Tag Archives: Miriam Sallon

Madame Ovary

Madame Ovary

★★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

Madame Ovary

Madame Ovary

Studio – The Vaults

Reviewed – 18th February 2020

★★★★

 

“Hesmondhalgh maintains a comic buoyancy throughout, allowing for the story to move on from the inevitable darker moments”

 

At 23, Rosa has decided this is going to be her year. She is going to get fit, she’s going to make good life choices and she’s going to write a show as good as Fleabag. Easy peasy. But whilst she’s been busy yogaing and dating and thinking about thinking about starting to write, unbeknownst to her, her body has been taken over by cancer. After a couple of weeks of painful bloating (trapped wind, she guesses) she drops into A&E, and pretty much doesn’t leave for six months.

Based around Hesmondhalgh’s own experience of a young diagnosis, she talks us through some of the physical sensations, the emotional struggles, and the essential support system who gathered tightly around her for the whole process. It’s not a ground-breaking story, but of course it isn’t, it happens to thousands of people every day. And that’s why it’s so relatable, and such a necessary story to tell.

I tend not to read synopses before seeing a show so I was genuinely shocked when it became clear this is a story about a cancer survivor, and not an out and out comedy, as the first ten minutes might suggest. But Hesmondhalgh maintains a comic buoyancy throughout, allowing for the story to move on from the inevitable darker moments. Her delivery is also starkly open and honest, sometimes painfully so, and there’s a very relatable sense that she’s trying to keep it light, trying to keep it funny, but that her experiences won’t let her. She also makes great use of her only prop, a projector screen, on which she plays with Tinder, Whatsapps, neurotically Googles (can I have IBS and still poo) and, the pièce de résistance, receives a personal message from Louis Theroux which makes me as happy as if he’d sent it to me. Even though it’s overtly present in most people’s lives in various forms, technology is often left out, or used really bizarrely in the arts, so it’s refreshing to see it included realistically.

With a story like this, the obvious arc concludes with a new lease on life and everything somehow being better than before. Hesmondhalgh tries to steer away from that, touching on her PTSD, meditating briefly on her now absent ovary, and returning to the hospital to visit a fellow cancer survivor only to discover she didn’t survive.

But she can’t quite resist a soppy ending, finishing off with a montage of photos and videos of friends and family during her illness, and of course the much beloved Louis Theroux’s well wishes. Sure, it erases any edginess from the show, but it’s also evidence of the ardent community involved in this near-on tragedy – something you can’t really express in a fictional tale.

Maybe it’s not as good as Fleabag, but Hesmondhalgh has created something worthy in its own right. A comic tear-jerker with a real-life heroine at the centre.

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020

 

Raw Transport

RawTransport™

★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

RawTransport™

RawTransport™

The Vaults

Reviewed – 12th February 2020

★★★

 

“The tense dynamic is really engrossing and well set out”

 

VR has been poised to further the possibilities of theatre for some time now. With experiences varying from creepy haunted houses to joining the circus, there seems no end to the locational possibilities. But theatre isn’t really about believing you’re witnessing reality – the proscenium arch is generally a big give-away. So aside from the ‘realness’ of the experience, and the ability to relocate its audience, does VR have anything to offer to a theatre production’s narrative?

RawTransport™ attempts to embroil the capabilities of VR in to the plot itself: Entering a small shipping container, we’re greeted by a very smiley host (Carly McCann) whose enthusiasm is infectious. Upon donning our headsets, we’ll be travelling, McCann tells us, to numerous breath-taking locations around the globe.

During her introduction speech, McCann is rudely interrupted by the creator of RawTransport™ (Ben Grant) who overtly undermines and embarrasses her in front of her passengers, and then proceeds to work silently in the corner within his VR creation.

The VR experience itself consists of various tranquil settings – under a willow tree, beside a countryside river, in a sunny field, and so on – pared with the occasional 4-D effect – accompanying scents, gentle rain, or a sip of a drink. This tranquillity is frequently interrupted by a glitch in the programme, and something/someone appearing to hack the system from within…

With a run-time of only half an hour, RawTransport™ doesn’t really give itself enough time to develop any of its ideas to fruition. Instead, it feels more like a preview for a full show, or perhaps the first episode in a series (Is this a thing?) But it’s not entirely clear what the message, or in fact the narrative, is supposed to be, and we’re left with a lot of loose ends. For example, having teased us a little at the beginning I would have liked to see more of McCann and Grant’s character developments. The tense dynamic is really engrossing and well set out, and I was surprised there wasn’t more of it. Similarly, the narrative of the VR experience itself seems only in the conceptual stages. There is most definitely a plot, but it feels just out of reach for the audience to grasp.

Electrick Village is certainly a theatre company to watch, with ideas for days, but they appear afraid of fully developing any single idea, perhaps lest their audience should grow bored. Being left wanting more is certainly better than being left wishing you’d had less, but this is a little extreme. It felt like it ended just as it was beginning.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020