Tag Archives: Laurie Coldwell

Dirty Corset

Dirty Corset

★★½

Pleasance Theatre

Dirty Corset

Dirty Corset

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 19th April 2022

★★½

 

“an exercise in acting of the kind that feels like one long improvisation”

 

Dirty Corset, produced as part of the 2022 New Work Season at the Pleasance Theatre in Islington, is one of several shows on offer in a venue that has not only survived the pandemic, but seems to be thriving. That’s good news in these difficult times. Dirty Corset, directed by Helen Tennison for the Bang Average Theatre Company, seems like a good choice for this venue, as it is also about making a living in the theatre in difficult times. Dirty Corset is a “re-imagined” take on Restoration Comedy. But this show focuses on the fleas, and not the elegance, of post Civil War theatre. Modern, and even postmodern, playwrights have taken on this trope before. The Bang Average Theatre Company pushes it into new territory. Bad smells, and bad language, are the predominant themes.

To be fair, the actors do warn that Dirty Corset is loaded, if that is the right word, from the outset. The first thing the audience sees, in entering the space downstairs at the Pleasance, are the corsets themselves. These, and the other costume pieces hung from lines draped around the set, are clean, even blindingly white, clean. But no one should relax. It’s all an ironic set up for the grubbiness that follows. The seventy minute show excels in presenting the audience with incongruities throughout. Actors Laurie Coldwell, Chloe Darke and Susannah Scott go from minutes of lying inert on large, white cushioned squares while the audience files in, to exploding into action once the lights go down. The acting style is eye poppingly physical. Raw eggs are featured, and do not have a happy ending.

Is Dirty Corset Restoration Comedy, re-imagined? Audiences will find it a matter of personal taste — still a new idea in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Dirty Corset tells the disjointed, and rather hard to follow, tale of a group of itinerant, flea ridden actors trying their luck in the indifferent North. Aptly named Mary Moralless, Isabinda McLovealot and Neil Hasbeen, Coldwell, Darke and Scott switch between playing their roles on stage, playing the actors off it, and sometimes their modern selves, with bewildering speed. This doesn’t give the audience a lot of time to identify with any of these switcheroos, or even care. Bang Average have done some research, and some of the details of the seventeenth century actors’ lives are undoubtably accurate. But for the most part, Dirty Corset chooses to ignore the fact that Restoration Comedy was an elegant style of theatre — a new theatre for its times, of Reason and Wit, despite its bawdiness.

Ultimately, Dirty Corset is an exercise in acting of the kind that feels like one long improvisation. The Company acknowledges as much in their programme notes. As such, it works quite well. It shows off the actors’ athleticism and versatility to great effect. But the script is deconstructed (much like the costumes) in a way that doesn’t leave much room to focus on anything else but the acting. Dirty Corset is the kind of show that will appeal to festivals, and it is a great showcase for energetic young actors. But for audiences who like a good script as well as good acting and solid production values — this offering by Bang Average is all about the underwear, and may feel a little underdressed.

 

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Hannah Sorrell

 


Dirty Corset

Pleasance Theatre until 24th April

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Catching Comets | ★★★★ | September 2021
Dog Show | ★★★★★ | December 2021
Express G&S | ★★★★ | June 2021
Ginger Johnson & Pals | ★★★★ | June 2021
Godot is a Woman | ★★★½ | June 2021
Lights Out | ★★★★ | October 2021
She Seeks Out Wool | ★★★★ | January 2022

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Laura

Laura
★★★½

Soho Theatre

Laura

Laura

Soho Theatre

Reviewed – 10th December 2018

★★★½

“an outrageous, immersive show that keeps the audience laughing and gasping”

 

Welcome, honoured guests, to the wedding of Laura and… Wait, where is he? Has anybody seen Johnny?

Writer, director, and star of her debut one-woman tragicomedy, Elina Alminas plays Laura, a Russian bride who has spent nine months planning this wedding to her English groom. Every detail is perfect, which is why it’s so galling that she’s been jilted at the altar. Again. Johnny’s abandonment is the final glass that topples the champagne fountain. The ensuing hour sees Laura, completely unhinged, power through the wedding solo: popping pills, swigging champagne, stuffing her face with cake, and accosting the audience (who are the guests).

If you like audience interaction, you’ll enjoy the way Alminas picks on people, interrogating them as to the whereabouts of the groom and expecting actual responses. If you’re not a fan of being put on the spot, consider yourself warned.

Alminas demands your attention like a train wreck. She’s an emotional hurricane, storming on stage in a wedding dress with mascara streaming down her face. Her stamina is impressive as she hyperventilates, gasp-sobbing her way through the show, seamlessly taking us from wretched lows to manic highs and right back down again as she navigates her character’s total breakdown. She revels in raw emotion; anyone who’s ever sat with a drunk, crying friend in the toilets will recognise the truth in her performance.

But the depth of Alminas’ acting is offset by a script that’s content to stay on the surface. Many people aren’t aware that still today Russian women are being raised to believe success means marriage to a wealthy man or a Western one. They’re coached and then sent out with only this goal in mind, being told effort spent on their bodies and makeup is the way to achieve it. It’s a real, tragically modern issue that it feels like Laura has missed a chance to explore. There’s too much one-note hysterical bride, and not enough about what’s pushed her over the edge.

Laura is a fascinating character: she’s caustic, hilarious, and vulnerable. It’s a mistake to keep her at such a distance. It isn’t until the very end she lets us in on what her life’s been like, but even then Alminas only scratches the surface. Laura’s childhood and previous two failed marriage-attempts are rife with potential for humour and insight into the social issues that create “crazy women”; it’s disappointing they’re left largely untapped, while most of the time is spent on throwaway banter.

This is an outrageous, immersive show that keeps the audience laughing and gasping at Laura’s antics. Alminas’ ability to throw in your face a woman broken by society, while never straying far from comedy, shows considerable skill. But the play’s insistence on staying in the shallows prevents it from being more than just a snapshot of a jilted-bride meltdown.

 

Reviewed by Addison Waite

Photography by Laurie Coldwell

 


Laura

Soho Theatre

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Francesco de Carlo: Comfort Zone | ★★★★ | May 2018
Great British Mysteries | ★★★½ | May 2018
Sarah Kendall: One-Seventeen | ★★★★ | May 2018
Sugar Baby | ★★★★ | May 2018
Flesh & Bone | ★★★★★ | July 2018
There but for the Grace of God (Go I) | ★★★★ | August 2018
Fabric | ★★★★ | September 2018
The Political History of Smack and Crack | ★★★★ | September 2018
Pickle Jar | ★★★★★ | October 2018
Cuckoo | ★★★ | November 2018

 

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