Tag Archives: Katre

LITTLE BOXES

★★★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

Little Boxes

Pit – The Vaults

Reviewed – 28th January 2020

★★★★★

 

“There is no hint of sentimentality, self pity or schmaltz. Just one woman’s humanity. And a lot of fun”

 

This one woman show is a delight. By turns hilarious, moving, sad and uplifting; it takes the audience on a journey through Joann Condon’s life and memories, dreams and sorrows. The stories are intensely personal, but also universal and immensely relatable. The publicity promises to make the audience laugh and cry, and it is true to that promise.

The moment Condon arrived on stage she had us with her. She is naturally engaging, and sometimes brutally honest, as she begins to talk about her childhood and the revelation that she, a ‘fat cockney girl,’ wanted to be an actress. The little boxes of the title are the boxes we all are put into, or choose for ourselves. At school were you the clever one? The naughty one? The popular one? And later, are you the good parent, the weird one, or maybe the one who works too hard? We unconsciously accept these boxes and are complicit in their construction. Condon lets the audience into her life, opening her boxes and examining the contents. She has a lovely comic touch, cheeky and beguiling, and there are plenty of laughs, many provoked by identification with the situation she is talking about. It’s a special thing, as an actor, to have the courage to be open and emotionally honest with your audience, and Condon’s connectedness when talking about difficult times provided the promised tears. When she dances like a diva the audience whooped and yelled in encouragement of her joy. There is no hint of sentimentality, self pity or schmaltz. Just one woman’s humanity. And a lot of fun.

It’s a lovely show, written by Condon and developed in collaboration with producer Leonie Rachel from a five minute stand up piece, and performed in a simple set full of piles of cardboard boxes. Supported by Ria Samalti’s lighting and sound, and directed with sensitivity and a playful authenticity by Daniel Brennan, this is one not to miss. I hope it will have a life after the Vaults Festival, so that more people will be able to see it.

 

Reviewed by Katre

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

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Peeping Tom: Child (Kind)

★★★

Barbican

Peeping Tom

Peeping Tom: Child (Kind)

Barbican

Reviewed – 22nd January 2020

★★★

 

“There is some delicious comedy in this show, and magic too. But it is a dark magic. Possibly too dark.”

 

Child completes Belgian physical theatre company Peeping Tom’s family trilogy, Mother and Father having already been shown at The Barbican during previous International Mime Festivals. Their style is always extraordinary, inventive and surreal, featuring a cast of seemingly boneless dancers, detailed settings and atmospheric sound and music. Both Mother and Father have combined an unsettling darkness with fabulous comic moments, but with Child the question is, have they gone too far?

The Child is played by Eurudike de Beul, an adult mezzo-soprano. She seems to be living alone in a wood, formed by Justine Bougerol’s beautifully constructed set. The wood is next to towering cliffs; it doesn’t look like a friendly place. The child sucks her thumb, rides her little bicycle and observes the behaviour of the adults who come and go in the forest. And the adults behave very badly. It’s a violent place, this adult world, and a sexualised one too. The child is drawn to the adults, who largely ignore her. Nobody will look at the picture she’s drawn, she is solitary, not understanding this strange milieu.

There is a lot of violence; the Child hacks a ‘baby,’ a tree that turns into a sort of wooden infant, to pieces after attempting to breastfeed it. She shoots a hiker multiple times, in a sequence that is both disturbing and funny, as the incredible Yi-Chun Liu writhes at every impact, creating seemingly impossible positions as she is flung around the forest by the impacts. And she smashes someones head in with rock. The Child sometimes breaks into an operatic aria, showcasing de Beul’s excellent voice. One problem is that the Child is inherently unlikeable, despite sympathy for her situation I cared less and less about her as the evening wore on.

The violence is one thing, but it’s the sexual exploitation of the Child that oversteps the mark. She is kissed and fondled by passing adults, sometimes seeming to enjoy it, but also disturbed by the experience. This is a strange look at childhood; love doesn’t enter the picture, and the dark imaginings that are played out seem to come from a nineteenth century casebook of insanity.

Peeping Tom’s directors Gabriela Carrizo and Franck Chartier work closely with their cast to devise and develop their shows. They are always thought provoking, as this certainly was. We are left wondering how much of the events are in the Child’s imagination, and if the violence she happily partakes in is intended to show the underlying tendencies of untamed human nature.

When a real child appears, and is threatened by Brandon Lagaer’s forest ranger, one of the only tender elements brings some warmth to proceedings, when the dead hiker appears, gently wraps her in warm clothes and leads her away. Is she dead? Dying? We don’t know. But at least someone cares.

There are some wonderful surprises and stand out moments; the appearance of the cast in back to front old man’s heads, scuttling like spiders, the tube/worm that is so bendy that it’s hard to believe there is a human inside. Maria Carolina Vieira’s cowgirl moment and Marie Gyselbrecht’s care for her baby tree. There is some delicious comedy in this show, and magic too. But it is a dark magic. Possibly too dark.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Olympe Tits

 


Peeping Tom: Child (Kind)

Barbican until 25th January

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Knight Of The Burning Pestle | ★★★★ | June 2019

 

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