Tag Archives: The Bunker

Devil With the Blue Dress – 2 Stars

Devil

Devil With the Blue Dress

The Bunker

Reviewed – 4th April 2018

★★

“The fuse of a potentially explosive evening remained unlit”

 

There was a buzz around The Bunker Theatre last night for the world premiere of Kevin Armento’s new play Devil with the Blue Dress. In 2018, with Trump in the White House, on the back of one of the most divisive US elections the world has ever seen – one in which deep currents of misogyny were exposed within the American electorate – the time seems ripe for a political play re-examining the events of the Monica Lewinsky scandal twenty years ago. Similarly, at a time when women across the globe are again challenging patriarchal power, it seems right to have this story told by an all-female cast. Unfortunately, the promise of the piece is undermined by the lack of theatrical imagination in this pedestrian production, which even the beautifully played live saxophone underscore (credit here to the saxophonist Tashomi Balfour) failed to invigorate.

The play opens with Hillary (Flora Montgomery) drawing our attention to the nature of theatre, and to the nature of the narrative we are about to witness. She says ‘theater [sic] is the art of the impossible’ which sets the expectation for a creative theatrical language which this production notably lacks. The play is dialogue heavy and physically static, and despite the energy of some of the performers, most notably Kristy Phillips as Chelsea and Daniella Isaacs as Monica, this most turbulent tale never feels truly alive, and would have benefitted from the skills of a good movement director. Flora Montgomery was well cast as the whip smart and emotionally controlled Hillary, though her moment of breakdown felt curiously detached.

All in all, the considerable talents of the cast felt underused, and the characters felt constrained rather than released by the writing. Dawn Hope as Betty, and Emma Handy as Linda, clearly had more to give performatively than this script and its realisation allowed them, and it seemed somewhat ironic that, when given their voice, four of the five female characters spent much of their time speaking the words of the President. Similarly, the chaotic cacophony towards the end of the second act – ‘the four of you, clawing, and conniving, and deceiving each other’ as Chelsea describes it in the script – belittles the complexity of these women’s collective experience in a way that runs counter to the exposition of their story.

Towards the beginning of the second half of the play – Article Two: Obstruction of Justice – Linda says ‘if you look past all the scenery and the subterfuge here … this is just another story of mammalian urges’. And that is indeed what we were left with – another unedifying tale of a powerful adulterer. The larger dramatic canvas was left unexplored, and the fuse of a potentially explosive evening remained unlit.

 

Reviewed for thespyinthestalls.com

Photography by Helen Murray

 


Devil With the Blue Dress

The Bunker until 28th April

 

 

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Electra – 4 Stars

Electra

Electra

The Bunker

Reviewed – 1st March 2018

★★★★

“an accomplished and dynamic production, that milks its source for contemporary relevance”

 

A family tragedy of epic proportions, DumbWise Theatre bring John Ward’s new adaptation of the classic Greek tragedy to the Bunker Theatre. Electra, the youngest daughter, lives as a prisoner of her mother and the man who killed her father, while her brother Orestes is in hiding. As their personal story is manipulated for political gain, questions of revenge, loyalty and fate merge into a bloody climax.

This is a raw, stripped back staging of the classic tale updated to reflect modern sensibilities and complemented by a stark punk-rock score. John Ward’s interpretation retains the lyricism of the classic, but strips away some of the grandiosity to cut to the core of the story. Combined with Samuel Wilde’s open stage and stark lighting, this truly allows him to open up the characters and expose their full complexities to the audience. Unlike the gods, the characters do roll in the mud, revelling in their pain and humanity.

It’s a strong ensemble cast, with no weak links. Standouts of note would be Sian Martin’s coldly charismatic Clytemnestra who deftly moves the audience from fear, to scorn, to sympathy in what is a stirringly topical exploration of what it is to be a successful wife and mother in a position of power. Also Dario Coates as the naïve, conflicted Orestes, torn between loyalty to his father and his mother. Despite the over two hour run time, the pacing is tight and the musical interludes break up the action. While the first half can seem a little convoluted as it lays out the complex political landscape, it really hits its stride in the second half when we get to concentrate on the personal family drama at the heart.

It’s an accomplished and dynamic production, that milks its source for contemporary relevance. It’s incredibly effective and moving. Lydia Larson is electric and anarchic as Electra, a symbol of the revolution, full of rage and righteousness. The lasting impression is of a young woman so twisted by the pain of the past, that she has lost faith and sight in the future.

 

Reviewed for thespyinthestalls.com

Photography by Lidia Crisafulli

 


Electra

The Bunker until 24th March

 

 

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