Tag Archives: The Vaults

Fool Britannia
★★★

VAULT Festival

Fool Britannia

Fool Britannia

The Vaults

Reviewed – 23rd January 2019

★★★

 

“Built on the irresistibility and sheer gall of the two contrasting comics they achieve a good degree of buy-in from the audience”

 

In its maze of neon and graffiti clad theatres and bars spreading like a psychedelic moss beneath Waterloo station, VAULT Festival is the perfect emblem of a London creative culture clinging to any unclaimed surface and proliferating in every crevice. This year the festival reaches new heights of aspiration with digital screens, airport style announcements of performances about to begin and earnest figures with ear pieces and tablets directing the subterranean human traffic. Apocalyptic train sounds and dank smells arguably add to a unique fringe atmosphere, whose spirit and energy come from breakthrough acts, experimental theatre and promising new comedy shows like Fool Britannia, the surreal comedy vehicle of Neil Frost and Dan Lees.

The show opens with Dan Lees in gown and mortar board, standing before a hand-made school lectern (motto: Ludum est fun) delivering a faintly silly start of term address. Neil Frost then appears as a gurning man-child supply teacher, and between them they embark on educating the audience on an utterly nonsensical history of the British Isles. Firstly, they change into cartoon cavemen brandishing inflatable clubs, then Hadrian and his builder (with inflatable hammer), then Vikings, rowing a hand drawn boat with wooden spoons singing ‘We’re Viking’s – and so on. Each period is simplified to nothingness, reaching a peak with Neil Frost as Shakespeare wearing a hand-folded paper ruff simply enjoining the audience to say ‘Shakespeare’. Occasionally they digress for sketches of affable randomness until the whole timeline and premise of the show is abandoned for some more school-based sketches, audience participation and a smattering of improvisation.

Their act is a classic comedy duo blending Pete and Dud with the dodgy props and wild invention of Vic and Bob, plus a suggestion of Lee and Herring and even, for aficionados, The National Theatre of Brent. The difference is that, apart from a Dan Lees ballad about St George and The Dragon, there’s not much sense in this show that any of the sketches have actually been written. It’s more a sequence of first thoughts on the back on an envelope. Sounds terrible? Yes, but the lack of bother, point or preparation is the joke and the Pythonesque method of undermining each premise as soon as it’s established succeeds in keeping the audience engaged, never knowing what to expect and not knowing where any gag is going. Built on the irresistibility and sheer gall of the two contrasting comics they achieve a good degree of buy-in from the audience. In any case, as they breezily acknowledge in asides while sidling around the stage as Vikings, ‘it’s not for everyone’.

 

Reviewed by Dominic Gettins

Photography courtesy Mad Etiquette

 

Vault Festival 2019

Fool Britannia

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

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Lola

Lola
★★★★

VAULT Festival

Lola

Lola

The Vaults

Reviewed – 23rd January 2019

★★★★

 

“the incredible writing, coupled with Dunne’s fluid, lively direction, allows the performances to spring to life”

 

Papercut Theatre have created something truly special with Hannah Nixon’s play Lola. Under Melissa Dunne’s direction, and using Nabokov’s Lolita as a source of inspiration, the play effortlessly addresses issues of power and gender that are timely and highly impassioned.

The play follows Lola (Gemma Barnett), an 18-year-old sixth former who is attempting to navigate the restraints and obsessions put on her gender and sexuality by the boys, and men, around her. In seeking the council of two of her teachers, Jez (Rob Ostlere) and Olivia (Joanne Ferguson), the play spills into a gripping and highly relevant drama of gender politics that refuses to stay silent.

Nixon’s writing is intricate and subtle and yet so full of weight. She’s able to capture so much story in a few sweeping statements, thus giving space for some excellent drama to play out between the play’s three characters as they struggle for power. The dialogue is seamless and flows like everyday conversation, constantly building in tension and allowing us to read deeper into all three personalities. The script does, however, lose some of its feeling when slipping into the dream sequences, which are a little jarring and occasionally act to take us out of the drama, rather than to throw us in deeper.

That said, the incredible writing, coupled with Dunne’s fluid, lively direction, allows the performances to spring to life. Ferguson’s Olivia is proud and human, funny and heartfelt. Ostlere’s Jez is charming and unnerving, and there is some real genius behind the actor’s creation of this untrustworthy ‘nice guy’ who proves difficult to work out. As Lola, Barnett’s performance takes centre stage; it’s mesmerising, raw and so beautifully executed. She’ll make you laugh, she’ll make you cry.

Lola is one of the best new plays I’ve seen a long while – it’s exciting, it’s slick, it’s inspiring and it showcases some real upcoming talent. Contemporary drama about gender politics can so often miss the mark, but this company have produced something that challenges social norms in a way that feels original, rousing and ultimately moving. I urge you to go and see this play if you can.

 

Reviewed by Tobias Graham

Photography by Ali Wright

 

Vault Festival 2019

Lola

Part of VAULT Festival 2019

 

 

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com