Tag Archives: Joanna Hetherington

Frankenstein: How To Make A Monster
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Battersea Arts Centre

Frankenstein: How To Make A Monster

Frankenstein: How To Make A Monster

Battersea Arts Centre

Reviewed – 14th March 2019

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“it’s the complex musical arrangements, inventive lyrics, slick choreography and brilliant vocals which inspire and lift β€˜Frankenstein’ beyond its genre”

 

The expectation of a beatbox show is a great evening of infectious rhythm, but walking into Battersea Arts Centre’s suitably gothic Grand Hall, filled with an audience buzzing with intoxicating anticipation and the scene set with bare, hanging bulbs and smoky lighting, is a suggestion that it is more than just that. Beatbox Academy’s β€˜Frankenstein’, fuses singing, rapping and movement with the group’s rhythmic skills in a production worthy of its standing ovation. Entertaining with energy and humour and mesmerising with seemingly limitless voices, Aminita Francis, Nadine Rose Johnson, Tyler Worthington, Nathaniel Forder-Staple, Alex Hackett and Beth Griffin (alias Aminita, Glitch, Wiz-rd, Native, ABH and Grove) move through every vocal possibility imaginable from industrial soundscape to Baroque cover version, each bringing a strong, contrasting personal slant but working in complete harmony.

After two industrious years of teamwork between devoted and enlightening directors, Conrad Murray and David Cumming, and the cast, the reconstruction of Frankenstein’s monster unfolds as a story reflecting on themes in Mary Shelley’s well-worn tale. She warns of the advance of technology and society’s condemnation of physical imperfection; here we are warned of the addiction of social media, smart phones, selfies and the loneliness they bring. Chapter one leads us from peaceful, forest birdsong to the noise of the city and breaks into the first number, introducing us to the β€˜Genius’. In the second chapter the monster is compiled of body parts in the form of musical fragments – James Brown, The Prodigy and Pachelbel, to spoil as little as possible. It is followed by β€˜growing pains’ and continues to develop its messages in varied numbers and breath-taking changes of mood. The sound (Marcello Coppola) is immaculate and perfectly balanced and Sherry Coenen’s lighting heightens the atmosphere at every turn.

Beatbox Academy is celebrating ten years of teaching, learning and personal development mixed with enjoyment. Enveloping inspiration, creativity and dedication with a powerful community spirit enables young people to discover and express themselves. The brief appearance of the younger members at the beginning and end of the show put into perspective the exciting journey these children are on and how much they can achieve. But it’s the complex musical arrangements, inventive lyrics, slick choreography and brilliant vocals which inspire and lift β€˜Frankenstein’ beyond its genre. To those already familiar with the group, it is an hour of excitement and exuberance; to those who aren’t, it is a thrilling and heart-filled revelation.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

Photography by Joyce Nicholls

 


Frankenstein: How To Make A Monster

Battersea Arts Centre until 29th March

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
How to Survive a Post-Truth Apocalypse | β˜…β˜…β˜… | May 2018
Rendezvous in Bratislava | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2018
Dressed | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2019

 

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Classified

Classified
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Tristan Bates Theatre

Classified

Classified

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 6th March 2019

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“A refreshingly uncluttered trio of plays”

 

As part of the β€˜Working Class Stories’ season, the Tristan Bates Theatre opens its doors to the Loosely Based Theatre Company with β€˜Classified’ which, in response to the growing inequality between classes, envisions possible eventualities in a gratifyingly old-school production. Writer, Jayne Woodhouse, creates three imaginative and perceptive worlds, with a strong feminine slant, to discuss causes and effects of this division and to reflect on how we are becoming trapped within our own lives through the control of data. Each play has its own style but they are connected by a portrayal of different human reactions to injustice and impotence.

In β€˜Choices’, set in the present day, the offer of a better life for her new-born baby leaves Leanne disillusioned about the inevitable prospects facing her son, as an unnervingly persuasive β€˜Interviewer’ reveals the effects that the negative algorithms of her lifestyle already have on her child. Anna Hallas Smith plays the young mother, swaying sensitively between tough exterior and internal vulnerability while David Lenik is an appealingly comic tormentor.

β€˜Classified’ takes us to 2080, when society has succumbed to an enforced class structure. Reminiscent of the β€˜angry young men’ dramas of the 50s, a couple discover that their mismatched resistance to authority has unanticipated results. Kate O’Rourke and Aaron Kehoe show a very real and heart-felt dilemma, enhanced by the mindful character writing and unpretentious acting.

Moving ten years on, β€˜The Watchers’ depicts two generations, mother and daughter, their grasp of the tighter restrictive barriers and their coping strategies. In stirring performances by both, Kate O’Rourke as the mother is shattered by her passive resistance to the system and resigned to her ensuing downgrading but her daughter, played by Anna Hallas Smith, knows nothing else. She feels protected against the β€˜dangerous’ lower classes by the fierce authoritative constraints and reacts disturbingly to the taunting she suffers when she and her mother are forced to move to the other side of β€˜the wall’.

Calum Robshaw’s direction is direct and unaffected, providing a welcome simplicity, though the initial set-up as the audience enters is becoming something of a clichΓ©; in retrospect, it detracts from the straightforward nature of the concept. Jayne Woodhouse builds interest and tension in scenes with skill and observation and most of the time the dialogue is in keeping with the roles, occasionally becoming somewhat strident. As a personal note, it would be interesting to interchange the order of β€˜Choices’ and β€˜Classified’ to reshape the dynamics and make the audience’s participation more poignant. A refreshingly uncluttered trio of plays, β€˜Classified’ encourages a consideration of our prevailing social climate with sincerity and charm.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

Photography by Jayne Woodhouse

 


Classified

Tristan Bates Theatre

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
San Domino | β˜…β˜… | June 2018
The Cloakroom Attendant | β˜…β˜…β˜… | July 2018
Echoes | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | August 2018
Love Lab | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | August 2018
Butterfly Lovers | β˜…β˜… | September 2018
The Problem With Fletcher Mott | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2018
Sundowning | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2018
Drowned or Saved? | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2018
Me & My Left Ball | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2019
Nuns | β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2019

 

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