s difficult to say more without giving too much away. It’s full of brilliantly weird interior worlds. Everyone is living moment by moment and we’re swept along with them.

What made you want to revive East?

East is full of passion and wit and energy and frustration. Several of its themes have (to our shame) acute contemporary relevance, but it’s also a very funny play. Everything is heightened – physically, emotionally, intellectually – but everything has to be kept in balance. So it demands a lot from a theatre company; those challenges were immensely appealing to us.

How does it feel to be bringing East back to the King’s Head Theatre where it originally made its London debut? Was it intentional?

Yes, it was …Β The King’s Head are very aware of their heritage and responsive to it, so creating a new version of one of their early successes has been a really fun and interesting process for all of us. And, perhaps unsurprisingly, the theatre suits the play. We’ve learnt unexpected things about East simply from working in that space (although of course the studio has changed in 40 years). And now it’s also likely to be one of the last shows in that King’s Head building, the production has become quite poignant: we’re the last company who will have the opportunity to restage East in its original space.

Do you think East is still relevant to a 21st-century audience, even though the play is now 43 years old?

Definitely. We took the deliberate decision not to stage East as a period piece. This came from the text of the play: its full of calculated contradictory references about when it’s set – an amusing if obscure puzzle alongside casual jokes about time-space trajectories and the Theory of Relativity …Anna Lewis’s design supports this interpretation, especially in the costuming (since we’re working in thrust). The cast could walk down Upper Street in their costumes and no one would blink because modern fashion is more a blend of different times than it’s ever been. So, if you look at individual items there’s vintage mixing with high street, a 60s miniskirt worn with a 90s scrunchie; a popped 50s rockabilly collar with skinny jeans and boots from the 80s. Or, to give another example, at one point our movement director Yvan Karlsson mixes dance styles from several decades to create a club scene.

East has acute general relevance – from stagnant social mobility, gentrification, to the equality and abuse of women, rampant political populism, and racist scapegoating – but it has subjective resonance too. The characters are powerfully individual, but they’re also almost archetypes who could be functioning in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s … they survive today. Their emotions, their relationships, their ambition and frustration and desire, are eternal.

East is known for it’s complex, Shakespearean-like language; did this bring any difficulties to the rehearsal process?

That’s something I love working with as a director, and East is so well written that it guides the speaker through the text if they’re alive to its vocabulary and rhythm. To allow us time to work the text and play with it, I met with each of the cast for a few intensive individual sessions before the main rehearsal process started (since we knew the staging would be demanding). The only real challenge we foresaw was casting: finding people who would thrive on the demands of the text as well as the physical demands of the production was something that Yvan and I were concerned about. But casting director Stephen Moore was magnificent. Fully understanding our requirements and incredibly sensitive to them, he helped us find a highly engaged, intelligent, and physically creative cast who give an unapologetic commitment to every moment.

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In four words, can you describe the main themes of the play?

Dreams. Desire. Rebellion. London.

Is there a character within East that particularly resonates with you? If so, why?

That’s really hard to say. If you know the play I imagine you’d expect me to say Sylv, and that’s true up to a point. She does resonate with all the women in the company because she’s negotiating some incredibly frustrating gender expectations, petty (and not so petty) sexual harassment on a daily basis, and other issues you’d really hope weren’t still so familiar for women in 2018. But Mike’s optimism and ability to live in the moment are also strangely appealing, as is Les’s desire to better himself – his ambition and energy. As its director, I have to find a way in with every character.

What do you hope the audience take away with them?

We want them to be entertained but also challenged. Occasionally shocked. East has some very uncomfortable moments, which often come out of nowhere. It’s not a play where you’re supposed to trust the characters, or believe they’re justified in all their actions or opinions, although you might be brutally charmed by them. So if you left with a straightforward uncomplicated liking for any of them – total approval – there would be something wrong. But likewise, you shouldn’t be able to dismiss them…

Are there any plans to take your production of East anywhere else after this run?

I think it’s a case of seeing how it goes. The challenges of a subsequent run would include the fact we decided to stage it in thrust, and in an unusual thrust configuration at that. It’s also such a perfect fit for the King’s Head in other ways, like their shared history, and the atmosphere of the pub which leads you to the theatre. If a really interesting and fitting opportunity existed we’d love to take that on, but, if not, we’re having a great run and we’ll just enjoy that. They are, however, all actors I would love to have the opportunity to work with again.

Putting East to one side, do you have any other exciting projects in the pipeline for the upcoming year?

Atticist has a few projects at various stages of development… one of which it is hoping to produce later this year and which I’ve been developing as a director, together with David Doyle. It’s an astonishing documentary and verbatim piece about a series of murders in Dublin in 1982 – we’re very excited about it and it will be a huge challenge. Beyond that, we’re all freelancers so are seeking interesting opportunities and new collaborations all the time.

 

Jessica Lazar was talking to Phoebe Cole

Production Photography by Alex Brenner

 

 

Lazar

 

East

King’s Head Theatre until 3rd February

 

 

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East

East

King’s Head Theatre

Reviewed – 11th January 2018

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“a grubby love-letter to London: from a Londoner, about Londoners, for Londoners”

 

Going into the back of a Victorian pub to watch the revival of Steven Berkoff’s seminal play about the East End, seemed like the only suitable way in which this production should be consumed. East made its London debut at the King’s Head Theatre in 1975, and 43 years later, it is back at its original London home, under the helm of director Jessica Lazar, and her company, Atticist.

With a combination of: audience members with pints in hand, sitting amidst an intentional crumbling set and the show’s Musical Director, Carol Arnopp tinkling on the ivories, you were immediately transported back to a pub of post-war, poverty-stricken London. Lazar did a fine a job in creating a multi-sensory atmosphere to envelop and match the textured, poetic language of Berkoff’s writing – a quintessentially working-class British style that has gone on to inspire a generation of playwrights such as Jez Butterworth and Mark Ravenhill. What I was intrigued to see was whether Lazar and her cast were able to make this period piece resonate to a 21st-century audience, many of whom were born after East was first produced.

Bustling back and forth between moments from the 1950s to the 1970s, we are given snapshots into the lives, fantasies, hopes and regrets of a working-class, East End family. The cocky, energetic lads, Mike (James Craze) and Les (Jack Condon) bounce across the stage with youthful vitality and masculine bravado, in violent, expletive-filled outbursts. Mum and Dad drift in days gone by, reminiscing about the good ol’ days. The racist Dad (Russell Barnett) is nostalgic for the wartime patriotism of Britain, whilst Mum (Debra Penny) daydreams about how she could have had a different life. Mike’s downtrodden girlfriend, Slyv (Boadicea Ricketts), completes the line up, desperately wanting to escape the world she knows, as she debates if life would have been better if she were born a man.

Linguistically, Steven Berkoff created a modern day masterpiece with East. Fusing a pseudo-Shakespearean style with contemporary Cockney slang produced highly abstract yet recognisable, visceral voices from the streets. The whole cast did a tremendous job in tackling this complex text, giving it the colour and definition that it deserved. With jaunty vocal soundscapes and grotesque, exaggerated physicality, it was a complete feast for all the senses.

Anna Lewis, the costume designer for this production, made an excellent choice in deciding to use outfits that were universal that could easily be from our time, as it made the production seem timeless. Yes, there were many vintage references but, text aside, the archetypal characters that lay underneath, you would find in any urban community, of any decade. This truly was a grubby love-letter to London: from a Londoner, about Londoners, for Londoners.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

Photography by Alex Brenner

 

 

EAST

King’s Head Theatre until 3rd February

 

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