Tag Archives: Matthew Gould

San Domino – 2 Stars

Domino

San Domino

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 10th June 2018

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“The key players are never given a chance just to be themselves and convince they are worth rooting for”

 

A creaky, wooden interior. Barrels serve as tables, milk crates as chairs. There are shelves stuffed with champagne glasses and bottles of wine. A jaunty band whip up a storm on accordion, violin and double bass, setting the stage for a bohemian romp into the past … San Domino, Tim Anfilogoff and Alan Whittaker’s 1939-set musical, starts with promise, but quickly disappoints.

Eight Italian men in this cafΓ© in Catania, Sicily are rounded up, labelled as degenerates, convicted to β€˜internal exile’ and shipped off to San Domino, an island off the east coast of southern Italy to serve their sentence. Their crime? Being gay. Imprisoned, relationships between the boys (and a woman!) flourish and fall, lives are put at stake and one camp guard discovers an inconvenient (and ironic?) truth about himself. How will the boys get home, and what will they have lost?

The plot is ambitious and its themes vital. In the tight Tristan Bates Theatre, it bursts at the seams. Faye Bradley’s gorgeous set design does its best with a small space. With a humongous cast of thirteen, the ensemble seems restricted in movement, and Matthew Gould’s direction at times leaves the actors awkwardly in the way of action. Generally speaking, the ensemble excels in the musical numbers, with stand-out vocals from Callum Hale and Joe Etherington. The star of the show is Andrew Pepper’s cross-dressing Pietro though. Pepper is witty, flamboyant, charismatic and utterly bewitching.

San Domino’s biggest fault is Anfilogoff’s book and lyrics. With such a large host of characters, it becomes difficult to care enough about each of them. New characters are introduced and new storylines thrown in making such a soup of information that it becomes quite hard to follow. Dramatic leaps are made with little or no reasoning behind them. Songs are asked to carry too much narrative weight than they can deliver. The key players are never given a chance just to be themselves and convince they are worth rooting for. Most disappointing is the decision to give what feels like the majority of romantic airtime to the only heterosexual relationship in the show. What should be a core relationship, and perhaps the only positive gay relationship in the show, is briefly mentioned, forgotten about, and, suddenly, the couple are performing a covert, ceremonial marriage ritual, leaving the audience (read: me) thinking: β€œWhat on earth have I missed?”

San Domino does offer a crucial insight into Europe’s fascist history, and its punishment of gay men. The band are superb, and almost every actor whips out an instrument at some point. β€œCack-handed” and β€œLetters From Home” are two songs that show off the skills of the entire creative team beautifully, and suggest that Anfilogoff and Whittaker could become a formidable musical producing partnership.

To address gay history through theatre and song is bold and brave, and though no romp, San Domino is informative, emotional, and a story well worth hearing.

 

Reviewed byΒ Joseph Prestwich

Photography by Rachael Cummings

 


San Domino

Tristan Bates Theatre until 30th June

 

Related
Previously reviewed at this venue
Love Me Now | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | March 2018
Lucid | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2018
Meiwes/Brandes | β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2018

 

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The Gulf – 3 Stars

Gulf

The Gulf

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 19th April 2018

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“a refreshingly nuanced and complex representation of a relationship”

 

In the sweltering heat in the shallows of the Gulf of Mexico, Kendra is fishing. Her monosyllables punctuate the constant chatter of her girlfriend Betty. But when they realise they are stuck on the boat for the night, the conversation moves from idle chat to a discussion about the state of their own relationship.

This is a refreshingly nuanced and complex representation of a relationship, in a world filled with predictably formulaic romcoms. It is also an exciting addition to the queer narratives we are seeing onstage more and more now, and it is brilliant to see a play where the sexuality of its characters is incidental.

Both Kendra (Louisa Lytton) and Betty (Anna Acton) are multidimensional characters, and it is the well-crafted development of them which makes up most of the plot. Though Acton takes a moment to settle into her accent, she is the stronger of the two, harnessing Betty’s frenetic energy and keeping the play moving forwards. Lytton takes longer to settle into the role of Kendra, but gets stronger as her character develops. However I felt like there was more she could have done with the role as some potential humour was lost onstage.

The set is impressively realistic, a rowing boat bobbing on a dappled floor, a jetty retreating into trees and shrubbery. As the light (design byΒ Mitchell Reeve)Β fades at an imperceptible rate, the couple’s isolation is gradually heightened.

Unfortunately pacing issues across the performance means the piece is unable to take off. The atmospheric slowness at the beginning works beautifully initially, but it continues for an overly long time. The build up also dips at points due to unnecessary pauses, making it easy to disengage as an audience member.

Directed byΒ Matthew Gould,Β Audrey Cefaly’s β€˜The Gulf’ is a meandering snapshot of a relationship many are likely to be able to relate to in some way. The characters are nuanced and well rendered by Acton and Lytton, but are let down by a lack of substantial plot and issues with pace, which means the piece fails to take off.

 

Reviewed by Amelia Brown

Photography by Rachael Cummings

 


The Gulf

Tristan Bates Theatre until 5th May

 

 

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