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Peter Pan Goes Wrong

★★★★★

Theatre Royal Brighton & UK Tour

Peter Pan Goes WrongPeter Pan Goes Wrong

Theatre Royal Brighton

Reviewed – 19th November 2019

★★★★★

 

“Simon Scullion has designed a set that seems to be always on the verge of killing someone, yet manages not to”

 

Glorious slapstick, wonderful cheeky humour, and a completely mad ‘plot.’ Peter Pan Goes Wrong has everything you could possibly want from a hilarious evening at the theatre.

Once again I had my nine year old sidekick, Manu, with me to help with the review. He loved it, I loved it, clearly the whole audience loved it. Manu’s favourite bits were the most outrageous physical ‘mishaps’; the collapsing sets, the appearance on stage of the crew, trying to fix things with a chain saw and various other alarming tools. But the fun began even before the show did. Cast and crew moved through the audience, getting in the way, running wires, looking for lost equipment and chatting with people in their personas as amateur actors on their way to perform. Patrick Warner the narrator, who also plays the Cecco, the Italian pirate, made Manu a balloon dog and Ciaran Kellgren who plays Peter Pan came along, playing the star. ‘You know who I am,’ he informed Manu, and luckily he did, because he’d been reading the programme. ‘You’re my biggest fan’ crowed Kellgren and signed his programme. One very happy boy, even before the play officially began.

Another thing that Manu loved was the number of characters some of the cast played. Phoebe Ellabani executed some lightning changes right at the beginning, transforming from Mary Darling to Lisa the maid in seconds. Several times. Later she became both Tiger Lily and Tinkerbell. Peter Pan’s flying was incredibly skilful. He made it look shambolic, dangerous and very, very funny. I don’t want to give too much away, but when the ‘stage hands’ came on to wire up the Darling children for their flight to Neverland they didn’t exactly manage to do it right. You’ll have to go and see it if you want to know what happens! It’s hard to convey the sense of breathtaking chaos. Nothing goes right, and everything is perfectly judged.

Romayne Andrews, as John Darling wearing headphones that ‘fed him his lines,’ had some fabulous moments when he unknowingly tuned into the shipping forecast, or the ‘backstage chat,’ repeating everything verbatim. Tom Babbage’s Michael Darling/crocodile combo won the hearts of us all, when his secret passion was revealed, his charm and vulnerability turning him from a geeky kid to the audience favourite. Connor Crawford’s outrageous and exasperated Captain Hook was determined that the play was NOT a pantomime, but nothing was going to stop the audience taking up the traditional ‘oh yes it is! Oh no it isn’t!’ call.

Everyone in the cast deserves mention, as they were all superb. Katy Daghorn was a Wendy holding it together with Sarah Bernhardt aplomb, Oliver Senton bumbled and growled as Starkey, woofed his way across the stage as Nana the dog and was determined that he was the Co-Director, not merely the assistant. Georgia Bradley was a sweet Tootles, injured and stuttering but finally triumphant and Ethan Moorhouse’s Trevor the Stage Manager was the epitome of incompetent frustration, trying to fix everything as it collapsed around him. Although the collapse was probably his fault in the first place, his team of Assistant Stage Managers, Eboni Dixon, Christian James, Soroosh Lavasani and Ava Pickett ‘helped’ with startling uselessness.

Just when it seems impossible for things to fall apart even more spectacularly the finale happens. And it seems to happen to the cast, rather than be created by them. The revolving stage revolves, everything seems on the edge of total implosion and somehow the characters arrive at something approaching the expected end.

Simon Scullion has designed a set that seems to be always on the verge of killing someone, yet manages not to. The lighting and sound design add beautifully to the explosions and mishaps. And it’s all shaped into a tight, crazy farce by Adam Meggido, who expects a lot from his cast and absolutely gets it.

