Tag Archives: Rebecca Crankshaw

Medusa – 3.5 Stars

Medusa

Medusa

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

Reviewed – 22nd October 2018

★★★½

“The stage is too often so busy with scenery and props that the extraordinary skill and beauty of the movement itself is lost”

 

Jasmin Vardimon Company is celebrating its twentieth anniversary with this sumptuous conceptual take on the Medusa myth. The company is renowned for the theatrical choreography of its founder and Artistic Director, Jasmin Vardimon, and Medusa makes full use of a theatre maker’s box of tricks – from extravagant props, costumes and visual effects, to intermittent fragments of spoken text and other performed vocalisations. As the lavish programme is at pains to point out (it contains an academic essay, ‘Transformation and liquid modernity in Jasmin Vardimon’s Medusa’ as well as Vardimon’s own introductory and explanatory words) the Medusa myth has proved fertile ground for intellectual and creative exploration; this work seeks to place itself firmly in that tradition.

Vardimon’s introduction references Sartre and Ovid; Armando Rotondi’s essay ranges from ancient Greek etymology to Zygmunt Bauman by way of John Berger, taking in capitalism and climate change en route. It is a crowded agenda, and the show suffers from it, both literally and metaphorically. The stage is too often so busy with scenery and props that the extraordinary skill and beauty of the movement itself is lost; similarly, the determination to give equal weight to each of the myth’s many manifestations, means that Medusa’s power – both as an icon and as an event – is too diffuse to be properly felt.

That said, the piece provides the audience with some unbelievably beautiful and potent images, and Vardimon’s dancers are frequently breathtaking. The moments that work best are those in which this supreme level of physical artistry is left to speak for itself. Despite all the text and trappings, it is the human body that really does the talking here. The opening sequence, in which yet another Medusa manifestation makes itself felt – that of the jellyfish, or medusa, as it is known in Italy and Spain – is remarkable, not just for the billowing sheet of transparent plastic, but for the way in which the shapes and movements of the dancers’ hands and feet so exactly evoke an underwater world. Similar choreographic invention informs an incredibly disturbing sequence of sexual violence, as well as spellbinding scenes of witchery and enchantment.

Vardimon is clearly an exceptional talent; not only is she director and choregrapher, but sound and set designer too. T.S.Eliot’s masterful poem The Waste Land wouldn’t exist in its present form without Ezra Pound’s editing skills, and one wonders whether Vardimon could also benefit from an equally powerful creative voice to be heard in her process, and to facilitate the judicious trimming down of the material. The company dances at the highest level and the audience needs the space to breathe and to wonder. In its current form, Medusa is such an exhaustive examination of its inspiration, that it leaves the audience not inspired, but exhausted.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Tristram Kenton

 


Medusa

Sadler’s Wells Theatre

 

 

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Jonny Woo’s Un-Royal Variety – 5 Stars

Variety

 Jonny Woo’s Un-Royal Variety

Hackney Empire

Reviewed -20th October 2018

★★★★★

“this annual festival is a joyous celebration of the scene in all its camp, disruptive naughty glory”

 

This is the third year for Jonny Woo’s queer, sexy, ribald, irreverent take on this most British of formats, and it’s clear that this fabulous evening has now rightly taken its place in London’s alternative social calendar. London now leads the world in queer performance, and this annual festival is a joyous celebration of the scene in all its camp, disruptive naughty glory. Jonny is the perfect host – witty, warm and salacious in equal measure – and Julian Smith’s costumes are delicious throughout. It is a long evening, at four hours, but the acts come fast and furious and are well-balanced enough that time flies by. This reviewer has to confess to being utterly disabled by laughter on more than one occasion – a treat indeed.

The whole show is cheerfully sweary from beginning to end, but there is a clear tonal arc to proceedings, and the second half is significantly filthier than the first. If you blanch at nudity and overt drug references, this is really not the night for you! After an explosive opening number, which sets the scene for the gender play throughout, the show begins with supremely professional high-camp drag from Myra Dubois. She opens the floodgates for the surge of talent to follow, and it is worth remembering that the energetic silliness of acts such as Garry Starr (Damien Warren-Smith’s brilliant comedy alter-ego), as well as the anarchic scratch-punk world of Christeene and Lucy McCormick, demand a high degree of artistic skill. Similarly, for those who might dismiss Lip Sync, Rhys Hollis’ mind-blowing routine – a fierce, sexy mash-up of Nicky Minaj, Missy Elliott and more – was a lesson in performance precision.

And there are voices too. From Sooz Kempner’s belting rendition of the Chorus Line favourite The Music and the Mirror, to the magnificent surprise of comedienne Jayde Adams’ huge operatic soprano, unleashed after her whip-smart comedy set, to Carla Lippis’ in-your-face and dangerous ‘I’m a Liar’, the Hackney Empire resounded with song throughout the evening. Special mention must also go here to the wondrous Theresa May choir – in splendid voice as well as being eye-wateringly funny. Laughter is nigh on continuous for the duration of the show, and every audience member will come away with highlights. Bourgeois & Maurice’s outrageous and lyrically brilliant take on overpopulation – Babies – and Mawaan Rizwan’s unique blend of song, dance and stand-up were personal favourites.

It is to Woo’s credit that important issues affecting the LGBTQIA+ community were woven in to the show’s glittering fabric – the importance of pronouns, trans equality, femme visibility and female visibility were all part of the tapestry. Equally, the terrific sketch between Le Gateau Chocolat and Adrienne Truscott was an affectionate poke at well-intentioned woke behaviour. The facility for self-parody is the surest sign of confidence, which Jonny Woo and this exceptional line-up exude from their pores. All Hail Their Majesties. Long May They Reign.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Studio Prokopiou

 


 Jonny Woo’s Un-Royal Variety

Hackney Empire

 

 

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