Tag Archives: Kirstie Davis

THE RISE AND FALL OF VINNIE & PAUL

★★★★

The Glitch

THE RISE AND FALL OF VINNIE & PAUL

The Glitch

★★★★

“Both actors possess exceptional singing voices — expressive, versatile, and emotionally charged”

The Rise & Fall of Vinnie & Paul explores one of art history’s most infamous fallouts — the brief but intense period when, in the autumn/winter of 1888, Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin lived and worked side by side in Vincent’s little Yellow House in the South of France. What begins as a shared dream of founding an artists’ colony soon unravels into a tempest of clashing egos, artistic ideals, and personal demons — culminating in Vincent’s self-mutilation and Paul’s abrupt departure.

This 60-minute two-hander rock musical blends fact with imaginative interpretation, propelled by a dynamic score and an unflinching examination of genius, obsession, and collapse.

Max Alexander-Taylor is magnetic and heartbreaking as Vincent, capturing the intensity of a man on the brink, whose passion for art masks deepening psychological instability. Nicholas Carter (Paul) is a perfect counterpoint — more restrained, emotionally torn, quietly simmering with frustration. Their chemistry is electric, veering from camaraderie to confrontation in a heartbeat. Both actors possess exceptional singing voices — expressive, versatile, and emotionally charged, moving effortlessly from delicate vulnerability to raw, soaring power.

Neil Bastian’s music and lyrics are a clear highlight. The score feels contemporary yet rooted in character — a mix of driving rock anthems and hushed, lyrical ballads. The opening number, Sunflower Power, sets a sharply ironic tone: Paul suggests Vincent has a sunflower seed in his brain and warns the audience he’ll be “cutting off his ear by the end of the hour” — a dark, witty line that chillingly foreshadows what’s to come.

This leads into a beautifully observed scene depicting Paul’s arrival in France, marvelling at the brilliance of Vincent’s sun-drenched summer work. In A Fistful of Brushes, the two duet with infectious optimism, declaring “colour is our new religion.” But harmony is short-lived. Paul learns he has sold a painting in Paris — while Vincent remains unsold.

Like a Painter Man reveals Paul’s growing doubts, and his suggestion in Take a Trip to Your Mind that Vincent paint from imagination proves dangerous. Vincent’s mind is not a safe place to linger. In Way Past Midnight, Paul recounts a disturbing nocturnal episode in which Vincent scrawled “I am the Holy Spirit” on the wall — a clear sign he is unravelling. News of Vincent’s brother Theo’s engagement — the man funding their lifestyle — proves the final blow, prompting Paul’s suggestion that their artistic experiment has failed — triggering Vincent’s downward spiral.

The following three numbers — Me and My Friend, Welcome to My Funeral, and Wheatfield with Crows — chart Vincent’s descent into psychosis, his self-mutilation, and eventual suicide, reported two years later in a newspaper Paul reads alone. The show ends with Red is the Colour, a haunting duet that mingles grief with a flicker of hope.

Kirstie Davis’ direction makes sharp use of the intimate studio space. A few simple props — stools, an easel, a trunk — create a shifting world that always feels alive. The tight staging amplifies the claustrophobia of their partnership; when violence erupts, it’s all the more shocking. Lighting is used with precision and symbolism: warm ambers give way to stark, envious greens, and in the climactic moment, a flood of red saturates the stage. Silhouette work adds visual intrigue, suggesting fractured selves and internal ghosts — as if we’re witnessing both the men and their demons.

Ryan Anstey’s sound design lends emotional and psychological texture. Natural sounds — wind, birdsong, rolling waves — gradually give way to something darker. During Vincent’s breakdowns, we hear echoes of voices in his head: his father’s stern religious teachings, inner criticism, mocking judgement.

The Rise & Fall of Vinnie & Paul is a fascinating, emotionally raw, and musically rich new work that — despite being a shortened version of a full-length musical in development — feels remarkably complete. It distils a fraught, complex relationship into something both theatrical and truthful — a vivid exploration of artistic brilliance, mental illness, and the volatile intimacy of creative partnership.



