Tag Archives: Nicola Chang

10

10
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VAULT Festival

10

10

The Vaults

Reviewed – 13th March 2019

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“an ambitious project … nicely done, with simple choreography and unified breath”

 

10 is an ambitious project for an hour long play; to distill the lives of ten women from history. Luckily, Lizzie Milton’s script lives up to the challenge well. When the audience enter the five women, who will take on two roles each, are standing around the space, statuesque in long dark blue dresses. The beginning and the transitions are nicely done, with simple choreography and unified breath. Director Nastazja Somers has created a strong framework on which to base the strands of the women’s stories and the music, sound and lighting, by Nicola Chang and Rajiv Pattani, support and complement the action beautifully. The casting is largely race and age blind, and it works really well.

Pamela Jikiemi took on the contrasting roles of Aethelflaed and Mary Prince. As Aethelflaed, the earliest recorded female ruler in Britain, she was impressive; portraying pride in achievement, and the shock of not being remembered. As Mary Prince, a woman who escaped slavery and terrible ill treatment to become only the second black woman to have her autobiography published, she was magnificent. Mary’s strength and anger, her suffering, and her pride shone through, and her sorrow when she thought of her husband was genuinely moving.

Rebecca Crankshaw was Brenda Proctor and Ada Lovelace. Proctor played a central, but largely undocumented, role in the miner’s strike, leading twenty-three thousand women on a march from Staffordshire to London. This piece was the least successful, not really conveying Proctor’s strength. There was so much concentration on her warm offerings of tea and cake that her activism rather got lost. Crankshaw gave a strong performance as Ada Lovelace, although I found her declarations, such as β€˜I’m bloody brilliant, aren’t I!” rather jarring. There was no sense of her as a woman of her time.

Lydia Bakelmun played Princess Caraboo and Noor Inayat Khan, bringing warmth and charm to both roles. Princess Caraboo was a young woman from Devon who managed to convince people both in the UK and the USA that she was a princess from a faraway land. When her deception was discovered she settled in Bristol and sold leeches to the Infirmary. Bakelmun’s Caraboo was flirtatious and appealing, sure of her beauty and delightful. In the very different role of Noor Inayat Khan she gave us a portrayal of a brave and very human heroine. Khan was of Indian and American descent, and was in the Special Forces during WW11. She gave the audience a dilemma. Would you kill a nazi to save the lives of innocent people? Could you do it? Khan’s courage, arrest and execution, her final cry of β€˜liberte’ were beautifully portrayed.

Beth Eyre’s first role was the Welsh artist Gwen John. John was recognised for her portraits of women, although she was overshadowed by her more famous brother, Augustus. Eyre’s Gwen was full of self doubt, imbued with a sense of faith, yet anxious about an upcoming exhibition. Her second role was that of Joan Clarke, who worked at Bletchley Park decoding the Enigma machine. Remembered now for her brief engagement to Alan Turing, Clarke was a gifted mathematician who made an important contribution the the war effort. Eyre showed her as a careful, deep thinking woman, concerned to make a word where everyone would be equally valued and welcome. Don’t try to knock the wall down, create a way through – a door maybe, she said.

Naomi Knox gave us Mary Seacole and Constance Markievicz, two very different women, both brought beautifully to life. Seacole was British-Jamaican woman who went to nurse in the Crimea, going there at her own expense. Knox showed her as a strong, woman, fulfilled by her work and her care for the patients. Then as a person lost, having to return home after doing so much. The warm strength of Mary Seacole was sharply contrasted by the harder strength of Constance Markievicz, a political revolutionary who fought for Ireland’s freedom from Britain. Knox was fierce, deadly determined, ready to shoot, but showing, too, Markievicz’s isolation in prison and her belief in a better world.

The play’s ten women, some better known than others, each made their own unique contributions. As an audience, enjoying the performances, we also learned about these extraordinary people and their lives, without ever feeling that we were being taught.

 

Reviewed by Katre

Photography by Ali Wright

 

Vault Festival 2019

10

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

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Inside Voices

Inside Voices
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VAULT Festival

Inside Voices

Inside Voices

The Vaults

Reviewed – 23rd January 2019

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“The actors are confident and energetic, and the piece has wonderful moments of intrigue”

 

The 2019 VAULT Festival has officially begun! As I walked into the neon-lit labyrinth of The Vaults it was less grand opening, more business as usual: numerous theatre spaces and a packed schedule of shows. The space was The Pit, and the show was β€˜Inside Voices’. Labelled as a dark comedy, this piece follows three Southeast Asian women attempting to break free from the constraints imposed by their race, culture, religion and gender. It has been published by Nick Hern books as one of the top seven new plays at The Vaults this year, so I was excited and optimistic as I took my seat.

The play starts very simply: three women sitting around a food tray eating and talking. It was an early opportunity to show the audience what great chemistry these actresses had, and it was a pleasure to watch. Instantly we knew what the relationship was between these three women, who used each other’s company as a chance to escape the pressure of their normal lives. Suhaili Safari particularly shines as the young idealist Nisa, and had buckets of energy throughout the show. Indeed, the whole piece was peppered with these simple but effective moments, be it Fatimah tenderly rubbing Nisa’s belly when she feels sick or the characters constantly talking over each other, which anyone in a close friendship group will be all too familiar with. It was in these moments that the tragedy of the piece really stuck out, and we learned of the tough experiences that forged these women into who they are.

Sadly, these moments fell few and far between, and what started as an effective and subtle drama slowly became a more polemic comment on intersectionality and the #MeToo movement. In these moments, you could feel a shift in the audience mentality. Whereas in the start of the play we were being invited to watch and search for our own interpretations, here we were being told what to think. This is perhaps easier for an audience, but not nearly as enjoyable or rewarding. These moments did drag and left me craving for the more intimate, seemingly mundane but charged scenes between these interesting women.

This show has a strong identity to it, and its message of social oppression and the battle these women face will resonate with a modern audience. The actors are confident and energetic, and the piece has wonderful moments of intrigue. I only wish that I could have been kept intrigued for longer.

Reviewed by Edward Martin

Photography courtesyΒ Lazy Native

 

Vault Festival 2019

Inside Voices

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

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