LIFE WITH OSCAR at the Arcola Theatre
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“his command of accents and impersonation is considerable.”
During Nick Cohenβs βLife with Oscarβ, we are increasingly reminded of the old aphorism concerning barks and bites. Or perhaps, more appropriately, that thing about tins and what is said on them. Cohen may be barking mad, but his seventy-minute show about his experiences in Hollywood doesnβt have the bite we were expecting. The marketing copy promises something more dangerous; darker and more revelatory.
Perhaps the anecdotal material is spread too thin. He adopts thirty-one characters in little over an hour after all. He begins as himself, affable and self-deprecatory. A self-confessed wannabe director and actor. Betraying his βTheatre de ComplicitΓ©β training he whirls us backwards and forwards in time with sharp movements, and his command of accents and impersonation is considerable. Itβs quite convoluted, but the main thrust of the narrative is that he is invited to Hollywood by a double Oscar winner who promises Cohen a short cut to his own Oscar win. Preceding this, though, we spend a fair chunk of the evening in the company of the child Cohen β precocious yet naΓ―ve, and programmed to fulfil the failed dreams of his celebrity parents.
The dream that Cohen takes to βLa La Landβ with him is an unformed idea for a short film. The escapades that follow are similarly unformed and sometimes anticlimactic. And although we are asked to believe that each anecdote is verbatim, we are aware of the artistic licence taken. And therein lies the frustration. Cohen plays with the truth too gently. We are enticed by the promise of portraits of the psychopaths, the crazies, the predators and the prey. A descent into the madness of Tinseltown. But it is gentler than that. A comfortable performer, Cohen doesnβt always have a tight hold on our attention and the multitude of characters often pass by in a blur.
He has chosen a theme that is well documented already on film and in modern literature. We are obviously not expecting the outrageous excess of Damien Chazelleβs βBabylonβ, nor the incisive prose of Budd Schulbergβs βThe Disenchantedβ. However, we are let down by Cohenβs inconsequential and indulgent writing. Writing that never quite hits its target. He talks of eventually escaping Hollywood, yet we never get the sense that he was trapped there. He equates his producer friendβs illusory promise of securing him an Oscar with the failure of the American Dream. This self-aggrandising is at odds with the self-deprecating modesty that informs the comedy of the piece β Cohen is better at mocking himself than the famous names he keeps dropping.
βLife with Oscarβ isnβt quite what it says on the tin. Cohen has prised open the lid to give us a glimpse of what might be inside, but we are left thinking that he has less to tell us than whatβs on the label. He can certainly spin a yarn, though, and the show is peppered with good humour. But ultimately a bit of an anti-climax.
LIFE WITH OSCAR at the Arcola Theatre
Reviewed on 3rd April 2024
by Jonathan Evans
Photography by G Taylor
Previously reviewed at this venue:
WHEN YOU PASS OVER MY TOMB | β β β β β | February 2024
SPUTNIK SWEETHEART | β β β | October 2023
GENTLEMEN | β β β β | October 2023
THE BRIEF LIFE & MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF BORIS III, KING OF BULGARIA | β β β β β | September 2023
THE WETSUITMAN | β β β | August 2023
UNION | β β β | July 2023
DUCK | β β β β | June 2023
POSSESSION | β β β β β | June 2023
UNDER THE BLACK ROCK | β β β | March 2023
THE MISTAKE | β β β β | January 2023
THE POLTERGEIST | β β Β½ | October 2022
THE APOLOGY | β β β β | September 2022
LIFE WITH OSCAR
LIFE WITH OSCAR
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