The Sweet Science of Bruising
Wilton’s Music Hall
Reviewed – 7th June 2019
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“Now in a venue every bit as grand as the writing deserves, The Sweet Science of Bruising is a gripping spectacle”
If you were given a minute to name as many stories about boxing as you could, youβd probably get into double figures. After all, there were six Rocky films alone. However, if this was narrowed down to womenβs boxing, you might get Million Dollar Baby and then hit a wall.
In βThe Sweet Science of Bruisingβ, Joy Wilkinson has written a worthy addition to this untapped canon. The play follows four women from different stratum of Victorian society who take up fisticuffs for a plethora of reasons: to champion womenβs equality, to overcome domestic abuse or just because theyβre good at lamping people. The first act romps along with the sort of feelgood factor – all upper cuts and corsets – that wouldnβt be out of place in the sort of Britcom film starring Gemma Arterton. However, things take a turn for the darker after the interval and there are several devastating moments that take the wind out of you.
The production premiered at Southwark Playhouse last October and since then, you can tell itβs been honed further, with the overall pacing now as lean as a boxer weighing in pre-fight. Some of the dialogue is ladled on a bit thick, but only to minor detriment. The main change is, of course, the venue and itβs difficult to imagine anywhere more fitting to stage it than Wiltonβs Music Hall. Built in real life only ten years before the play was set, the venue certainly adds a seedy realness to the underground fighting in the script. Director Kirsty Patrick Ward utilises the space brilliantly. One climatic fight scene has the majority of the ten-strong cast rushing in and out of the wings and onto the balconies in such an explosive manner that it has your eyes darting about like a dog watching a volleyball match. Even the subtle touches are there too – a layer of dry ice hangs in the air like the sort of deep Victorian smog in which Jack the Ripper lurked.
Credit must go to Kate Waters, the fight director β not a title you see on a programme all too often. What could have easily looked like drama school graduates pulling on boxing gloves for the first time actually looked fairly convincing. In fact, Fiona Skinner β who was difficult to prise your eyes off as the hyperactive northern lass Polly Stokes β looked like she could be quite handy in the ring if the whole thesp thing doesnβt work out. Whatβs more, while it seems churlish to pick out a male actorβs performance for particular praise in a play all about female empowerment, Owen Brenman is especially amusing as the verbose Svengali figure who organises the bouts.
Now in a venue every bit as grand as the writing deserves, The Sweet Science of Bruising is a gripping spectacle that never drops in quality and doesnβt shirk in getting stuck into the burning injustices of the time.
Reviewed by Joe Holyoake
Photography by Mitzi de Margary
The Sweet Science of Bruising
Wilton’s Music Hall until 29th June
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
A Midsummer Nightβs Dream | β β β Β½ | June 2018
Sancho – An act of Remembrance | β β β β β | June 2018
Twelfth Night | β β β | September 2018
Dietrich – Natural Duty | β β β β | November 2018
The Box of Delights | β β β β | December 2018
Dad’s Army Radio Hour | β β β β | January 2019
The Good, The Bad And The Fifty | β β β β | February 2019
The Pirates Of Penzance | β β β β | February 2019
The Shape Of the Pain | β β β β β | March 2019
The Talented Mr Ripley | β β β β | May 2019
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