The whole thing is a superb romp that anyone from nine to ninety will love, acted and directed with whip smart skill. Manu and I both say ‘go and see it!’ You won’t regret it, although your ribs may be sore from laughing.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Alastair Muir

 

Peter Pan Goes Wrong

Peter Pan Goes Wrong

Theatre Royal Brighton until 24th November then UK tour continues

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
This is Elvis | ★★★ | July 2018
Salad Days | ★★★ | September 2018
Rocky Horror Show | ★★★★ | December 2018
Benidorm Live! | ★★★★ | February 2019
Noughts And Crosses | ★★ | March 2019
Rotterdam | ★★★★ | April 2019
The Girl on the Train | ★★ | June 2019
Hair The Musical | ★★★ | July 2019

 

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Pure Dance

Pure Dance

★★★★

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

Pure Dance

Pure Dance

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

Reviewed – 23rd October 2019

★★★★

 

“The connection between them was electric”

 

Pure Dance is a curated evening of seven pieces, designed to showcase Natalia Osipova’s talent and versatility. Osipova came from the Bolshoi to be a principal dancer with the Royal Ballet, and in this evening’s programme, she was paired with three male dancers, Jonathan Goddard, David Hallberg and Jason Kittelberger.

The first piece was the delicate and delightful ‘The Leaves are Fading,’ from a ballet by Antony Tudor. Osipova and Hallberg wove a lovely pas de deux, full of a gentle longing like leaves swirling in an autumn breeze. The technical artistry of the two dancers and the lyricism of their movements was mesmerising.

Next came ‘Left Behind,’ a powerful contemporary piece, passionate and full of feeling. Osipova danced with Kittleberger, her real life partner, who was also the choreographer. The connection between them was electric. This story of a couple in the final stages of a tempestuous relationship showcased Kittleberger’s amazing fluidity, at times he seemed to be sliding through a liquid slow motion breakdance, where every gesture was full of feeling. Osipova was transformed from the graceful ballerina into a very real, connected and bold contemporary dancer. She has been criticised in the past for a lack of emotional connection with her partners in contemporary pieces, but in the seven minutes of this dance she proved herself, completely inhabiting the character and drama of the dance. The audience roared it’s approval. It was one of the stand out performances of the evening.

In ‘Flutter,’ by Ivan Perez, Osipova was partnered by Jonathan Goddard. This piece was a little uneven. The first half, with music composed by Nico Muhly, was true to the title, the two dancers fluttering and skipping into and out of the light to a chorus of women’s voices. There was a lovely touch of 1967 San Fransisco in the childlike playfulness. But Osipova had lost the emotional connection she’d found so deeply in the previous piece.

The other standout piece of the evening was ‘In Absentia,’ a solo danced by the astonishing David Hallberg. The only light came from a low source, disguised as a television, throwing a huge shadow of the dancer on the back wall. Hallberg gave us a masterclass in how to dance with emotional power and commitment. It was wonderful.

The first piece in the first second half was ‘Six Years Later,’ a rather loo long exploration of a couple’s relationship after a six year absence. Kittelberger was back, and there were moments of true connection and feeling between him and Osipova, and some clever choreography by Roy Assaf.

Ave Maria was Osipova’s solo, choreographed for her by Yuka Oishi. It was rather lovely.

The final piece was Valse Triste, and it paired Osipova and Hallberg in a graceful, lyrical pas de deux, the perfection of their technique and interpretation displayed in classical style as in ‘The Leaves are Falling’. Two dancers at the top of their profession, leaving the audience with a charming end to the evening.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Johan Persson

 


Pure Dance

Sadler’s Wells Theatre until 26th October

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Dystopian Dream | ★★★★★ | November 2018
Layla and Majnun | ★★★½ | November 2018
Swan Lake | ★★★★★ | December 2018
Bon Voyage, Bob | ★★½ | February 2019
The Thread | ★★½ | March 2019
Mitten Wir Im Leben Sind/Bach6Cellosuiten | ★★★★★ | April 2019
Rite Of Spring | ★★★★★ | May 2019
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre – Programme A | ★★★★ | September 2019
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre – Programme C | ★★★★ | September 2019

 

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