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The God of Hell thespyinthestalls

The God of Hell

Theatre N16

Reviewed – 13th July 2017

 

⭐️⭐️⭐️

 

 

“A powerful performance from Helen Foster”

 

Followers of American Sam Shepard, once described as ‘the greatest American playwright of his generation’ will be aware of his prolific work that has spanned over half a century. For those less aware, he has written over forty plays including The God of Hell, described by Shepard as ‘a take-off on Republican fascism’.

The show premiered in New York in 2004, following the publication of The Plutonium Files:America’s Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War. The book is a history of US government-engineered radiation experiments on unwitting Americans.

The stage play, starring Tim Roth, closed after a short run and was last seen in the UK at the Donmar Warehouse in 2005. It has now opened at the Theatre N16 for a 4 week run directed by Rocky Rodriguez, Jr.

Rodriguez has made the point that he wanted to take on one of Shepard’s most surreal pieces of work though his interpretation is not in line with the run at the Donmar. He has certainly pushed the boundaries particularly in the final third of the play where things become quite bizarre.

Upon entering the theatre the audience is immediately drawn into a marvellous set designed by the exceptionally talented Abigail Screen. We are facing a kitchen and it is almost exclusively black and white, having a cartoon style feel. Think of the pencil-sketch animation in the 1985 A-ha Take on Me video.

We are transported to the bleak and bitterly cold state of Wisconsin where Frank and Emma live in rustic isolation on a dairy farm. They are among the last holdouts in an area where independent dairy farmers are being pushed out of business. Their peace is shattered when Graig Haynes, a friend of Frank, comes to stay and has Welch, a supposed salesman, in hot pursuit. We soon learn that Graig is a radioactive refugee from a plutonium producing establishment. What follows is a process of intimidation in which Welch gets his man and terrorises the innocent mid-westerners.

God of Hell cast thespyinthestallsHelen Foster & Craig Edgley

The star of the show is without doubt Helen Foster who plays Emma and commands the stage taking her character from homely to hysterical as the play progresses. Her accent was spot on and her performance is worth the price of admission alone.

Ryan Prescott

Craig Edgley plays Frank, a dependable man who loves looking after his heifers and Ryan Prescott is a watchable as Haynes with his unpredictable and often violent behaviour. Less convincing is Thomas Throe as Welch, who failed to hit the spot with either his accent or portrayal of what is a sinister character.

The play does become quite bizarre towards the end particularly when Haynes was paraded in a gimp mask with an electric lead attached to his genitals. This dark production demands attention throughout and leaves the audience with much to think about. It is a fast paced hour long show brought to the stage by critically acclaimed fringe theatre company Craft Theatre, the first piece in a 12 month season of four shows.

 

 

Photography courtesy of Craft Theatre

 

THE GOD OF HELL

is at Theatre N16 until  5th August

 

 

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 An Evening with Giulia

 An Evening with Giulia

Blue Elephant Theatre

Reviewed – 13th July 2017

 

⭐️⭐️⭐️

 

 

“Incredibly beautiful to watch”

 

 

The seven dancers who comprise Giulia Iurza’s company J7S walk into the unadorned space in the dark to begin the first piece, Shikishin Funi (the title taken from Buddhist terminology, and referring to the oneness of mind and body). The Blue Elephant is an intimate venue, which means we can hear their feet on the floor. This, it turns out, is the perfect introduction to Giulia and the company’s work, which brings the spirituality of human connection into focus.

It is movement with intensity, and we can see and feel the physical and emotional transactions that are happening throughout, whether between groups of dancers, or in a lone performer’s sequence. The dancers have clearly evolved a shared movement language – it is at once sinuous and precise, and makes moments of touch, or lack of touch, resonate – but each performer’s individual character is also given room to breathe. This is incredibly beautiful to watch, and the minimalist score, developed in rehearsal by Mau Loseto, feels organically connected to the movement, rather than functioning as either a backdrop or a driver.

After an interval, and a short film about the process of developing the work, we were treated to the evening’s second piece, a work in progress called The Other Self . This was a duet, and the two dancers – Guilia Avino and Paola Drera – were mesmerising throughout. Their evident emotional connection created a powerful charge in this intimate portrayal of the dance of friendship; full of love and tenderness but not shying away from dissonance and pain. As a performance, it was immensely moving.

This reviewer only wished that we had been left with the resonance of the performance, rather than segueing into a Q&A. Part of the pleasure of attending a dance show is seeing the human body at its most eloquent; verbal exposition seemed particularly redundant after such physical skill and intensity.

A few things didn’t quite work for me – some of the travelling sequences in the first piece seemed a little too close to contact improvisation in the rehearsal room, and some of the detailed hand work lacked precision – but these tiny quibbles did not take away from an exciting evening with a passionate young company that has a bright future.

Tonight (14th July) is their final night at the Blue Elephant, but I have no doubt that this will not be the last opportunity to spend an evening with Giulia, as it was an evening most assuredly well spent.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

 

Blue Elephant

 

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