Tag Archives: Ovalhouse

The Croydon Avengers – 3 Stars

Croydon

The Croydon Avengers

Ovalhouse

Reviewed – 20th June 2018

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“sophisticated, even slick, staging serving an unsophisticated plot”

 

Recently endowed with superpowers, the Croydon Avengers take the Ovalhouse by storm on a mission to fight crime and bring justice and peace. Inspired by Maya Productions β€˜Superheroes: South of the River’, a project involving young Londoners including young refugees, writer, Oladipo Agboluaje, draws a budding junior audience into a world they can relate to, a world of comic books, superheroes and martial arts. With energy and enthusiasm, Petre (Theo Toksvig-Stewart), Laure (Nicole Sawyerr) and Aisha (Shala Nyx), three refugees from different ethnic backgrounds, set out to show that they are not helpless and needy, but are ready to fight for their places in British society. But Regina Rump, played by Tania Rodrigues, fears they are a threat to British identity and orders her media empire to stop them. Will her political influence overcome the trio? Or will their strength and determination prove too powerful even for her?

Director, Suzanne Gorman, creates a fast-moving narrative, interposing live action with clips of video, illustration, audio and audience participation. The fluidity of the complex coordination of images (Victor Ross) and sound (Riz Maslen) together with the functional set designed by Marina Hadjilouca, which neatly adapts to change the scenes, helps to hold a school-age audience’s attention. The lighting (Katherine Williams) works to emphasise dramatic moments but could be used to greater effect in keeping with a comic book’s exaggerated visual impact.

The cast work well to form a team yet portray three individual stories with empathy. They discuss and debate their different backgrounds, their journeys to the same situation, their confused feelings and their determination. Tania Rodrigues’ Regina sheds light on a dissonant viewpoint; she, like many, does not see the refugees as victims. It’s not always easy to say whether plays of this simplistic and fast-moving kind make children think about the predicaments of refugees unless they have some follow-up or prepping. In any case its saliency would vary between and within audiences. Eight-year-olds, who are included within the production’s target range, would enjoy it as a superhero comic brought to life. At a school with displaced students it’s likely to be powerful, fulfilling a deep need for representation. For the more mature, young adult audiences such as that at Ovalhouse, it borders on trite; sophisticated, even slick, staging serving an unsophisticated plot and a moral that the newcomer’s desperate need to fit in can be resolved through positivity and teamwork. Not for everyone, but in the scripting, projections and interplay of the young performers, some hidden theatrical superpowers are on display.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

Photography by Barnaby Aldrick

 


The Croydon Avengers

Ovalhouse until 23rd June

 

 

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Austerity and Me – 4 Stars

Austerity

Austerity and Me

Ovalhouse

Reviewed – 14th June 2018

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“a truthful and brave piece of theatre”

 

Austerity and Me is a show written and devised over the course of six months by The Performance Company. This is the first show for the company of local 18-24 year olds, based in South London’s Ovalhouse. The piece focuses on the ways in which austerity measures, set by the government a decade ago, have affected the lives of people in London and the ways in which this still persists today.

The show is comprised of a multitude of performance styles, each one playing to the strengths of every member of the company. It is an incredibly robust and thoughtful piece of applied theatre, the output of a long creative journey that included developing both performance and devising skills. Head of Learning & Participation at Ovalhouse, Mahri Reilly explained the benefit of creating the piece in such a way, β€œit offered them the opportunity to voice frustrations and fears, as well as come together to provide solutions and collective actions.” This was certainly evident throughout the performance with each actor emanating their passion for the play and its subject matter, particularly when that story was derived from their own experiences of austerity measures.

It was incredibly refreshing not only to hear the voices of the youth of South London being projected to a diverse audience, but also within an area of the city that has undergone extreme gentrification over the past ten years. During one of the few points in the piece, whereby the fourth wall was broken, the performers explained that during the creative process they had lost three members of the company directly due to austerity measures. In particular, one member could not attend weekly rehearsals because they were juggling two jobs to pay their rent.

Watching such a truthful and brave piece of theatre, directly from South London-based young people became even more poignant when focus was drawn towards the anniversary of the Grenfell Tower fire. It was a stark reminder that the key messages embedded within this powerful piece are still incredibly potent today. Austerity and Me is a wonderful piece that will awaken your inner political monologue, and inspire you to raise the voices of those around you for the greater good.

 

Reviewed by Claire Minnitt

 


Austerity and Me

Ovalhouse

 

Related
Previously reviewed at this venue
This Restless State | β˜…β˜…β˜… | March 2018
Standard:Elite | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | May 2018
Undersong | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2018

 

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