Tag Archives: Rebecca Gwyther

Anna X

Anna X
★★★★

VAULT Festival

Anna X

Anna X

The Vaults

Reviewed – 14th March 2019

★★★★

 

“Sheehy’s control of her character is phenomenal”

 

Welcome to New York City’s most elite social scene. It’s made up of trust fund kids, twenty-something tech CEOs, and futurist entrepreneurs. It’s 2016: Billy MacFarland is securing millions from investment giants for Fyre Festival: an event he has no ability to materialise. But that doesn’t matter. Because somewhere along the way, the idea – the concept, the online image – has become more important than reality.

This is the New York 24-year-old Anna steps into. Anyone following the Anna Delvey scandal will need no introduction to the play’s protagonist. Written by Joseph Charlton and directed by Daniel Raggett, Anna X beautifully, articulately captures the “playground” of New York City, and the smart, ambitious young people hustling to play its games.

Charlton’s script follows Anna (Rosie Sheehy), a mysterious Russian girl based on the real-life Delvey, who arrives in the city armed with designer clothes, intimidating knowledge of modern art, a lit Instagram, and stacks of $100s in cash. She is perfectly poised to infiltrate an echelon that knows next-to-nothing about art and fashion, but heaps value on those that do (or seem to). It’s rich soil for imposters, and Anna – who comes from nothing but claims she’s worth $60 million – flourishes.

Charlton adds a second character, Ariel (Joshua James), an MIT grad with an idea for a dating app valued at $200 million. Although Ariel is fictional, he may be a good approximation of the sort of nouveau riche tech guys who would have been in Anna’s circle: her ‘friends’ who somehow always ended up with the bill at the end of her wild nights.

The play’s use of projected media – displaying impressionistic cityscape backgrounds – creates an appropriately artistic and chaotic aesthetic. A brilliant opening scene has Anna and Ariel at an “immersive nightlife experience”, shouting to each other over blaring EDM. Their lines, obscured by the music, are projected on the wall for the audience to read. It’s an ingenious representation of the incomprehensible swirl of art and tech currently dominating New York’s trendiest scenes.

Sheehy’s control of her character is phenomenal. With excellent command of the Russian accent, she fluently communicates Anna’s contempt for the people around her, while occasionally allowing a childlike brightness to shine through. Sheehy, perhaps like Anna, understands the aloof coldness, which may be common in eastern Europe, is disorienting enough to Americans to unbalance them. She effortlessly demonstrates that indifference in Alexander Wang sportswear is a magnetic kind of cool. James is excellent as the earnest Ariel. Together they have great chemistry, and easily power through the rapid, intense pace of the show.

Although Anna may have harboured disdain for the socialites she conned, the play shows no animosity toward her. There’s real skill in Charlton’s ability to reveal the humanity under her manipulation. His play argues that Anna was trying to get ahead like anyone else. If her cunning took her higher than most, then it was that much further to fall.

 

Reviewed by Addison Waite

Photography by Lidia Crisafulli

 

Vault Festival 2019

Anna X

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

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A Hundred Words for Snow
★★★★★

Trafalgar Studios

A Hundred Words for Snow

A Hundred Words for Snow

Trafalgar Studios

Reviewed – 7th March 2019

★★★★★

 

“heaps of honesty and bone-dry comedy”

 

I feel a little panic entering a theatre for a one-person play to find a seemingly basic set design. My natural inclination is to want as much distraction from the solitariness of the person on stage as possible – multiple pieces of furniture to move around on, lots of little props to play with, all so we can avoid eye contact and the general intensity that comes from silently praying that this one person will remember their seventy five minute monologue. In this case, the set is a curved white wall with various white blocks, all overlaid by a partial map, and that’s all. Not much of a give-away and certainly not much in the way of distraction.

But as it transpires, there’s no need. Fifteen-year old Rory (Gemma Barnett) saunters on stage and begins talking so casually, she might have been mid-conversation with an old friend. She starts at the end – in a helicopter flying over the North Pole with her dad’s ashes and her mum sobbing – and then continues on to the beginning – a completely commonplace death (a hit-and-run) of a nice and outwardly ordinary Geography teacher, who also happens to be Rory’s dad. Thereafter unfolds the journey from funeral to helicopter.

There is a whole lot of room in this plotline for saccharine catharsis and maudlin sentiment, but Tatty Hennessy’s writing is so perfectly British, deftly avoiding the more obvious route of overly stated loss with heaps of honesty and bone-dry comedy. Lucy Jane Atkinson’s direction sees Barnett deliver the entire play with impossible ease. She repeatedly teeters on the edge of mourning relief and repeatedly pulls back, making the few moments of emotional exposure all the more poignant. The script is also sneakily quite educational; I’ve now got a whole bank of fun facts about the north pole- my favourite involves a chisel made of poo.

Christianna Mason’s design is clean and simple – the camouflaged blocks house the few props used, as well as doubling as beds and chairs when required. But that’s all. And in fact, any more would have felt superfluous and distracting. The sound (Mark Sutcliffe) and lighting (Lucy Adams) follow suit, appearing sparingly and to great effect.

I feel it requires a mention that A Hundred Words for Snow is a story about an adventurous teenage girl, produced by a near-entirely female cast and crew, which is rare on both counts. And if this play is anything to go by, it should happen all the time because it appears to lead to roaring success.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Photography by Nick Rutter

 


A Hundred Words for Snow

Trafalgar Studios until March 30th

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Good Girl | ★★★★ | March 2018
Lonely Planet | ★★★ | June 2018
Two for the Seesaw | ★★ | July 2018
Silk Road | ★★★★ | August 2018
Dust | ★★★★★ | September 2018
A Guide for the Homesick | ★★★ | October 2018
Hot Gay Time Machine | ★★★★★ | November 2018
Coming Clean | ★★★★ | January 2019
Black Is The Color Of My Voice | ★★★ | February 2019
Soul Sessions | ★★★★ | February 2019

 

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