Tag Archives: Lauren Mooney

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL: THE SHOW

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL: THE SHOW at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“The prowess of Jones’ writing and Charlotte Bennett’s direction is unique and utterly refreshing”

My Mother’s Funeral: The Show is a crucial and stunning piece on trauma mining in the arts. Based on the experience of losing a loved one and discovering the expense of death unjust, Kelly Jones writes a masterpiece that challenges the notion that dying is the great leveller. A breath-taking meta-theatrical triumph: this performance follows 24-year-old Abigail as she desperately pitches and writes a play about her mother’s (very) recent death. When a stranger turns to you at the end of the show in tears letting you know they intend to immediately ring their mum, you know the performance has done its job.

Playwright Kelly Jones presents a stunningly honest voice on the issues of how the arts industry treats trauma and social commentary. Jones delivers a powerful and poetic script that skips between tearjerkingly direct experiences of navigating the death of a close family member and trying to respect a dead relative’s wishes. The complexity of her writing is brilliantly clever and pulls the audience in from the moment Nicole Sawyerr (playing Abigail) takes to the stage. Sawyerr gives her all to the performance, holding the audience tightly in the palm of her hand.

As a microphone takes centre stage, as does our grief-struck protagonist. Moments where Abigail takes the mic on her feelings work beautifully into the meta-theatrical premise of the show and the sound production flies in support of it. Touching on themes of gentrification, demonisation of the working class, and estranged family relationships, My Mother’s Funeral touches nerves with the utmost composure and tact. The throughline of commentary on the divide between working class communities and the arts industry is sharp and so very needed. As the show holds a mirror to its paying audience, gasps and tears and laughter are elicited from the audience.

The staging (Rhys Jarman) is dynamic and drives the creativity of the show. Similarly, the gorgeous lighting (Joshua Gadsby) and sound design (Asaf Zohar) are as electric as the knife-edged acting. Samuel Armfield (playing Abigail’s brother and a particularly distasteful theatre producer) and Debra Baker (playing Abigail’s mum, healthcare professionals and an ignorant actor) multi-role phenomenally. The two flawlessly switch between different accents and well-crafted physicality. The direction is tasteful, thoughtful and comedic from beginning to end. This show catches you howling with laughter one second and wiping tears away the next in well-earned moments of emotional tension. Armfield and Baker’s supporting roles combine to pressure the devastation and rage of Sawyerr’s acting as her voice echoes both forcefully and delicately into the space. In particular, the climax of the show is directed with terrific effect, highlighting the pathetic hypocrisy of marketing trauma in theatre at the expense of real people.

My Mother’s Funeral breaks down what it means to write from your own experience to receive financial gratification from others. The prowess of Jones’ writing and Charlotte Bennett’s direction is unique and utterly refreshing amongst an arts landscape that is so readily available to sacrifice its creatives for the sake of entertainment and shock value. The perspective this show provides and its innovative delivery and conception is deeply essential.


MY MOTHER’S FUNERAL: THE SHOW at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Roundabout @ Summerhall

Reviewed on 23rd August 2024

by Molly Knox

Photography by Nicola Young

 

 


MY MOTHER’S

MY MOTHER’S

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Trap Street – 4 Stars

Trap

Trap Street

New Diorama Theatre

Reviewed – 9th March 2018

★★★★

“a veritable plethora of stimulation”

 

In the year 2018, affordable housing in London still seems a bit of a joke. There may be a rise in various schemes and changes to legislation to try and help first-time buyers and the like to get on the property ladder, however, we are still in the midst of a tremendous housing crisis. Over the decades Londoners’ attitudes to home ownership have had to majorly adjust, and theatre company Kandinsky has chronicled this gear change in a most inventive way for their latest production, Trap Street. This multi-sensory show achieves a detailed, yet highly accessible and entertaining perspective on urban life, as well as the making and breaking of inner city communities.

In the 1960s, the Austen Estate was viewed as a shiny beacon of hope for housing, a figure of London’s future. Now, it is a crumbling, inconvenient blot on the map, obstructing the way for new buildings and enterprises making money. Spanning over fifty years, we witness the significant changes that this cluster of tower blocks has endured, through the eyes of one particular family who have been there from the cutting of its ribbon, to the demolition ball looming outside.

Trap Street energetically bounces back and forth, through the decades, jam-packing its eighty minute duration into seeming far longer; which is a good thing, I must hasten to add. Actors Hamish MacDougall and Danusia Samal must be commended for the multitude of characters they realistically transform into, whilst Amelda Brown brings the emotional weight that the show requires. With live music, and a TV projecting dates, names, and video footage, in addition to the stylised actions of the performers; there is a veritable plethora of stimulation. You do not know where to look at times.

Much of my fascination was with musician and composer Zac Gvirtzman who unobtrusively sits in the corner yet integrally busies himself with creating the wonderfully discordant live soundscape to audibly enhance the performance. Manoeuvring between playing instruments, twiddling dials and working a vinyl record turntable all at once, is just as captivating to watch (and of course hear) as what is happening on the main stage.

Based on original material by Kandinsky founding members James Yeatman and Lauren Mooney, Trap Street is a collaboratively devised production from the cast. With an imaginative response to use of props and movement, and with its social commentary, there is arguably a real likeness to the type of work that Complicité produces. Yeatman just so happens to be an Associate Director for the award-winning company too, and it shows. Regardless of where their influences may lie, Trap Street certainly stands on its own two feet, taking a creative, non-formulaic approach to commentating on what homes and, more importantly, community means to us in this day and age.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

Photography by Harry Yeatman

 


Trap Street

New Diorama Theatre until 31st March

 

 

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