Zeus on the Loose
Cockpit Theatre
Reviewed – 23rd August 2018
โ โ
“a strange brew of classical mythology and sex comedy, although it is often hard to tell what the story is at all”
Only by the time Iโm on the bus, halfway to the venue, do I notice the proviso: โNot for the faint-heartedโ. In all honesty, I had only had a brief glance at the showโs description before setting off, and what I half-expected to be a modern take on Greek comedy is in fact billed as a blend of โmusical theatre, circus, and burlesqueโ. And โnot for the faint-heartedโ.
The plot line of โZeus on the Looseโ is a strange brew of classical mythology and sex comedy, although it is often hard to tell what the story is at all. It starts with a scheme between Hades and Hera to abduct Aphroditeโs twin and prevent the sisters from overpowering all the gods of Olympus (how or why they would do this is unclear). Concurrently, Hera is having husband issues; the insatiable King of the gods, Zeus, has committed one infidelity too many, convincing Hera to side with Hades (though again, quite why abducting Aphroditeโs sister constitutes betraying Zeus is never made clear). By the end Iโve pretty well lost track of both these plotlines, except that Hera ends up going to hell herself and doesnโt really seem too worried about it.
Randomly placed scenes follow one after the other, often with no discernible linkage. There are occasionally actual gaps in the music and dialogue as if to highlight this fact. Why, halfway through the show, do Zeus and Hera play a game called โGods & Mortalsโ in which various characters compete in a choreographed battle? Sure, itโs a good excuse for a dance sequence, but I keep wondering why. The writing plays liberally (that is to say, inaccurately) with Greek mythology, which would be totally fine if only the characters didnโt feel the need to keep making a joke out of it. All the way through, the show makes overly difficult work of a plot that is really just a vehicle for the circus and burlesque.
Perhaps it is unfair to criticise the plot of a show too much when really the main attraction is in the singing, dancing and, yes, stripping. There are some genuinely impressive acrobatics on show including a terrifyingly athletic trapeze act and a woman shooting arrows at a target with her feet. I have to admit that bit gets me to sit up in a way that the burlesque elements really donโt. True, it is quite a spacious theatre and Iโm not that close to the action, but for a play that begins with instructions on how to escape if the raunchiness gets too much, it doesnโt hugely shock or excite. The explained-away appearance of Cleopatra (Zeusโs cousin and lover, apparently) gives an excuse for a feathery, pharaonic striptease, but thatโs about as saucy as it gets. I canโt help the feeling that both the provisos – and Hadesโ constant innuendoes – oversell things slightly. Anyway, there are a couple of children in the front row, so the producers couldnโt have been planning anything too extreme. Good thing the kids arenโt โfaint-heartedโ.
In general, the performers make a good fist of it. The aforementioned circus acts are genuinely exciting, albeit a bit thin on the ground, and it is quite fun to hear Greek gods singing along to classic rock hits. Hades in particular keeps things running along relatively smoothly, and in his role as charming-but-deadly narrator he keeps the audience well-entertained.
On paper the concept sounds enticing, fusing musical theatre, circus and burlesque, and there is no doubt a version of this show exists in which the fusion comes together. However, on this occasion, the fun is both overstated and underwritten.
Reviewed by Harry True
Photography courtesy Pandora’s Door
Zeus on the Loose
Cockpit Theatre
as part of The Camden Fringe Festival 2018
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