Tag Archives: The Actors Centre

Raskolnikova

★★★★

The Actors Centre

Raskolnikova

Raskolnikova

 The Actors Centre

Reviewed – 3rd February

★★★★

 

“the cast bring Gaitán’s play to life with imaginative staging and excellent acting”

 

Raskolnikov, an impoverished former student, has a theory that society is divided into ‘ordinary’ and ‘extraordinary’ people, and that the latter have the right to use evil means to achieve humanitarian good. Considering himself one of these superior beings, he plans and commits a crime but is consequently haunted by harrowing guilt. Although ‘Crime and Punishment’ is the story of a murder and the eventual confession of the perpetrator, Dostoyevsky’s classic novel is primarily an investigation into the psychopathology of the murderer. However, if an evening of intense moral anguish is a daunting prospect, then Teatro Nómada’s enlightening new production is the perfect antidote. Originally published in 2013 under the title ‘Leakage(s) and Anticoagulants’, writer, David Gaitán, constructs a superb dramatisation of the protagonist’s feverish ordeal in the form of a chorus of four individuals who vocalise the conflicting thoughts in his head. Sometimes they are united but often they argue amongst themselves; they tease, support, egg him on and irritate him with their nagging. Through them we can picture his mind and its perpetual conflict. Gaitán leaves to one side the complex sub-plots, the religious angle and the impact of urban hardship and uses just six of the book’s characters to focus on Raskolnikova (in this case, a woman) and her journey to the recovery of a diseased spirit.

Fresh out of the ‘Royal Central School of Speech and Drama’, director, Fernando Sakanassi, and the cast bring Gaitán’s play to life with imaginative staging and excellent acting. Through the script, artfully humanising the various voices, the five actors effect an atmosphere of foreboding with defined personalities and striking facial expressions. They merge into the plot’s personas by a simple change of costume (Rodrigo Muñoz), always leaving a member of the chorus on stage as a reminder. Raskolnikova is played by Hana Kelly, capturing the powerful angst from the opening and slowly being worn down by her own remorse. Jack Tivey is her best friend, Razumihin, charmingly garrulous and positive, while Zoë Clayton-Kelly portrays chief investigator Olga with her smug smile and self-assured composure. Zamiotov, a mere clerk in the novel, is given upgraded importance in an appealing interpretation by Alessandro Piavani. The music of Pergolesi’s ‘Stabat Mater’ is the nearest reference to the religious nature of Sonia whose pure, Christian goodness in the book is replaced by altruistic generosity and reflected with beautiful naïvety by Mariam Khundadze.

On a bare stage, Sakanassi uses constructive and imaginative movement to shape the internal conversations of Raskolnikova’s dilemma, with wooden poles as the only props, threatening, fighting and trapping him. Sound (José Canseco) and lighting (María Fernanda Cuervo) give the production the perfect technical addition, enhancing without overpowering and some unexpected singing fits neatly into the narrative. Even though it takes a minute or two to get into the style at the beginning and that the end is somewhat incidental, it is hard to believe that this is a ‘work-in-progress’. Whatever work is done or progress made, let’s hope it doesn’t lose its compelling inventiveness.

 

Reviewed by Joanna Hetherington

 


Raskolnikova

 The Actors Centre until 5th February as part of the Latin American Season

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Sorry Did I Wake You | ★★★★ | July 2019
The Incident Pit | ★½ | July 2019
When It Happens | ★★★★★ | July 2019
All The Little Lights | ★★★★★ | August 2019
Boris Rex | ★★ | August 2019
The Geminus | ★★ | August 2019
The Net | ★★½ | August 2019
A Scandal In Bohemia! | ★★★ | October 2019
Dutchman | ★★ | October 2019
Ugly | ★★★½ | October 2019

 

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Love Me Now – 4 Stars

Now

Love Me Now

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 29th March 2018

★★★★

“a relevant and contemporary narrative that explores consent within a relationship”

 

The stage is taken up by a sloping double bed, red material snaking up the headboard to weave through the ceiling, clothes strewn, all slightly reflected in the shining black floor. Designer Fin Redshaw punctuates set and costume alike with bright red, a colour that bring out the intensity of the piece and mixes sexuality with foreboding. Michelle Barnette’s debut play is opened by B (Helena Wilson) entering through the audience, staring wide eyed at us as she moves to the stage, ‘Voulez Vous’ emblazoned across her T-shirt.

In B’s flat, A is preparing to leave post sex but when the door gets stuck, the pair are forced to discuss what exactly is going on between them. Interspersed with snapshots of their relationship prior to now, what begins as a conversation about a relationship unearths an ugly and pervasive misogyny. This is a relevant and contemporary narrative that explores consent within a relationship, the silencing of women, and the double standard surrounding sex and gender, that slut-shames women who have lots of sex and deems them “whores”, yet normalises and accepts this behaviour in men.

Helena Wilson is fantastic as B, urgent and warm, rounded and relatable, she comes alive onstage and is impossible to stop watching. Alistair Toovey as A is utterly unlikeable, callous and violent. Gianbruno Spena offers sinister comedy as C, but his characterisation feels the most stylised, the least natural.

What should have been the final scene is incredibly powerful, as B prepares to go out, shaking hand applying lipstick after a scene of near rape and near domestic abuse. This is an image of absolute strength in its vulnerability, reminding the audience how unfortunately normal this kind of narrative is, how many people have experiences like this and are forced to carry on. This should have been a brutally moving final moment.

Unfortunately this is not where the play ends. There is another half hour yet to come of light relief that descends into something more sinister, and a replay of earlier scenes, that seem an unnecessary over-labouring of the point. This second segment of the play does not take us anywhere we had not already arrived at, and does not give the audience and the actor credit for being able to understand and deliver respectively the impact of what has happened to B in her single lingering stare.

This is a compelling and moving piece of theatre with a stunning performance from Helena Wilson, that just didn’t know when to end.

 

Reviewed by Amelia Brown

Photography by Helen Murray

 


Love Me Now

Tristan Bates Theatre until 14th April

 

Related
Helena Wilson
The Lady From the Sea | ★★★★ | Donmar Warehouse | November 2017
Alistair Toovey
The Box of Delights | ★★★★★ | Wilton’s Music Hall | December 2017

 

 

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