Tag Archives: The Dot Collective

One Hundred Trillion
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Old Vic Workrooms

One Hundred Trillion

One Hundred Trillion

Old Vic Workrooms

Reviewed – 7th April 2019

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“The Dot Collective and director Laura Harling have created something truly beautiful”

 

Walking into the venue I was spoken to by someone who I thought was a helpful road worker, he said β€œare you here for that One Hundred Trillion thing? It’s over there”. I proceeded to walk into the venue thinking nothing more of this. On receiving my ticket I was directed to walk up some stairs where I was greeted in an exaggerated manner by a gentleman who showed me the way to the bar or to the toilets … I chose the bar. I didn’t think much about my earlier encounters as I listened to the live music being performed in there by two of the cast.

I think it’s important to say that this isn’t a β€˜show’ or even a β€˜performance’, I feel it surpasses those terms and sits better being referred to as an experience, and what an experience it is. We are exposed to facts and figures regarding dementia which we struggle to comprehend only to be then given a visual way of thinking about it, with the idea of the bookshelf. This helps us picture how the mind works in this way and the reasons some memories are kept and some drift away.

The experience then takes us on a literal journey around the building putting us in rooms covered in writings from actual people that the company has connected with through its research. These stories and real answers to questions littering the walls allow us into the very different minds that created them, they feel true and grounded. This is something I came back to a lot during the evening, the idea of truth and authenticity. The portrayal of those incredibly touching yet personal stories was sensitively done, letting us into the lives of those affected.

Interlacing the performance elements are snippets of footage from the various nursing homes the company had visited, reminding us that these are real people and what they say matters. These clips were sometimes supported with voiceovers from the creatives on the project explaining what they had done and who they had connected with in order to get their material, this cemented for me that this was a labour of love and not a vanity project. The creative team and seven strong cast gave an impression of really caring, and for an audience this means a lot, we feel comfortable laughing at funny lines and more importantly we feel okay to shed a tear when it touches us.

One Hundred Trillion is a promenade piece and each journey into a new room is a different performance – The Frames, written by Chantelle Dusette, I Could Have Danced All Night by Margaret Perry, Lucy Grace’s Topsoil, and London Bus by Lily Bevan.

The Dot Collective and director Laura Harling have created something truly beautiful, making memories feel real and showing us how important it is to celebrate what we remember because one day there’s a chance you might forget. A true work of brilliance, sensitively crafted and authentically shown, touching the audience on a human level.

 

Reviewed by Laurie Wilson

Photography by Headshot Toby

 


One Hundred Trillion

Old Vic Workrooms until 11th May

 

 

 

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Review of Desert Dust at The Star of Bethlehem – 4 Stars

Desert

Desert Dust at The Star of Bethlehem

Blue Elephant Theatre

Reviewed – 13th December 2017

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“a heart-warmingly loving tale, for the whole family to enjoy”

 

As our population is starting to live longer, illnesses such as dementia are becoming more prevalent within society. It is finding ways in which we can help those who are suffering, keeping their minds still engaged, rather than just forgotten about in some care home. This is what The Dot Collective is trying to accomplish. They provide pop-up theatre and access to the arts for communities within a care environment. With their new festive project, Once Upon A Christmas Song, The Dot Collective facilitated a series of workshops with dementia and day care centres, getting participants to remember past Christmases, expressing what the yuletide means to them. It was this collaboration that spurned the charming modern-day Nativity story, Desert Dust At The Star Of Bethlehem, for all to enjoy.

Set in the upstairs dwellings of a 1970s East End inn, we follow the adventures of children Tina and Andy on Christmas Eve. Our main protagonists take the form of brilliant two-foot tall puppets (brought to life by actors Ariel Harrison and Chris Levens). They explore the different rooms of the inn, encountering the various lodgers, however, it is not until Tina and Andy stumble across a young couple hiding in their basement, that they discard their games of make-believe, to help the unknown woman who is about to give birth on their basement floor.

This cleverly written modern twist on the Nativity story, approached from the Innkeeper’s perspective, enchantingly encapsulated traditional Christmas values by drawing on the various mediums of music, storytelling and puppetry to make this a heart-warmingly loving tale, for the whole family to enjoy. Actor-musicians Sonya Cullingford and Toby Lee did a marvellous job at playing the multitude of characters that surrounded the puppets Tina and Andy, with all the performers making imaginative use of the basic yet homely set created by Ana Maio. Putting the show to one side, it is the uplifting process that The Dot Collective undertook that really is the special part of this production. The company have proved that quality artistic work should be for all and that you can become involved in the arts, no matter what age.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

 

 

Desert Dust at The Star of Bethlehem

was at the Blue Elephant Theatre

 

 

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