Tag Archives: Pleasance Theatre

Children of the Quorn

★★★★★

Pleasance Theatre

Children of the Quorn

Children of the Quorn

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 20th October 2019

★★★★★

 

“Silly but insanely smart at its core”

 

It’s an age-old question: How do you pass the time while you wait for the dead to show up to your séance? With some sketch comedy, of course! Well, that’s how comedy duo Megan from HR (Ambika Mod and Andrew Shires) approach this situation in their latest production Children of the QuornTM at least.

Armed with a Ouija board and a passion for the paranormal, Ambika and Andrew want to contact a spirit. With no initial luck, the pair resort to entertaining themselves and the audience with a series of short sketches ranging from a dance number (with the Devil no less) to questionable dating advice (the Yawn, the Stretch, the Kill and the I’ll Never Tell). Quick-paced with writing as smart as it is funny, Children of the Quorn will leave you stunned that no one has ever thought to do a play with such a premise before.

The play begins with a look at its end. Ambika cleans up a stage littered with paper money and overturned furniture and Andrew walks around on stage brandishing a hammer while wearing devil horns and a blood-stained shirt. After discussing the success of their latest séance, the duo walk off stage, boom ‘one hour earlier’ from behind the curtain and show the audience how such a chaotic scene unfolded.

Ambika’s dead-pan delivery and Andrew’s upbeat quirkiness complement each other perfectly and it is a joy to witness them banter on stage. Their awkward and bumbling style means that it is often unclear what is scripted and what is improvised. Their back and forth feels so organic and the audience can’t help but laugh along with two friends having this much fun.

Despite all the fun and silliness, Ambika and Andrew remind us not to get too comfortable. They claim that to really understand this show, you must pay attention, and right they are. Jokes and sketches veer off course time and time again resulting in the pair looking at the audience with pity and explaining how stupid their assumptions about the given scene were. The audience never knows what’s going to come next and this is Children of the QuornTM’s greatest strength.

The staging is simple, but this adds to the production’s charm. Three chairs (one of which rests the Ouija board and a bell that the ghost will ring) and a table are the extent of the set. There are some props – a guitar, some books – but most of the sketches embrace the lack of extra frills. One particularly funny sketch pokes fun at the limitations of being a double act as Ambika serves soup to 100 guests all of which Andrew plays. Another highlight is Andrew running off and on stage pretending to be five different people at once which leads Ambika to sit down to endure the wait.

Both Ambika and Andrew know just how long to keep a joke going and there are some wonderful moments of self-awareness: “You may be asking: Does this joke warrant two sketches?” “No, no it doesn’t.” “But is it our best sketch?” “Yes.” The play’s fast pace also prevents any joke or bit getting stale, and there are great references to earlier sketches throughout.

Children of the QuornTM is a real treat and there is no way the audience won’t leave smiling. Silly but insanely smart at its core, Megan from HR is a group who will no doubt continue to take the fringe stage by storm.

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

 


Children of the Quorn

Pleasance Theatre as part of London Horror Festival

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Millennials | ★★½ | May 2019
Kill Climate Deniers | ★★★★ | June 2019
It’ll Be Alt-Right On The Night | ★★★★ | September 2019
Midlife Cowboy | ★★★ | September 2019
Anthology | ★★★★★ | October 2019
Murder On The Dance Floor | ★★★ | October 2019
The Accident Did Not Take Place | ★★ | October 2019
The Fetch Wilson | ★★★★ | October 2019
The Hypnotist | ★★½ | October 2019
The Perfect Companion | ★★★★ | October 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Anthology

★★★★★

Pleasance Theatre

Anthology

Anthology

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 19th October 2019

★★★★★

 

“while these stories will have you on the edge of your seats, there are also moments of laugh out loud humour to lighten the load of existential dread”

 

Anthology is a dazzling collection of three short plays written and directed by Chris Lincé, and performed by Carrie Thompson. Working together as part of Hermetic Arts, this extraordinarily talented duo shine darkly in the 2019 London Horror Festival. Special Sounds (inspired by An Individual Note by Daphne Oram); Wholesale and The Empty Clock, are modern, even slightly futuristic, horror stories. Each play highlights the heightened anxieties of our modern technological age in ways that will remind audiences of Edgar Allan Poe—if Poe had written on steroids while navigating the terrors of the gig economy, corporate marketing, and internet dating. But while these stories will have you on the edge of your seats, there are also moments of laugh out loud humour to lighten the load of existential dread.

Carrie Thompson, as solo performer, and ably assisted by the split second timing of sound and lighting effects, holds the attention effortlessly. And she does this in Special Sounds without uttering a single word. It’s a nice reworking of the trapped-in-a-room-with-a-monster trope, except that in this case, the monster is a dictation machine that has captured an audio typist. That’s a situation a lot of us can relate to. The second play, Wholesale, shows off Thompson’s ease with American accents as she ups the energy in this tale of a motivational speaker working for a modern corporation. Enlisting the aid of the audience for this one, Thompson appears to be selling the virtues of a new concept of marketing based on implanted memories. The idea of some corporation tampering with a cherished memory as a marketing gimmick is a thought horrifying enough to cause any number of sleepless nights. Thompson and Lincé save the best for last, however. The Empty Clock is the most Poe like in Anthology—but updated for the twenty-first century. A modern young woman meets a man online, and what happens next as the woman’s grandmother clock gets involved in their relationship is truly the stuff of nightmares. Echoes of The Fall Of The House Of Usher and The Oblong Box resonate throughout The Empty Clock. Lincé’s writing is so vivid that it is enough for Thompson to simply sit and narrate this terrifying tale.

Anthology plays for only one night at the 2019 London Horror Festival unfortunately, but set a google alert for this company—you’ll want to see whatever Lincé and Thompson dream up next. So what if their material gives you nightmares. These are bad dreams that make you think.

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

 


Anthology

Pleasance Theatre as part of London Horror Festival

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Don’t Look Away | ★★★½ | May 2019
Regen | ★★★ | May 2019
The Millennials | ★★½ | May 2019
Kill Climate Deniers | ★★★★ | June 2019
It’ll Be Alt-Right On The Night | ★★★★ | September 2019
Midlife Cowboy | ★★★ | September 2019
Murder On The Dance Floor | ★★★ | October 2019
The Accident Did Not Take Place | ★★ | October 2019
The Fetch Wilson | ★★★★ | October 2019
The Hypnotist | ★★½ | October 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews