Tag Archives: VAULT Festival 2020

Aamira And Gad

★★★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

Aamira And Gad

Aamira And Gad

Cavern – The Vaults

Reviewed – 22nd February 2020

★★★★★

 

“Content follows form in this beautifully created production”

 

Bee in my Beanie use puppetry, audience participation and multi-layered narrative to explore how relationships are governed by war in a splendid new work of immersive theatre – Aamira and Gad.

Upon entering the site, audience members are co-opted as new recruits to the Society of Archivists. The society leader – a mole-like puppet (embodied by the wonderful movement of Thomas Delacourt) – soon emerges to lay down the law. We are to observe, report on, but not interfere with the ensuing events.

Message understood, we move further into the space and to a second narrative layer. Now observers – we meet Aamira and Gad – two children on opposing sides of a conflict. Aamira (Demi Wilson-Smith) is a third-generation story teller searching for a key. Gad (Emma Zadow) is a young boy from a long line of soldiers who has found a key. As the two tell their own tales and tussle to understand each another we learn that their lives have been tragically intertwined. The question is – will we, as Junior Archivist, dare to ignore the Arch Archivist, interfere with events, and bring the tale to a different ending?

Each time the two children tell a story their words are brought to life by beautiful movement pieces performed by Delacourt, Alexandra Ewing and Lyla Schillinger. As Movement Director, Ewing has brought ample helpings of the spirited, child-like play that is at the heart of the company’s ethos. The production blends audience participation; layered, storytelling and movement pieces into a complex whole. Making direction as much about the finnicky world of event management as it is about artistic delivery. Co-Directors Tess Agus and Katherine Sturt-Scobie overcome each of these hurdles superbly to deliver a smooth production without ever losing the rich fantasy of the performance. Set consultant Charlotte Cross and Music Director Edward Watchman each bring additional layers of depth to the immersive experience.

Content follows form in this beautifully created production. The company worked with social psychologist, Dr. Smadar Cohen-Chen to understand how people relate to one another whilst living through war. What emerged was importance of hope and narrative in overcoming the barrier imposed by conflict. The use of audience participation to deliver this message is terrific. In weaving the audience into the story, the company help us to understand how we are each responsible for the narratives of the world and that we each have the power to change them.

 

Reviewed by Euan Vincent

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020

 

Essence

Essence

★★½

VAULT Festival 2020

Essence

Essence

Crescent – The Vaults

Reviewed – 21st February 2020

★★½

 

“A more nuanced approach to this narrative would’ve made this script by Sarah Henley, far more successful”

 

Elyot (Timothy O’Hara) is living a life of strict routine, a life that avoids external forces. He rotates wordless records that he plays on his gramophone, his alarm is going off constantly, moving him on to the next thing, keeping him in motion (sound design by Ally Poole). He is counting down his life with a week by week tally. He has two plants that he spritzes regularly, and he is building a boat. He’s here and ready to improve. Until Laquaya (Nina Barker-Francis) climbs through his window, dancing into the stage space, and kicking over his plant. She’s 14, she’s a feminist and until recently, a young carer – and she’s here to meet her father. Over the course of the play the two very different characters find commonality, sharing a loneliness that the other might be the cure for.

The themes of ‘Essence’ are well worth exploring – loneliness, grief, difference, separated family members – but the writing is too heavy handed. Elyot’s transformation feels like flipping a switch it happens so fast, and as a result doesn’t feel believable. And his process of acceptance is too literally presented to the audience. A more nuanced approach to this narrative would’ve made this script by Sarah Henley, far more successful. Whilst the final scene is lovely, the best in the play, it feels like an obvious destination for the narrative.

Nina Barker-Francis is a brilliant presence on stage, full of energy and warmth and honesty. Her entrance lifts the piece and it is her we are rooting for through out. Timothy O’Hara is also strong, but he has a harder job with such an insular character that doesn’t bring much energy to the stage. He is particularly lovely in the final scene as we see the character begin to come out of himself and let go. Henley creates two very different characters and in doing so puts an unusual and interesting dynamic onstage.

The stage, set up as Elyot’s home, features all the components for his routine. As he begins to accept Laquaya in his life, these components evolve as he does. The themes and the characters are the strength of this show, delivered by our two actors. But the narrative itself lacks the nuance that this story requires.

 

Reviewed by Albert Owl

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020