Tag Archives: Katzpace Studio Theatre

Dead Reckoning
★★½

Katzpace Studio Theatre

Dead Reckoning

Dead Reckoning

Katzpace Studio Theatre

Reviewed – 13th May 2019

★★½

 

“Their exciting ideas bode well for the future but are no replacement for a performance in the present”

 

Daring, important, thoughtful theatre can be bad. It just can. A play is not a thesis. Even where a production’s messages are incisive, clever and critical to the discourse, it can still be unenjoyable, wooden and boring. Dead Reckoning by Clumsy Bodies has achieved this uncanny combination of having something important and new to say but still being spiritless and beige.

The show is an exploration of what it is to be young and non-binary or trans. It draws on recorded interviews of other non-binary and trans people to whom the collective have spoken. Dead Reckoning is a genuinely ambitious show that is thinking deeply about the emotions and realities of trans and non-binary people and often trying to seriously grapple with the second-order problems of who gets to be ‘trans’, what a ‘proper’ non-binary person is and the human impact of these choices. Through it runs a commitment to make accessible and vulnerable theatre. Our two young actors/writers/directors present spoken word and movement cut together with a concoction of genuinely engaging audiovisual content, audience participation and earnest personal stories.

This makes it all the more painful to say, but these ideas were drowned out by a seemingly low level of preparation combined with a substantial lack of performance.

While the evening was a scratch night, it was still unavoidably alienating as the two actors stood on stage without commitment or performativity. The physical theatre was awkward whilst the dancing was drawn out and appeared unrehearsed (but not in an interesting improvisational way). Acting from the pair lacked any sense of urgency or gravitas and there was a complete over-reliance on the script to deliver that autobiographical energy and vulnerability. For a show that showed such bravery in its themes and opinions, the acting was safe and fearful.

It was consistently hard to ignore that virtually no attempt at professionalism was made in the preparation. Theatrical clutter abounded with clattering mics, not-so-off-stage conversations with AV crew and a confused wardrobe of military-style jumpsuits. It’s not quite enough to say it was simply still a work in progress as elsewhere in the production this wasn’t a fundamentally poorly prepared show. Jess Rahman-González and Oli Isaac Smith of Clumsy Bodies had lavished preparation on the themes by carefully researched the ideas, with sections from historic newspapers, recorded interviews and impressive film and audio.

There was precious little set to speak of which meant that the frame around the stage was a constant littering of props from scenes gone by and scenes yet to come. Costumes were drab olive green RAF style jumpsuits that, I think, were supposed to leave the actors androgynous and sexless but instead cast them as a pair of aeroplane technicians.

All said and done, a play is about what happens on stage. Rahman-González and Smith have put together a complex, thoughtful, compassionate play yet failed to achieve the ‘IT’S ALIVE’ moment of animation. Their exciting ideas bode well for the future but are no replacement for a performance in the present.

 

Reviewed by William Nash

 

Katzpace

Dead Reckoning

Katzpace Studio Theatre

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Gaps | ★★★ | April 2018
What the… Feminist?! | ★★★★ | April 2018
Obsession | ★★★ | June 2018
Let’s Get Lost | ★★★ | July 2018
Serve Cold | ★★ | August 2018
Much Ado About Nothing | ★★★★ | October 2018
Motherhood or Madness | ★★★ | November 2018
Specky Ginger C*nt | ★★½ | November 2018

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com

 

Fight Flight Freeze Fuck
★★★

Katzpace Studio Theatre

Fight. Flight. Freeze Fuck

Fight Flight Freeze Fuck

Katzpace Studio Theatre

Reviewed – 12 May 2019

★★★

 

“for a work in progress performance, it fairs rather well”

 

There’s a new queer and feminist theatre festival in town. Erase Erase Erupt, is a platform for artists to test out new work focusing on queerness, sexual assault, gender identity and more. The brainchild of Pink Freud Theatre Company, it is a free-spirited affair that’s inclusive to all. As well as being producers, Pink Freud also have their own work in progress show as part of the line up, ‘Fight Flight Freeze Fuck’.

Nine coloured envelopes hang on a washing line, each containing the personal account of an incident of sexual assault, rape, besmirched consent that has happened in the past to the actors Riz Davis and Amelia Brown. One by one each story is randomly chosen to be read with no details left out. As much as the piece highlights troubling behaviour and horrific codes of conduct, it also focuses on kindness, support, and the strength that comes from listening to one another.

Relaxed and inviting, this is a safe space for explicit and uncomfortable details to be voiced. Trigger warnings are mentioned before each story is read, and an open house policy for anyone who wants to leave if they feel the tale will bring up any past memories is also in place. Steps are constantly taken to assure nobody is affected or offended. This is less like traditional performance and instead, is an amalgamation of different art styles. Audience participation is done in a gentle form (handing bags filled with props to the actors) which never feels uncomfortable or evasive for those audience members who are terrified of being involved.

Inviting a male actor to read the stories, which have consciously been written from the perspective of the perpetrator, is a refreshing and far more impactful choice. With the two women not voicing their own stories directly, it actually magnifies the disgusting nature of the assaults. Particularly the blasé attitudes of the men who believe themselves innocent in all of the incidents. It also allows some distance for the actors from their incredibly personal material.

Davis and Brown find some original ways of interpreting the stories through performance art-like actions, which, done successfully, captures these two women’s inner feelings within each story. Sometimes this doesn’t always happen and the abstract moves lose their significance.

Some of the stories edge on being too similar, which makes you question whether it was really adding anything to the piece. Yes, these are all truthful, personal accounts experienced by the actors, but at the end of the day, this is a performance and not therapy. Perhaps a wider net of stories from a wider range of women would be the next step for progressing this show.

All in all, for a work in progress performance, it fairs rather well. Pink Freud certainly have some imaginative and engaging ways of making difficult and hard to swallow subject matters actually entertaining. It will be compelling to see what journey the show goes on from here on in.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

 

Katzpace

Fight Flight Freeze Fuck

Katzpace Studio Theatre

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Gaps | ★★★ | April 2018
What the… Feminist?! | ★★★★ | April 2018
Obsession | ★★★ | June 2018
Let’s Get Lost | ★★★ | July 2018
Serve Cold | ★★ | August 2018
Much Ado About Nothing | ★★★★ | October 2018
Motherhood or Madness | ★★★ | November 2018
Specky Ginger C*nt | ★★½ | November 2018

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com