Tag Archives: Miriam Sallon

The Passion Of The Playboy Riots

★★★★

Chapel Playhouse

The Passion Of The Playboy Riots

The Passion Of The Playboy Riots

Chapel Playhouse

Reviewed – 28th July 2019

★★★★

 

“He embodies an almost sinister wholesomeness, aggressively polite and self-contained”

 

Based on the writings of Lady Gregory and W. B. Yeats, Neil Weatherall’s ‘The Passion of the Playboy Riots’ tells of Ireland’s fight for independence and the clash in Irish literature between art and propaganda.

We’re invited backstage to three of the most important and controversial works in twentieth century Irish theatre: Yeats and Gregory’s ‘Cathleen ni Houlihan’ in 1902, JM Synge’s ‘The Playboy of the Western World’ in 1907, and ‘The Plough and the Stars’ in 1926. Yeats (Neil Weatherall) and Gregory (Vanessa Corradi), old friends, sit in the wings for each, commenting on the audience’s response- sometimes enamoured, but mostly scandalised. In the first, an eager and very green Patrick Pearse (Justin McKenna) comes backstage to shake the hand of his literary hero, and perhaps show him some of his own writing. Yeats promptly snubs both his literary efforts and his political views (he believed in direct action where Yeats and Gregory felt strongly that this would be ineffective). Pearse would of course go on to be one of the leaders of the Easter Rising in 1926, and thereafter tried without a jury and shot.

Justin McKenna has an unfair advantage having already played this role back in 2017, but he could not be better cast. He embodies an almost sinister wholesomeness, aggressively polite and self-contained. He also manages to transform himself into ‘Padraig’, the actor playing Pearse in the final play; jovial and light of heart, with none of the weight of Pearse’s political impulses. McKenna does so with no aesthetic change, still the audience knows immediately that we’re not watching the same man.

Weatherall and Corradi have a great chemistry on stage, though Corradi seems sometimes a little stiff. However, this might not be so apparent in a larger auditorium – the audience was, after all, only a foot or so away.

Beside the period costumes, there’s little in the way of staging or props, but there’s no need – the body of the play is carried in its dialogue.

Before both the first and second acts, director Cameron Bell addresses the audience, announcing first “I don’t like this play, I think it’s dreadful”, and later, “See what I mean? It’s really dreadful.” It’s certainly unexpected and has the effect of putting the audience at ease to an extent, but it does seem a little out of place in the general structure of the show. Bell also asks that the audience play the part of ‘the audience’, clapping and booing when cued. This is the sort of audience participation I’m absolutely fine with, and it’s not often you get to boo something outside of a panto.

At only an hour, this show certainly packs in a lot: it’s both political and intimate, and peppered with enough dry wit to see us through its historical weightiness. I’d love to see it extended to a full two-hour performance, but perhaps it’s best to keep the audience wanting more.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Photography by Cameron Bell

 


The Passion Of The Playboy Riots

Chapel Playhouse

 

This show is an Edinburgh Festival Fringe preview – click on the logo below for more details

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Blood Tales | ★★½ | March 2019
Connecting | ★★★★ | March 2019
Freak | ★★ | March 2019

 

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

 

Ms Paolini Phantasmagoria Cabaret
★★★

Hoxton Hall

Ms Paolini Phantasmagoria Cabaret

Ms Paolini Phantasmagoria Cabaret

Hoxton Hall

Reviewed – 26th July 2019

★★★

 

“Ms Paolini’s charming and comedic patter bestows a delightfully nonsensical quality on the evening”

 

I am very confused about my feelings on this show. On the one hand, the chaos and slap-dash feel seem to be deliberate – it might even be the whole point, and that being the case, it’s very effective. Not to sound intolerably pretentious, but it smacks a little of the Dada movement’s Cabaret Voltaire, which prided itself on chaos, anarchy and experimentation.

Ms Paolini herself is very endearing. Beginning the show in black bicycle shorts, net tights and a fascinator, she announces proudly, “I’m fifty two, I’m a woman, and I’m fine with that, thank you very much.” Moving from one digression to the next for the first twenty minutes or so, I genuinely have no idea what she’s talking about. But maybe that’s the point? Regardless, she has the audience on side, everyone trying desperately to follow what she’s saying.

She is joined on stage by her two co-hosts- a young woman sporting a corset and matching fascinator, and a gentleman in his fifties who starts off wearing a suit, but who quickly strips off to match the women (in a fashion) in tighty-whities, a vest, and a silk red tie. The three remain on stage throughout as a visible audience for the other performers.

The patchwork of acts includes some who are purposefully subverting the usual cabaret performance: Irie Feather, for example, conducts an incredibly depressing strip-tease whilst singing a very ropey version of ‘Feeling Good’. She then decides she’s not feeling that good actually, rips off her nipple tassels to reveal gaffer tape crosses, and proceeds to finger-paint herself black to a heavy rock accompaniment.

There are other acts, however, that aren’t quite subversive but just a bit mediocre. It’s hard to know whether this is a choice, to keep everything rough around the edges, to steer away from anything too polished – the show describes itself as “deconstructed cabaret” after all. But the final performance is multi-percussionist Beibei Wang whose act is very polished, and quite amazing to watch. The contrast in quality between her and some of the previous acts is a little stark…

Between the acts, however, Ms Paolini and her co-hosts maintain an absurdist quality, performing often inexplicably funny sketches – dressed in ballgowns, for example, sniffing around the stage to ‘Mission Impossible’ style music which occasionally cuts out, for them to wail, “I need a boyfriend!”

Regardless of the individual acts, Ms Paolini’s charming and comedic patter bestows a delightfully nonsensical quality on the evening, bringing together a family of misfits, where the audience feels more like a community. Granted this is by no means a traditional cabaret, but it doesn’t want to be. Expect plenty of provocation, explorations of the ridiculous, and a good dose of confusion.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Ms Paolini Phantasmagoria Cabaret

Hoxton Hall

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Oranges & Elephants | ★★★ | January 2018
Don Juan | ★★★★ | April 2018
Arabian Nights | ★★★★ | September 2018

 

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