Blue Tights, Red Knickers and an ‘S’ on her Vest
Lion and Unicorn Theatre
Reviewed – 14th August 2019
β β β
“the tone is charmingly undramatic, somewhere between a βmy rubbish lifeβ comic monologue and self-deprecating lifestyle piece in a colour supplement”
Microaggressions at work, the indignities of commuting, the strain on relationships caused by overworkβ¦ these experiences speak to millions. In this production, they speak directly to Jenna, alone on stage while others in her life are represented by disembodied voices. Itβs an elegant way to portray social anxiety as a world inside the head that alienates even those who try to help. The homemade superwoman costume Jenna wears signals her as the people pleaser, taking on piles of paperwork from idle colleagues while working late to fulfil her own stressful function as a legal representative.
This everyday story is low key and familiar, something of an attractive change for a Camden Fringe show. A victim of mildly disappointing annual reviews and far from horrific workplace bullying incidents, Jenna bemoans the lack of pastoral care from the firm but also dreads the camping break they organise as a bonding exercise. She resents the loss of support from best friend David as he moves away but is wary nevertheless when he tries to stay in touch, and although she groans at her motherβs calls, itβs her mother who worries enough to pay for her endless therapy sessions.
Itβs an interesting conundrum, figuring out how to respond sympathetically to someone so relatively fortunate without falling into the same trap as her work colleagues. Itβs easy for the insensitive or inexperienced to dismiss depression and anxiety disorders with βget a gripβ and βcheer upβ, yet itβs not clear from Jennaβs description that she is suffering from either of these serious mental health problems, as opposed to the stress of working in an unhealthy culture.
Thematic Theatre is co-founded by the playβs writer and main performer, Laura Shoebottom, along with Liam Ashmead, who both directs the piece and voices the role of David. Created expressly to stage productions with important themes, they tackle here the subject of mental health, but in their own misdiagnosis of anxiety as something that can be cured by changing jobs or being more assertive β in other words, by getting a grip β they threaten to undermine their message and mission should anyone examine them too closely.
However, the tone is charmingly undramatic, somewhere between a βmy rubbish lifeβ comic monologue and self-deprecating lifestyle piece in a colour supplement. Laura Shoebottom writes and plays the central character with a drily knowing quality, while her self-confident presence is given excellent technical support from Chuma Emembolu, Daniel Foggo and Phil Matejtschuk in the sound design and lighting departments. For a city-living audience the time passes pleasantly, affirming that their bad work experiences are common and that if you do occasionally feel isolated, youβre not alone.
Reviewed by Dominic Gettins
Photography courtesy Thematic Theatre
Blue Tights, Red Knickers and an ‘S’ on her Vest
Lion and Unicorn Theatre until 16th August as part of Camden Fringe 2019
Previously reviewed at this venue:
In the Wake of | β β β | August 2018
The German Girls | β β β | August 2018
The Cut | β β | November 2018
BackPAGE | β β Β½ | February 2019
Like You Hate Me | β β β | April 2019
Mama Gβs Story Time Roadshow | β β β β β | May 2019
River In The Sky | β β Β½ | May 2019
Euan | β β β β | July 2019
The Death Of Ivan Ilyich | β β | August 2019
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