Tag Archives: Leicester Square Theatre

Stick Man – 3.5 Stars

Stick Man

Leicester Square Theatre

Reviewed – 21st October 2018

★★★½

“the whole cast consistently kept a sparky energy and played well to the audience”

 

Stick Man, one of Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler’s many much-loved children stories, is now enjoying a stage adaptation by Freckle Productions, in a show that lifts the charm and appeal off the page and delivers it to families across a sizzling forty five minute romp.

The plot sees the titular Stick Man (Jack Benjamin) taken on a perilous adventure after being swept away from his stick family by a dog (Kate Malyon, also playing everything from a swan to a very aggressive schoolgirl) during a jog in the park; he keeps getting used and abused in different scenarios until he ends up in need of some serious help to be reunited with stick wife and children. Euan Wilson rounds out the cast, chiefly providing music (composed by Benji Bower) on all manner of instruments that provides a gleeful timbre to the action on stage. The interplay between Wilson on the saxophone and Malyon’s swan was particularly enjoyable, although the whole cast consistently kept a sparky energy and played well to the audience.

Stick Man employs a number of everyday objects in its design (Katie Skyes) that allows for the cast and director Mark Kane to let them ooze creativity when used in performance, such as a roll of blue wallpaper wrapped between two cast members acting as a river, or using umbrellas to depict a raging ocean. The results are visually delectable, and keep the audience constantly engaged as to what innovative use of regular paraphernalia will be utilised next.

The style of the show takes a number of cues from pantomime, featuring a chase through the audience, a game of catch with a beach ball, and – yes – even a ‘they’re behind you’ moment. This works wonders to invite the audience into the story, and it is telling that the sections which did not feature any participation are the ones where the audience grew restless, giving the feeling that Stick Man should have embraced a few more opportunities to include the audience.

The source material has some issues if you’re looking closely, such as that the entire journey Stick Man goes on doesn’t see him learn anything or change, and there’s no especially interesting lesson to take from the story. Crucially, however, by and large the children adored it, and were uncontainably engrossed by the show’s end. Parents looking for an alternative to the usual panto this Christmas will find a lot on offer here.

Reviewed by Tom Francis

Photography by Paul Blakemore

 

Leicester Theatre

Stick Man

Leicester Square Theatre until 6th January

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Murder, She Didn’t Write | ★★★ | February 2018
Sh*t-faced Shakespeare: The Merchant of Venice | ★★★★ | April 2018
Sh*t-faced Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet | ★★★★ | June 2018
Murder She Didn’t Write | ★★★★ | September 2018
Sh*t-faced Showtime: Oliver With a Twist! | ★★★ | September 2018

 

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

 

 

Murder She Didn’t Write – 4 Stars

Murder

Murder She Didn’t Write

Leicester Square Theatre

Reviewed – 23rd September 2018

★★★★

the audience entered into the spirit of the show with gusto

 

Degrees of Error are an improvised theatre company based in Bristol, and ‘Murder She Didn’t Write’ has been touring the UK since 2013. It is a fun romp of a show. One pianist, one lady detective and five other actors had the audience in stitches and had a lot of fun in the process.

I always feel slightly sorry for actors who are preset on stage, and the detective had to sit and peruse her books for a good fifteen minutes before the show began. The pianist played in the background, creating a good atmosphere before the action. Unfortunately I was not able to get a cast list, so these talented improvisors will remain unnamed, which is a shame.

The detective got the show off to a good start, getting people to look around suspiciously at their fellow audience members, as ‘there is a murderer in the room.’ One person was nominated as Jerkins, the hapless assistant, and suggestions were solicited as to the location of the crime and the murder weapon. And so we watched a crazy tale set in a plastic surgery hospital in Basildon, where a foul murder was carried out using a syringe made of ice!

So ‘who done it?’ Was it Mr Green with a stick in the morgue? Miss Violet in the office with poison? Mr Blue in the consulting room with a plant? Well, we knew it would be a syringe, but neither the audience nor the actors knew more than that!

The actors enjoyed themselves immensely as the plot thickened around them, and the audience entered into the spirit of the show with gusto, and a lot of laughter. Watching the cast get themselves and each other out of tricky situations, and accept the twists and turns of the story that were thrust upon them was delightful and hilarious. The detective’s interjections changed the ’scenes’, ably assisted by simple lighting changes. The story was told with the use of minimal set and props; a table, a wicker screen and a couple of plants, a walking stick, a bottle and not much else.

Degrees of Error are performing the show at the Leicester Square Theatre once a month at the moment and, if you fancy some madcap entertainment on a Sunday afternoon, I suggest you go and see them. Who knows where the crime scene will be next time, and who will be the villain? Wherever it will be, and whoever will commit the crime, a lot of fun will be had by all.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Jamie Corbin

 


Murder She Didn’t Write

Leicester Square Theatre – next performances 14th October & 18th November

 

Related
Previously reviewed at this venue
Sh*t-faced Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet | ★★★★ | June 2018
Sh*t-faced Shakespeare: The Merchant of Venice | ★★★★ | April 2018
Sh*t-faced Showtime: Oliver With a Twist! | ★★★ | September 2018

 

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