Tag Archives: Rachel Mervis

Trial of Love

★★★½

Bread and Roses Theatre

Trial of Love

Trial of Love

Bread and Roses Theatre

Reviewed – 11th September 2019

★★★½

 

“As a concept, it’s alluring in its originality”

 

Though it has a love triangle storyline in common, this is not Mary Shelley’s Trial of Love, but an ambitious fusion of genres and styles all its own, vaulting across time and space between Chinese opera and Western horror, physical theatre and black comedy.

It starts with a nicely turned sitcom premise. A wealthy Chinese bachelor studying in London, Archie (Sam Goh), calls in Annie (Rhyanna Alexander-Davis), a specialist in exorcising oriental spirits, via a very plausible app called Ghostbusters. After the initial confusion caused by Annie’s black South Londoner identity, Annie discovers that Archie’s girlfriend, Hannah (Seisha Butler), is possessed by the spirit of Ann (Ning Lu), the lover Archie left behind in China. In a sudden change of mood, Ann now takes over the stage to sing her sad story, in flowing costume and with precise dance steps in the Chinese opera tradition. Then the genre moves on to ‘scary movie’, as Ann’s ghost variously inhabits, fights and controls the other characters.

As a concept, it’s alluring in its originality. Despite modern setting and dialogue the performance retains the formal quality it inherits from its roots, with percussion marking the beats, stylised poses and exaggerated facial expressions to portray the emotional narrative. There is a suspicion that the production is forged into its unusual shape to suit the personnel available, yet as an apparently random collision of ideas it wards off the ever-present danger of baffling the audience. Ning Lu’s classical training is apparent as Ann, but Director Sally Jiayun Xu must take much credit for blending the ensemble so fluidly, as well as for the production’s (otherwise uncredited) art direction, careful use of colours and costume.

The script is a kind of love triangle itself, between the Director’s modernisation of an ancient tale and its westernisation by Dwain Brown but, however it was devised, its tight dialogue and meticulous execution allow it to slalom through funny, then beautiful, magical then scary without much difficulty, very much helped by slick lighting changes (Melanie Percy) and sound (Andrea Lungay). The mesmerising spectacle ends with a neat coda as tea is ritually taken by the remaining characters.

Though elegantly done, there are a few holes and oddities, perhaps lost in translation. Archie is supposed to be wealthy, yet later appears to be financially supported by his hardworking, abandoned first lover, who is also busy haunting his girlfriend. The theme of stereotyping and interrelating cultures that is set up so intriguingly at the start is undermined by being left unexplored. The unhelpful naming of the characters appears to be an unmotivated whim. However, the outcome is fresh, witty, visually enchanting and not without depth, while the universal themes of love, greed and betrayal keep it one piece.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

 

Bread & Roses thespyinthestalls

Trial of Love

Bread and Roses Theatre until 14th September

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Enemies | ★★★ | October 2018
The Gap | ★★★★ | October 2018
Baby Blues | ★★★ | December 2018
A Modest Little Man | ★★★ | January 2019
Two Of A Kind | ★★★ | January 2019
Just To Sit At Her Table, Silver Hammer & Mirabilis | ★★★ | April 2019
Starved | ★★★★★ | April 2019
The Mind Reading Experiments | ★★★ | May 2019
The Incursion | ★★½ | July 2019
Room Service | ★★★★★ | September 2019

 

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My Brother’s Drug – 3 Stars

Drug

My Brother’s Drug

Blue Elephant Theatre

Reviewed – 18th October 2018

★★★

“Elysia Wilson is an engagingly vulnerable solo performer, vacillating between anger, desperation and, poignantly, misplaced hope as the show progresses”

 

This work-in-progress piece, written and directed by Rachel Mervis, explores the devastating impact of a young man’s chronic drug addiction on his family from the perspective of his younger sister. Using a combination of monologue, spoken word poetry and physical theatre, she unflinchingly depicts the desperate cycle of homelessness, criminality, hospital visits and betrayals as her once high-achieving brother (nicknamed ‘Frank’) spirals ever deeper into the life of an addict.

Mervis’ writing contains some intriguing ideas. One is struck particularly by the notion that Frank has a personality which is tragically predisposed to addiction – that the high he experienced off academic success and schoolyard competitiveness led to his seeking more dangerous thrills. She employs a cleverly cyclical structure, reinforcing the sense of entrapment caused by this disease. Her direction works well with sparse staging – two chairs which become a prison, a hospital bed, even a dancefloor. Elysia Wilson is an engagingly vulnerable solo performer, vacillating between anger, desperation and, poignantly, misplaced hope as the show progresses.

Inevitably, for a W-I-P show, there are areas in need of development. The choreography is somewhat indecisive: interesting ideas crop up but are not fully worked through and the physical theatre elements stray a little too close to charades, at times. The poetry requires work, often clunking slightly in its pursuit of a rhyme. Also missing is a sense of the siblings’ relationship prior to Frank’s drug problems, making it that much harder to invest in the story. One never got a rounded idea of just who it was who was being lost to these addictions. Furthermore, the show feels faintly ill-focused and episodic, lacking much of a narrative shape. The eventual climax, which centres on the poems performed throughout the show, is a little rushed and half-baked.

Even if it’s currently in its early stages, this piece is certainly one to watch.

Reviewed by Joe Spence

 


My Brother’s Drug

Blue Elephant Theatre

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Sisyphus Distressing | ★★★★ | March 2018
Boxman | ★★★★ | July 2018

 

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