THE RISE AND FALL OF VINNIE & PAUL

The Glitch

Reviewed on 17th April 2025

by Ellen Cheshire

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed by Ellen:

KNEES UP! | ★★★ | NEW THEATRE ROYAL | March 2025
RETROGRADE | ★★★★ | APOLLO THEATRE | March 2025
TESS | ★★★★ | NEW THEATRE ROYAL | February 2025
THE NUTCRACKER | ★★ | THEATRE ROYAL BRIGHTON | January 2025
THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE | ★★★½ | CHICHESTER FESTIVAL THEATRE | January 2025
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST | ★★★★ | NEW THEATRE ROYAL | December 2024
REDLANDS | ★★★★ | CHICHESTER FESTIVAL THEATRE | September 2024
BARISTA THE MUSICAL | ★★★ | CAPITOL THEATRE | September 2024
THE BELT | ★★★★★ | THE CORONET THEATRE | September 2024
THE WEYARD SISTERS | ★★ | RIVERSIDE STUDIOS | August 2024

THE RISE AND FALL

THE RISE AND FALL

THE RISE AND FALL

THE MASSIVE TRAGEDY OF MADAME BOVARY

★★★

Southwark Playhouse Borough

THE MASSIVE TRAGEDY OF MADAME BOVARY

Southwark Playhouse Borough

★★★

“a high-spirited affair that the cast dive into with relish, commitment and enviable energy”

Gustave Flaubert, the champion of realism, spent five years writing “Madame Bovary” only to find himself charged with immorality. Thankfully he was later acquitted, and the notoriety that the trial provoked accelerated the novel’s rise to bestseller status. It is now considered Flaubert’s masterpiece; one that maintains its revered place in literature (its influences have reached the likes of Marcel Proust, Virginia Woolf and James Joyce). Okay, the novel was a touch bleak, to say the least, and we all know that it ends in tragedy. John Nicholson might be exaggerating the magnitude of the misery by prefixing his retelling of the story with the word ‘massive’. And he might be missing the point by unashamedly turning it into a farcical comedy. By his own admission, Nicholson has ‘lovingly derailed’ the story. Interpret that how you will. After all, theatre is all about free expression, and this play is very free with it.

The story of the cuckolded country doctor and his frustrated, pleasure-seeking wife is turned on its head as it wields its slapstick and wry exposition with such force that the fourth wall has no chance of standing. Even a sabotaged attempt at changing the ending is allowed into the edit. The result is a stew of French and Saunders, Blackadder and Upstart Crow, with a generous side order of pantomime. It is a high-spirited affair that the cast dive into with relish, commitment and enviable energy. Georgia Nicholson, as the ruffled Madame Bovary seeking amorous adventure, is surrounded by the whirlwind threesome of Stephen Cavanagh, Ben Kernow and Darren Seed who play at least a couple of dozen other characters. The story begins at the end with Madame Bovary recounting her life story to a pair of ratcatchers who have arrived in the village of Yonville. At times it is almost like a speed run. A ‘Potted Panto’ performed by ‘The Reduced Flaubert Company’.

Buried deep in the silliness are strokes of ingenuity. Kirstie Davis’ staging is slick and precise. Beneath the mayhem there is a reliance on accuracy of movement and timing, which the actors are well practiced at. Grace Murdoch’s movement and choreography is an extended conjuring trick, albeit one that seems to have wandered in from the set of ‘The Play That Goes Wrong’. Like the jokes, the influences are manifold, and the bawdy humour does become relentless and predictable. Nevertheless, the versatility of each performer shines through as they switch characters and costume at lightning speed.

You cannot help but admire the irreverence. Their approach to Flaubert’s text is embodied when, at one point, one of the ratcatchers exclaims “you took the words out of my mouth… but in a different order… and with different words”. There is a clear echo of Eric Morecambe’s famous line brilliantly delivered to André Previn. The bravery of this company matches its tongue-in-cheek audacity. In his mausoleum in Rouen, I’m sure Flaubert must be grinning, even if it can’t quite conceal an expression of open-mouthed bemusement. Over in Southwark, the audience seem to be of a similar opinion. Between moments of bewilderment the laughs come thick and fast (though as a grin rather than the out-loud variety) in this risqué, eccentric and anarchic comedy.

 


THE MASSIVE TRAGEDY OF MADAME BOVARY at Southwark Playhouse Borough

Reviewed on 9th December 2024

by Jonathan Evans

Photography by Tanya Pabaru

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed at Southwark Playhouse venues:

THE HAPPIEST MAN ON EARTH | ★★★★★ | November 2024
[TITLE OF SHOW] | ★★★ | November 2024
THE UNGODLY | ★★★ | October 2024
FOREVERLAND | ★★★★ | October 2024
JULIUS CAESAR | ★★★ | September 2024
DORIAN: THE MUSICAL | ★★½ | July 2024
THE BLEEDING TREE | ★★★★ | June 2024
FUN AT THE BEACH ROMP-BOMP-A-LOMP!! | ★★★ | May 2024
MAY 35th | ★★★½ | May 2024
SAPPHO | ★★ | May 2024
CAPTAIN AMAZING | ★★★★★ | May 2024
WHY I STUCK A FLARE UP MY ARSE FOR ENGLAND | ★★★★★ | April 2024

THE MASSIVE TRAGEDY OF MADAME BOVARY

THE MASSIVE TRAGEDY OF MADAME BOVARY

 

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