Tag Archives: King’s Head Theatre

Fishbowl – 3 Stars

Fishbowl

Fishbowl

King’s Head Theatre

Reviewed – 17th April 2018

★★★

“A tighter play might have lent a much-needed weight to the darker central theme of depression”

 

The writer’s note for Jenna Kamal’s Fishbowl reminds us of a haunting fact: the biggest killer of men under forty five in Britain is suicide. In a world where masculinity is explicitly linked to strength, and emotion explicitly linked to weakness, she argues we are creating a generation of men who are unable to handle complex emotions and routinely suffer the consequences. With Fishbowl, she stages a careful study of this alarming notion.

George and Hatty are neighbours and sometime lovers. One morning at 4 a.m., George calls Hatty complaining of a leak in his ceiling. She thinks that it’s just an excuse for sex, but as the play unfolds, it is clear something much darker is on George’s mind.

In the opening moments of the show the actors’ delivery does feel somewhat stilted, but as they settle into the performance, the characters come alive. Nick Cope skilfully handles George’s transition from comedy to tragedy; slowly his stubborn attitude slips away, revealing deeper troubles which he can barely admit to himself. Felicity Green’s Hatty starts in a slightly forced register, but once the play is up and running, she likewise settles in to its emotional rhythms.

The stage design is spacious and efficient – sofa, table, chair – and gives the actors plenty of room to stretch their legs but can sometimes add an unusual distance between the pair, even though they’re supposed to be (semi-) romantically involved. This distance also appears to be implicit in the writing, though it is not always clear why.

In general, Kamal’s dialogue is warm and witty. In fact, it is often hilarious; on several occasions, George and Hatty’s combative relationship gets genuine big laughs from the audience. George’s quixotic attempts to deal with his leak and his inability to avoid argument demonstrate Kamal’s capability with comedy. However, this does sometimes overshadow the play’s more serious overall message, and one can’t help the feeling that some of the comedic sequences could have been trimmed. A tighter play might have lent a much-needed weight to the darker central theme of depression. There is also a sense that George and Hatty are at arm’s length with each other, despite their romantic relationship. This is partially because of George’s inability to really deal with emotion, but nonetheless feels at odds with the plot. A brief kiss between them towards the end suddenly reminds us just how unromantic they have been, despite the undeniable affection between them.

However, in spite of a few slightly-too-lengthy sequences, Kamal’s story is considered and her characters sympathetic. The isolation that many young people suffer today, especially in big cities, is made all too painfully clear. Conversation may well be the best form of confrontation, and with Fishbowl, Kamal makes a powerful point.

 

Reviewed by Harry True

Photography by Erin Blackmore

 


Fishbowl

King’s Head Theatre until 21st April

 

 

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Trainspotting Live – 5 Stars

Trainspotting

Trainspotting Live

The Vaults

Reviewed – 29th March 2018

★★★★★

“audience members are climbed over, shouted at and showered with the contents of ‘The Worst Toilet in Scotland’”

 

Opiate abuse has crept back onto the media agenda of late as drug overdoses claim to be the leading cause of death for Americans under fifty. Overdoses from Fentanyl, a prescription painkiller, have soared over the last five years, with some areas being so badly affected it’s been called an epidemic. A similar social environment of high unemployment and easily accessible opiates were present in Edinburgh thirty years ago, most frankly portrayed in Irvine Welsh’s breakout novel Trainspotting.

Originally adapted for the stage by Harry Gibson only a year after the publication of the novel, Trainspotting Live actually predates the much loved Danny Boyle film. All the most infamous scenes are here in this immersive production by In Your Face Theatre, but presented using the multiple narrative style of the book, rather than a necessarily linear plot, to open a window to the drug addicted, despairing youth of 1980s Edinburgh.

A glowstick gains you entry to the appropriately atmospheric venue under the arches of Waterloo train station where Sick Boy, Begbie, Renton and the rest of the cast are dancing to rave classics and engaging with the audience. This is only the beginning, as audience members are climbed over, shouted at and showered with the contents of ‘The Worst Toilet in Scotland’ all to raucous laughter. It’s shocking stuff. But as with Welsh’s original book and the film, it’s meant to make you squirm. As the hilarity slowly gives way to degeneracy, the sense of loneliness and isolation is stark and it can be seen as both the cause and effect of the bleak circumstances the characters face.

The seven strong cast is made up of veterans having honed their roles since 2013 and some more recent additions; the stand out of which is Frankie O’Connor as the charmingly disaffected Renton. It’s an intense production, requiring the highest energy levels and stamina from the cast who are all utterly absorbing to watch.

Whilst this is a completely immersive production and best enjoyed as such, you can watch without fear of full frontal nudity directly in your face if you opt for allocated seating, although this privilege does come at a premium to the general admission seats.

Sure, nudity and audience participation are easy ways to get a laugh, but it’s the shock factor that really drives home the lengths to which addiction can drive a person. Trainspotting Live was one of the most exciting and engaging pieces of theatre I have seen this year so far. A spectacle not to be missed.

 

Reviewed by Amber Woodward

Photography by Geraint Lewis

 


Trainspotting Live

The Vaults until 3rd June

 

 

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