Tag Archives: Tristan Bates Theatre

Sundowning – 4 Stars

Sundowning

Sundowning

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 18th October 2018

★★★★

“There is an outstanding performance from Hazel Maycock, whose portrayal of Betty is worth the price of admission alone”

 

Dementia is one of the biggest health and social challenges we currently face. Most people know someone affected by this cruel illness and whilst in general mental health is something increasingly spoken about, dementia still has an element of public stigma about it. It is encouraging to see more theatres presenting plays with dementia at the core of the story and one such production from Kali Theatre certainly forces the audience to think deeply about their attitude to the topic.

Sundowning is an eighty minute play by Nessah Muthy which introduces us to Betty, a dementia sufferer, her daughter Teresa and the troubled Alyssa. The title refers to a state of increased agitation, confusion, disorientation and anxiety that typically occurs in the late afternoon or evening in some individuals affected with dementia.

The play opens with Betty on a bed in a care home displaying realistic signs of vagueness. Either side of the room are two doors through which Teresa and Alyssa come and go as each scene moves. To the rear of the stage is a window through which we see changes in the light and darkness of the days as time progresses. 

The story appears to be well researched and though not all autobiographical some parts are from Muthy’s own family experience with the disease. We see how difficult it is for all affected and it gives us a glimpse into the realities of caring for someone afflicted by it. 

There is an outstanding performance from Hazel Maycock, whose portrayal of Betty is worth the price of admission alone. She certainly conveys to the audience a very realistic version of a dementia sufferer with an unnerving amount of confusion yet remembering well her beloved late husband Jimmy. Whilst her marriage was an important part of her life that she hasn’t forgotten, arguably it does form a little too much of the play. Aasiya Shah makes Alyssa a believable character whose life has gone off the rails but has a deep down love for her Nan and wants to take her from the care home for one last holiday. The third cast member Nadia Nadif as Teresa has less of a character to get to grips with, though it is clear she finds Alyssa’s sudden appearance an annoyance as she struggles to do what she think is best for her mum.

The sound design (Dinah Mullen) enhances the production. The mix of white noise and excerpts of 60s pop songs helps to give an idea of how Betty’s brain is working. The lighting design (Pablo Fernandez Baz) works well and particularly so in the last scene.

Whilst some parts of the performance did seem to drag a little on occasions, director Helena Bell generally makes the performance flow well. Overall, whilst Sundowning is not a fun night out at the theatre, congratulations should be given to all involved in this thought provoking production which can only raise the awareness and better understanding of dementia.

 

Reviewed by Steve Sparrow

Photography by Robert Day

 


Sundowning

Tristan Bates Theatre until 3rd November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Love Me Now | ★★★★ | March 2018
An Abundance of Tims | ★★★½ | April 2018
Lucid | ★★★★ | April 2018
Meiwes / Brandes | ★★★ | April 2018
The Gulf | ★★★ | April 2018
San Domino | ★★ | June 2018
The Cloakroom Attendant | ★★★ | July 2018
Echoes | ★★★★★ | August 2018
Love Lab | ★★★★ | August 2018
Butterfly Lovers | ★★ | September 2018
The Problem With Fletcher Mott | ★★★★ | September 2018

 

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The Problem With Fletcher Mott – 4 Stars

Fletcher

The Problem With Fletcher Mott

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 15th September 2018

★★★★

funny and genuine and well meaning

 

The Problem With Fletcher Mott could have chosen to be a heavy, hard to digest piece of theatre. Dissecting the role that personal and professional anxiety play in creative processes could easily be an immense task that leaves its audience drained and unmotivated. On the other hand, this piece of theatre, put together confidently by students from Goldsmith’s University, held a strong sense that this specific brand of anxiety is only as powerful as we allow it to be – and, what’s more, that perhaps it’s necessary in small doses for any kind of creativity to take place.

There were certain elements of the structure that were perhaps a little outdated: presenting anxiety in a physical form does feel a bit like an easy fix to the enormous problem of how to represent mental health issues on stage. However, I would definitely prefer to focus on what this piece is saying rather than how it says it. Amid a comedically mountainous heap of problems: The dream girl stolen swept off her feet by a more successful, more popular upstairs neighbour, the looming deadlines for new work and the ever present ghost of a past successful play that came and went six years ago, there’s a very emotionally well tuned message. That said, it never becomes preachy.

The protagonist is far from always right, and neither is anyone else. Instead, the entire cohort of characters just spent an hour and a bit being horrified by the extent to which everyone around them could be wrong, and personally I think that worked better.

All in all, The Problem With Fletcher Mott was just funny and genuine and well meaning, and really that’s all it needs to be.

 

Reviewed by Grace Patrick

 


The Problem With Fletcher Mott

Tristan Bates Theatre as past of Mélange: The New Musical Theatre Festival

 

 

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