Tag Archives: Patience Tomlinson

Go Bang Your Tambourine

★★★★

Finborough Theatre

Go Bang Your Tambourine

Go Bang Your Tambourine

Finborough Theatre

Reviewed – 8th August 2019

★★★★

 

“A wholesome odd-couple plot, interlaced with serious questions of morality, loyalty and duty of care”

 

As a general rule, give me a ticket to a three-hour fringe production of a play written in 1970, never performed in London, and I will give you a whole bunch of explanations why I sadly can’t attend. So I was more than pleasantly surprised to find that ‘Go Bang Your Tambourine’, directed by Tricia Thorns, is compelling, concise, and heartbreaking.

Young, bashful David (Sebastian Calver), an eager Salvation Army soldier, has lost his mother. His father, Thomas Armstrong (John Sackville), absent for the past four years, returns for the funeral to find David waist-deep in religious zeal and the wholesome SA way.

Living alone in his mother’s house, David is persuaded to take in a lodger. But rather than the appropriate young catholic boy working at the local chemist, he invites Bess Jones (Mia Austen) to rent the room. A bartender at the Golden Lion, Bess is a whole lot worldlier than David, and a fair bit older. But she’s respectful and sweet-natured, and most importantly, David believes, she was sent by God.

A wholesome odd-couple plot, interlaced with serious questions of morality, loyalty and duty of care.

Calver starts off looking like a wounded puppy for the entire first act, which wears a little thin – sad people don’t look sad all the time. Thereafter, however, he conveys an intimate understanding of his character – the occasionally funny, but mostly heart-rending combination of childish naivity and very real misery. After not too long the audience feels very protective of young David – I almost accidentally heckled in his defence in the second act, but just about managed to restrain myself.

Sackville plays the villain skilfully. Writer Philip King was not so binary in his understanding of what makes a man, and Sackville embodies this mess of humanity and cruelty, so that whilst the audience is certainly not on side, it’s hard to know exactly how much blame to lay at his door. Austen is similarly complex in her performance, making room for certain of Bess’ choices which might have appeared to contradict her nature, but which instead give depth to her character. Patience Tomlinson, playing the role of Major Webber of the Salvation Army, is understated but effective.

The entire play takes place in David’s sixties living room: dizzy floral wallpaper, lots of brown furniture and a space heater bizarrely covering the fireplace. Considering the set (Alex Marker) never changes and the play goes on nearly three hours, you might consider this a recipe for very dull disaster. But somehow, the audience is captivated throughout. The incredibly complicated relationships between each of the characters, thick with paradox and uncertainty, fill the stage and time to capacity. A story fundamentally about a naïve nineteen-year old boy living with a savvy Yorkshire lass, director Tricia Thorns brings us a tale full of nuance, coiled intensity and honest contradiction.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Photography by Phil Gammon

 


Go Bang Your Tambourine

Finborough Theatre until 31st August

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
A Funny Thing Happened … | ★★★★ | October 2018
Bury the Dead | ★★★★ | November 2018
Exodus | ★★★★ | November 2018
Jeannie | ★★★★ | November 2018
Beast on the Moon | ★★★★★ | January 2019
Time Is Love | ★★★½ | January 2019
A Lesson From Aloes | ★★★★★ | March 2019
Maggie May     | ★★★★ | March 2019
Blueprint Medea | ★★★ | May 2019
After Dark; Or, A Drama Of London Life | ★★★★ | June 2019

 

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

 

Imaginationship – 2 Stars

Imaginationship

Imaginationship

Finborough Theatre

Reviewed – 8th January 2018

★★

“The main issue comes from Healy’s script, aiming to cover far too much and along the way ending up with very little with real depth”

 

Consistently, whether true or not, the Brexit Vote has been linked to nostalgic ideas of Britain’s past. In the same way, Sue Healy’s Imaginationship examines Great Yarmouth, an area in which 72% voted Leave, as a town plagued by memories of an apparently glorious former life. The conflicts of residents with both the world outside and those who come in will drive the thrust of this wide reaching drama.

We follow a series of interconnected relationships. A nostalgia night ran by Ginnie Atkins is taking place, gazing back into the 70s, the music and the dance moves. For her best friend Brenda and her daughter Melody, sex is on the brain, whether desiring too much or a lack thereof. The conflicts of each and those that they encounter, will spread wide through sexual obsession, migrant tensions and a rosily imagined past and future for all that looks unlikely to develop.

The main issue comes from Healy’s script, aiming to cover far too much and along the way ending up with very little with real depth. It is a shame because there are some really clear characters to explore, though a couple feel defined by patronising characterisations. There are also some nice ideas into what the frame of an ‘outsider’ can be. However, as we move through each issue and the story, they are spread thin enough that we have no empathy. All this builds to an ending that at best is clunky and at its worst really quite distasteful.

Tricia Thorns’ production is functional without being inspiring, with occasional insight suffering with stiffness. The sense of a faded town is sufficiently brought in by Leigh Malone and Isabella van Braeckel’s design, while the tackiness of a seaside celebration is effectively brought to life by Richard Haines’ lighting. Overall the cast is solid though hobbled by the material. Patience Tomlinson’s Brenda effectively shows a woman overwhelmingly desperate for male attention, and as her daughter, Joanna Bending lends Melody a biting nature undercut by her signs of vulnerability with Bart Suavek’s sweet Attila and Rupert Wickham’s controlling Tony.

It feels as though the theatre world is still struggling to get to grips with Brexit, with performances confronting it directly often revealing little insight to a like minded audience. This is no different, in an uneven and overlong show that needs far more clarity and focus to bring anything new to the discussion.

Reviewed by Callum McCartney

 


Imaginationship

Finborough Theatre until 23rd January

 

 

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