Off The Top With Jason Kravits
Crazy Coqs Live At ZΓ©del
Reviewed – 13th January 2020
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“He fills the intimate space of the Crazy Coqs with a low key, but dynamic energy”
Jason Kravits is a successful American character actor who obviously enjoys giving himself a bit of a challenge, because his cabaret show Off The Top is ninety minutes of improvisation taken from audience suggestions written down on slips of paper. Does this performing without the safety net of a full script work? Heck, yes.
Off The Top really begins while weβre settling into our chairs in the elegant, Art Deco inspired decor of the The Crazy Coqs cabaret space downstairs at the Brasserie ZΓ©del in Piccadilly Circus. On the table in front of us are slips of paper and pencils. We are invited to drop these slips of paper into a fish bowl handed round by the master of ceremonies, on which we have written responses to βA Place,β βA Thing,β βA Short Phrase,β βWords to Live Byβ and βThe Last Text Message You Sent or Received.β Then Kravits appears, creates a character made up on the spot consisting of an audience memberβs middle name plus a place name, and jumps on stage.
Since his show every night is different, I wonβt hesitate to give spoilers by saying that on this particular night, we were treated to the life story of the not-so-famous Matthew Discovery from Tulsa, Oklahoma (there were quite a few Americans and Canadians in the audience). Discovery himself is nattily dressed in a plaid suit with lilac shirt and purple tie, and while he draws slips out of the fish bowl to describe the circumstances of his early life in Tulsaβs βwet sockβ factory surrounded by pussycats and lifeboats, we find out that this wannabe performer of the cabaret scene can really sing. With the backing of a nicely mellow three piece band (MD/pianist John Thorn, bass Jonny Gee and drums Sophie Alloway) Discovery might treat us at any moment to a Sinatra like riff on βhealth, beauty and loveβ or a song about Grimsby that includes fish and donkeys. A version of an βunknownβ song by Sondheim is instantly recognisable. But the barnstormer is the duet sung with guest star Ruth Bratt as the couple fondly recall their attempts to connect given that sheβs a bigamist attempting to become a βtrigamistβ. (What on earth was written on that slip of paper?) In short, Kravitsβ show, based on the rough sketch of a performer following his dream, is a hilarious world tour that visits Tulsa and the Taj Mahal, with brief detours to Venice; Saskatoon in Saskatchewan, and yes, Grimsby. The climax of the story takes place in Croydon, naturally, during a street performance that almost gets the hapless Discovery arrested, while creating a major diplomatic incident with Canada. By this point the audience is breathless with laughter.
Kravits makes all this acting by the seat of his pants look effortless. He fills the intimate space of the Crazy Coqs with a low key, but dynamic energy. Sometimes heβll slip the audience the side eye when presented with a particularly outrageous word or phrase from the bits of paper, but then he kind of mentally shrugs and launches into a vocal rendition liberally sprinkled with F words and S words anyway. Heβs had us all in the palms of his expressive hands from the start. When we leave, ninety minutes later, his brilliant, made up on the spot songs are still on our lips, and our stomach muscles still aching from non-stop laughter.
Reviewed by Dominica Plummer
Photography by Danny Kaan
Off The Top With Jason Kravits
Crazy Coqs Live At ZΓ©del until 19th January
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Dad’s Army Radio Hour | β β β Β½ | January 2018
Liza Pulman Sings Streisand | β β β β | March 2018
The Clementine Show | β β β β | July 2018
I Wish My Life Were Like A Musical | β β β β β | August 2018
Welcome to the Big Top | β β β β | October 2018
Well-Strung | β β β | October 2018
Sinatra: Raw | β β β β β | January 2019
Randy Roberts Live! | β β β β | June 2019
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