Tag Archives: Ockham’s Razor

TESS

★★★★

UK Tour

TESS

New Theatre Royal, Portsmouth

★★★★

“The direction is expertly crafted, ensuring that every movement and physical interaction serves a purpose”

Ockham’s Razor has achieved something extraordinary with Tess, a bold and breath-taking adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the D’Urbervilles that fuses theatre, movement, and contemporary circus to re-imagine Hardy’s 1891 tragic novel. Through inventive staging and visceral physicality, the company distils this tale of endurance, injustice, and resilience into something immediate and deeply affecting.

The story follows Tess Durbeyfield, a young woman from a poor rural family who is sent to seek kinship with the wealthy D’Urbervilles after her father learns of their supposed aristocratic lineage. There, she falls prey to the manipulative Alec D’Urberville, an event that alters her life forever. Seeking a fresh start, she later finds love with the idealistic Angel Clare, but when he learns of her past, his rejection leaves her struggling to survive in a world that offers her little compassion. As Tess fights against the rigid moral codes of Victorian society, she finds herself once more in Alec’s grasp, leading to a final desperate act that seals her fate.

The striking set design of shifting wooden planks, towering walls, and billowing linen is integral to the storytelling, creating a constantly evolving landscape that mirrors Tess’s emotional and physical journey. The performers interact seamlessly with their surroundings, swinging, climbing, and manipulating the set with an urgency that reflects her struggles. Production designer Tina Bicât keeps the staging simple yet evocative, while Aideen Malone’s lighting and Daniel Denton’s projections shift fluidly to enhance the ever-changing atmosphere.

The cast of seven deliver extraordinary performances, both physically and emotionally. Tess is portrayed by two performers: Lila Naruse, who serves as the narrator, recounting her story with a soft West Country lilt while slipping in and out of dialogue, and Anna Crichlow, who embodies Tess’s physical journey through movement, expressing her emotions with acrobatics and dance. Their dual performance is quietly powerful with one Tess speaking, while the other relives events with no ability to change them. A particularly moving moment comes when one Tess reaches out to hold the other’s hand in silent support, reinforcing the sense of inevitability that haunts her story.

The predatory Alec D’Urberville is played with an unsettling charisma by Joshua Frazer, while Angel Clare is brought to life with both idealism and naivety by Nat Whittingham, making his betrayal all the more painful. Both actors also take on ensemble roles, and particularly in Frazer’s case, it is striking to see how posture, movement, and a quick costume change transform him from one of Tess’s mischievous younger siblings into a predatory seducer.

Lauren Jamieson, Victoria Skillen, and Leah Wallings play multiple roles throughout, from the romping Durbeyfield children to barroom brawlers, but particularly shine in two comedic sequences as the trio of dairymaids vying for Angel’s attention.

The adaptation, by directors Alex Harvey and Charlotte Mooney, streamlines the novel’s plot while maintaining its emotional depth. Tess’s journey is strikingly depicted, for instance, her initial trip to the D’Urbervilles sees her navigating an intricate sequence of angled planks, with projected mountain ranges behind her emphasising the sheer scale of her world. This is later mirrored when she flees from Alec, retracing her route backwards, a breathtakingly choreographed sequence performed in reverse that heightens the sense of her desperation.

One of the production’s most visually powerful moments comes during Alec’s seduction of Tess, represented through a Cyr wheel routine. What starts as a peacocking display of skill becomes something darker as Alec lures Tess into his orbit, quite literally drawing her into his circle, trapping her. Their final encounter, which drives Tess to flee, is almost unseen, shrouded in darkness and accompanied by an unsettling soundscape. With one Tess watching helplessly as events unfold, reinforcing how ingeniously this dual portrayal captures the inevitability of her fate.

The direction is expertly crafted, ensuring that every movement and physical interaction serves a purpose. The integration of circus arts is not just for spectacle but a vital storytelling tool, making Tess’s struggles feel immediate and visceral. The music and sound design by Holly Khan further heighten the drama, weaving folk-inspired melodies with an atmospheric score that underscores Tess’s emotional journey. The costumes, designed by Bicât, balance historical authenticity with functionality, allowing the performers full range of movement while remaining firmly rooted in Hardy’s world.

This production masterfully transforms Hardy’s prose into something immediate and deeply affecting, distilling its themes of power, privilege, consent, and female agency (or lack thereof) in a way that still resonates today. Through bold direction, inventive staging, and an emotionally rich interpretation, Tess proves that even the darkest of literary classics can be re-imagined with breath-taking vitality.



TESS

New Theatre Royal, Portsmouth then UK Tour continues

Reviewed on 25th February 2025

by Ellen Cheshire

Photography by Kie Cummings

 

 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST | ★★★★ | December 2024

 

Tess

Tess

Tess

Belly of the Whale – 4 Stars

Whale

Belly of the Whale

Greenwich & Docklands Festival

Reviewed – 24th June 2018

★★★★

“Seeing their play reach such a degree of unity is exhilarating”

 

Every year, Greenwich Fair, as part of Greenwich and Docklands International Festival offers a weekend of free outdoor theatre, circus and dance. This year, theatre company Ockham’s Razor put on a performance that was as much circus as it was theatre and sculpture.

Set outside, next to the Thames and the Cutty Sark, Belly of the Whale is a show that combines acrobatics with an exploration of structure. In a large round metal and wood construct, the three performers, Amanda Homa, Nathan Johnston and Stefano di Renzo meet, clash and harmonise. Sometimes invoking a skateboard ramp, sometimes the ribs of a whale or a sailing ship, the mechanics of the giant see-saw are as versatile and surprising as the performance itself. Over the course of forty minutes the actors assign the construct its own roles, making it partner, tool, antagonist and weapon. In their playful exploration, it is as much a part as the performers themselves. Although sometimes overbearing, at the point where the structure is most restricted, Amanda Homa’s spectacular aerial acrobatics carry a sense of abandonment and loneliness. Just as freedom and constraint are opposed, there is an opposition of control and manipulation, teasing and supporting.

While the show explores the human connection to its environment it is also about interhuman relationships. Everything comes together in the climactic finale when the performers create an equilibrium with each other and the structure as they delve into an ever faster and lighter play, seemingly losing all contact to the ground, taking off, fuelled by the balance they had searched for all this time. Seeing their play reach such a degree of unity is exhilarating and offers a sense of conclusion to the diverse impressions the performance left until then.

Even though each of the performers has an individual solo act, they are most fascinating as a team. Throughout the show they are supported by musician Gabriele Pierro who uses a mix of sounds and live guitar music to set the mood. While his performance is great, he was unfortunately let down by the speakers which were too loud and scratchy in the open space. The fact that the show leaves room for everyone’s own personal interpretation, invoking scenes and ideas without forcing a conclusion or judgement, adds to the theme of playfulness that runs throughout and which leaves the audience with a feeling of airiness.

 

Reviewed by Laura Thorn

Photography by Mark Dawson

 


Belly of the Whale

Greenwich & Docklands Festival

 

 

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