Tag Archives: Traverse Theatre Company

Black Beauty

Black Beauty

★★★★

Purcell Room

Black Beauty

Black Beauty

Purcell Room, Southbank

Reviewed – 18th December 2019

★★★★

 

“This playful, inventive show simply serves to underline and encourage the gentle values of warmth and kindness we all too often forget to prize”

 

Written in 1877 by Anna Sewell, Black Beauty remains one of the best-loved children’s books in the English language, with numerous film, television and theatre adaptations to its name. It is a simple story, in which we follow Beauty – a black horse – from his young days as a foal to his old age, through his time spent with numerous different owners, some gentle and some cruel. There are moments of high drama, in which Beauty saves the day, but mostly it is a tale which illustrates the importance of love and kindness. This warm-hearted collaborative production, presented by Red Bridge Arts and Traverse Theatre Company, stays totally true to the tender spirit of the original, but frames it within the sweet and humorous tale of two orphaned Irish brothers, who perform together as a pantomime horse and are down on their luck. This framing device allows for some lovely silly moments, and also enables the use of a few well-chosen contemporary references, both of which serve to further connect the young audience to the central story.

Paul Curley and John Currivan are a charming duo and work beautifully together as the brothers, with understated but completely masterful physical comedy and story-telling skill throughout. Although the show takes a little while to get going, once they hit their stride the performers move things along at a good pace, and deftly engineer the emotional gear changes, from hilarity to moments of genuine pathos. The creative team (Andy Cannon, Andy Manley, Shona Reppe and Ian Cameron) clearly delight in theatre’s inventive possibilities, and the show is full of joyful ingenuity, giving the children watching plenty of stimulus to fire up their collective imagination. It was a pleasure to feel the youngsters being carried away into a world in which a wellington boot can be a horse, a net curtain can be a baby, and different characters can appear and disappear at the actual drop of a hat. These imaginative realms are also enabled by Dave Troutan’s wonderful sound design, and the simple but ingenious horsebox which serves as the set’s multi-purpose centrepiece. Both set and sound design are conceptually simple but expand outwards, beyond the literal, and so further draw us in to the show’s meta-reality.

This Black Beauty wears its theatrical artistry lightly. The creative telling of a story can easily come to obscure the essential quality of the story itself, but that is not the case here. This playful, inventive show simply serves to underline and encourage the gentle values of warmth and kindness we all too often forget to prize.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

Photography by Mihaela Bodlovic

 

Southbank Centre thespyinthestalls

Black Beauty

Purcell Room, Southbank until 5th January

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Ino Moxo | ★★½ | June 2019
Piece For Piece and Ghetto Blaster | ★★★★ | October 2019

 

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What Girls Are Made Of

★★★★

Soho Theatre

What Girls Are Made Of

What Girls Are Made Of

Soho Theatre

Reviewed – 12th September 2019

★★★★

 

“the story itself is nostalgic and heart-warming with a great soundtrack to boot”

 

Everyone has a fantasy of winning big; having your absolute pie-in-the-sky, never-in-a-million-years dream come true. But what happens after it does? On discovering the fearsome coolness of Patti Smith, young Cora decides she absolutely needs to sing in a band. So, she finds an ad in the local paper and does just that, and everything just seems to fall in to place. Ten gigs in and they’re already playing for all the biggest record label reps, and in no time they’re signed to Phonogram, on tour with the likes of Radiohead and Blur, trashing hotels and playing to 2,000-strong audiences. But after one bad review in NME, everything turns sour and Cora is left trying to work out what happens next.

Based on the actual events of Cora Bissett’s teenage years and directed by Orla O’Loughlin, What Girls Are Made Of charts the epic highs and crushing lows of quick fame, and the unforgiving nature of the industry, as well as the less romantic heartaches of life in general. The main message seems to be that few people’s lives glide along on an ever-ascending trajectory, and that a successful and full life is not defined by a lack of failure. This message is muddied in the ending’s slightly disappointing emphasis on the importance of being a mother, and passing the lessons down to the next generation, as though the rest of the story were only validated by her daughter’s existence. That being said it’s hard to argue with the plot seeing as it’s based on Bissett’s life – she did in fact want to be a mother, and she did succeed in doing so.

The design (Ana Inés Jabares-Pita) is a classic gig theatre set-up, and Bissett is joined on stage by her fellow band members, Simon Donaldson, Emma Smith and Harry Ward who also aid in her story, playing the parts of concerned parents, coked-up record label heads, shifty managers, and urm… Radiohead. The quality of musicianship is excellent, and the soundtrack takes us back to the rose-tinted memory of a teenager’s 90s – the Pixies, Nirvana, PJ Harvey, and of course Patti Smith.

Bissett is an endearing and engaging story teller and though there might have been a little more grit in a true tale of rock-and-roll, the story itself is nostalgic and heart-warming with a great soundtrack to boot.

 

Reviewed by Miriam Sallon

Photography by Mihaela Bodlovic

 


What Girls Are Made Of

Soho Theatre until 28th September

 

Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Angry Alan | ★★★★ | March 2019
Mouthpiece | ★★★ | April 2019
Tumulus | ★★★★ | April 2019
William Andrews: Willy | ★★★★★ | April 2019
Does My Bomb Look Big In This? | ★★★★ | May 2019
Hotter | ★★★★★ | May 2019
Citysong | ★★★★ | June 2019
The View Upstairs | ★★★ | July 2019
It All | ★★★ | August 2019
The Starship Osiris | ★★★★★ | August 2019

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews