Tag Archives: Rebecca Crankshaw

Tom Brown’s Schooldays

★★

Union Theatre

Tom Browns Schooldays

Tom Brown’s Schooldays

Union Theatre

Reviewed – 7th January 2020

★★

 

“a floundering production that simply doesn’t know what it is”

 

Tom Brown’s School Days is a semi-autobiographical novel by Thomas Hughes, first published in 1857. This production is the latest in a long line of adaptations, and director Phil Wilmott has chosen to set it in WWII, presumably to shoehorn it into the Essential Classics season at the Union, which this year takes this war as its theme. The idea of the season, to quote the programme notes, is to present work ‘in which great writers of the past reflect on the issues we face today’. This seems a stretch for this particular piece. For starters, Hughes can in no way be described as a great writer, and secondly, the script that has been put together by the company (there is no accredited playwright) is thin and uninspiring; devoid of any intellectual or emotional gravitas. At its best it is well-worn pastiche, and at its worst a paeon to all that is wrong with British public school culture.

The plot (such as it is) is a simple one. A new boy – Tom Brown – joins Rugby School at a time when many of the masters are absent, serving in the war, and the old Head has come back from retirement. This Head – Dr. Arnold – wants to eradicate bullying in the school and produce boys who are fit to be the new generation of leaders of the country. Tom and his fellows face down the bullies, and many of them go on to serve in the same squadron, under their former Head Boy. Lest we forget, the programme notes helpfully remind us that these are the ‘upper class young men who’d go on to lead the armed forces to victory’. There is one woman in the play, the resourceful working class cook, who cheerfully helps our boys out when they use their fathers’ money to fund black market feasts for one another, and takes being called a ‘stupid woman’ by our hero on the chin. In Britain 2020, after the most divisive election there has been in decades, and one in which ‘the vast majority of the British people bewilderingly voted to continue to be governed by upper class millionaires’ (programme notes again), the uncritical way in which this story is presented leaves a deeply unpleasant taste in the mouth.

This is a floundering production that simply doesn’t know what it is. The staging – endless and bizarre use of direct address, and plenty of choreographed stage pictures – is pure musical theatre, but it isn’t a musical. And yet…. There are hymns of course, fitting the Rugby setting, but then there are two extraordinary and ill-judged bursts of song which tie in with neither plot nor period: a Jerry Lee Lewis style piano number, and a plaintive guitar solo. There are also jarring moments of melodramatic piano underscore throughout. Reuben Speed’s set looks good, and is well-designed for the space and Penn O’Gara’s period costumes also fit the bill. Unfortunately, the performances are uniformly flat and disconnected. Press Night stumbles aside, which are to be expected and are in no way problematic, this was a production in which not a single actor shone. In the rare high-stakes moments, there was simply no emotional connection in the performances. The words never took flight, and as such, the audience had no investment in the characters whatsoever. This was a thoroughly forgettable evening. Would that the stewardship of Boris and his chums could be similarly consigned to history’s wastepaper basket without consequence.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Mark Senior

 


Tom Brown’s Schooldays

Union Theatre until 2nd February

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Midnight | ★★★★★ | September 2018
Brass | ★★★★ | November 2018
Striking 12 | ★★★★ | December 2018
An Enemy of the People | ★★ | January 2019
Can-Can! | ★★★★ | February 2019
Othello | ★★★★ | March 2019
Elegies For Angels, Punks And Raging Queens | ★★★ | May 2019
Daphne, Tommy, The Colonel And Phil | | July 2019
Showtune | ★★★★ | August 2019
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes | ★★★★ | October 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Black Beauty

Black Beauty

★★★★

Purcell Room

Black Beauty

Black Beauty

Purcell Room, Southbank

Reviewed – 18th December 2019

★★★★

 

“This playful, inventive show simply serves to underline and encourage the gentle values of warmth and kindness we all too often forget to prize”

 

Written in 1877 by Anna Sewell, Black Beauty remains one of the best-loved children’s books in the English language, with numerous film, television and theatre adaptations to its name. It is a simple story, in which we follow Beauty – a black horse – from his young days as a foal to his old age, through his time spent with numerous different owners, some gentle and some cruel. There are moments of high drama, in which Beauty saves the day, but mostly it is a tale which illustrates the importance of love and kindness. This warm-hearted collaborative production, presented by Red Bridge Arts and Traverse Theatre Company, stays totally true to the tender spirit of the original, but frames it within the sweet and humorous tale of two orphaned Irish brothers, who perform together as a pantomime horse and are down on their luck. This framing device allows for some lovely silly moments, and also enables the use of a few well-chosen contemporary references, both of which serve to further connect the young audience to the central story.

Paul Curley and John Currivan are a charming duo and work beautifully together as the brothers, with understated but completely masterful physical comedy and story-telling skill throughout. Although the show takes a little while to get going, once they hit their stride the performers move things along at a good pace, and deftly engineer the emotional gear changes, from hilarity to moments of genuine pathos. The creative team (Andy Cannon, Andy Manley, Shona Reppe and Ian Cameron) clearly delight in theatre’s inventive possibilities, and the show is full of joyful ingenuity, giving the children watching plenty of stimulus to fire up their collective imagination. It was a pleasure to feel the youngsters being carried away into a world in which a wellington boot can be a horse, a net curtain can be a baby, and different characters can appear and disappear at the actual drop of a hat. These imaginative realms are also enabled by Dave Troutan’s wonderful sound design, and the simple but ingenious horsebox which serves as the set’s multi-purpose centrepiece. Both set and sound design are conceptually simple but expand outwards, beyond the literal, and so further draw us in to the show’s meta-reality.

This Black Beauty wears its theatrical artistry lightly. The creative telling of a story can easily come to obscure the essential quality of the story itself, but that is not the case here. This playful, inventive show simply serves to underline and encourage the gentle values of warmth and kindness we all too often forget to prize.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Mihaela Bodlovic

 

Southbank Centre thespyinthestalls

Black Beauty

Purcell Room, Southbank until 5th January

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Ino Moxo | ★★½ | June 2019
Piece For Piece and Ghetto Blaster | ★★★★ | October 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews