Tag Archives: VAULT Festival 2020

Coming Out

Coming Out Of My Cage (And I’ve Been Doing Just Fine)

★★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

Coming Out Of My Cage

Coming Out Of My Cage (And I’ve Been Doing Just Fine)

Pit – The Vaults

Reviewed – 11th February 2020

★★★★

 

“a fun and ultimately sincere one hour show which begins to portray the music, emotions and indigenous people of those glorious double zero years”

 

Previous decades have had their iconic theatre revivals. The 70s have Mamma Mia!, the 80s has The Bodyguard, and the 90s has Viva Forever! What should be clear from this list, is that the further away from a decade you get – the easier it is to write theatre for it. Coming Out Of My Cage is a genuine noughties musical, replete with all the nostalgia, joy, youth and instability which comes with the attempt to look back so soon.

Our two performers (Hannah Fellows and Tim Chapman) present a sort of old-style revue comedy act as the pair portray the creation of the show in which they are currently performing – what could be more millennial or post-modern than a show about itself? The characters, on stage and through their high-quality audiovisual content, trawl the web for every performance of Mr Brightside by The Killers only to become obsessed with one karaoke performer in the north of England. As their journey culminates, the duo finds the point at which their favourite party banger becomes a poignant swan song.

At the same time, just like the smashed avocado which, without doubt, fuelled this show – Coming Out Of My Cage tastes good but is a little green around the edges. The lack of tightness is a little challenging to ignore in the imposing setting of both the vaults physical and VAULT Festival. Moments of distracted audience participation are more Butlins than Beckett plus references and in-jokes are often not quite as funny or clever as they’re meant to be. However, these details give way to a show that does have a heart. The temptation to ironise, gimmick and meme, eventually becomes the servant to a human story.

Projections and sound recording, which Shepard Tone pride themselves in, come and go telling the story of the actors’ journey to find their mystery singer. Each section moves the narrative along well and is enjoyably novel and modern – the projections were sometimes tricky to follow due to the space, but this wasn’t enough to ruin the moment and creativity.

An opening gimmick literally sets the stage – the actors begin inside a cage which is left present for the remainder of the performance. Both performers dress in the sumptuous golden suits and ties of The Killer’s music video and this places the play in the same dreamlike Moulin Rouge where that music video occurs. On stage, music is a must for the millennial show, and the synth, ukulele and accordion are pleasant if a little off-piste from the story.

A protozoic noughties Mamma Mia!, Coming Out Of My Cage is a fun and ultimately sincere one hour show which begins to portray the music, emotions and indigenous people of those glorious double zero years. More shows will follow, and although this was the first and not the best, it is entertaining, committed and novel. The next time a newspaper columnist says that young people are too alienated and purist to have fun, make mistakes or to show they care about the little things – show them this show.

 

Reviewed by William Nash

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020

 

THE FIRST

★★★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

The First

Pit – The Vaults

Reviewed – 11th February 2020

★★★★★

 

“one small step at the VAULT Festival, but it must surely be destined for a giant leap to something much bigger”

 

You would hardly expect one of the small venues at the VAULT Festival to host an epic, but Barry McStay’s “The First” offers a space odyssey that deserves a universe of stars.

This 60-minute two-hander features two astronauts on the first crewed space mission to Mars hoping to make history. Back home a war of the words breaks out about the Martian expedition, with two writers battling to produce a speech suitable for the US President to praise its success – and another to deliver should it fail.

The play was inspired by the famous speech given by President Nixon when Apollo 11 saw the first men land on the Moon in 1969 and the alternative version which praised the crew’s sacrifice in the event of a fatality – much in the news over the 50th anniversary of the mission last year.

McStay’s rich and heart-stirring script probes a possible future scenario that feels all too real and credible with its clever parallel dramas of the eager astronauts discovering things starting to go wrong with their vessel only days away from touchdown on the Red Planet and two imaginative writers tussling with words of triumph or remorse.

In just an hour the tightly-written play manages to consider heroism, positivity in the face of danger, a depth of human relationships, coping with tragedy and humanity’s innate desire to explore beyond frontiers.

Playing all four roles are Katrina Allen and Daniel Ward, with barely a heartbeat marking the switch from the space travellers to the writers. Multi-role playing is never easy, but the two actors manage it effortlessly.

Allen is the all-American no-nonsense astronaut Rose, who envisages her face being carved on the side of a mountain to commemorate her fame. She gave up a boyfriend in favour of making the trip and Allen captures this personal sacrifice alongside the excitement the character feels at being a pioneer.

Her colleague on-board is the gay black Englishman Simeon, who Ward plays with authority. His wake-up music on the ship is the theme to “2001” (hers is Europe’s “The Final Countdown”) and he wants a school named after him . There are some fabulous moments where the pair discuss the fact that everything they do on Mars will be “the first…” yet both recognise the emotional effects of knowing that no other human beings have ever been so far apart from other humans.

Ward is also the brash and experienced political hack Marcus, forced to work on the two possible scripts with celebrated screenwriter Alisha (Allen), whose successful TV show has just been cancelled by the network.

Allen and Ward work together splendidly throughout, arguing a liberal vs conservative political agenda while developing a grudging respect for one another as the writers and keeping spaceboots solidly on terra firma as the trailblazing astronauts.

Director Emily Jenkins makes every second count, keeping an energetic pace without losing important moments of silence and reflection. Movement director Mikey Brett manages to make the astronauts look weightless, with adroit use of minimal props and set (Delyth Evans’ two tables and two chairs are skilfully utilised on an appropriately claustrophobic traverse stage with a large red disc on one wall representing Mars).

“The First” is one small step at the VAULT Festival, but it must surely be destined for a giant leap to something much bigger with a potential stage or screen production that will be out of this world.

 

Reviewed by David Guest

Photography by Alessandra Davison

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020