Tag Archives: White Bear Theatre

Schrödinger’s Dog – 4 Stars

Schrödinger’s

Schrödinger’s Dog

White Bear Theatre

Reviewed – 1st November 2018

★★★★

“There are some side-splitting one-liners in this play, as well as some hard-hitting ones too”

 

Hugo wants to kill himself, but he doesn’t necessarily want to die. Schrödinger’s Dog is a dark comedy about male suicide. It follows a young man’s chaotic night as he tries to make some difficult decisions. What ensues is a sequence of hilarious events that are just about fantastic enough to be believable. Hugo (Monty Jones) reaches out to unhelpful friends and unsuspecting strangers, from Chucks (Aaron Phinehas Peters), the pizza delivery boy to Barbara (Lindsey-Anne Barnes) from the call centre. There is hysteria, there is an accidental kidnapping, there is despair and there are moments of true kindness.

Actor and writer Monty Jones has perfect comedic timing. His portrayal of Hugo as a simultaneously charismatic and narcissistic young man carries an incredible vulnerability and humour. Equally, Aaron Phinehas Peters’ performance of Chucks is focused, an amiable and calm presence to Hugo’s unravelling. Their initial conversation kindles a friendship and is among the most touching and uproarious scenes in the play.

Director Dom Riley manages to turn The White Bear’s small and flexible stage into a space of intimacy and claustrophobia. With some well chosen, and often ironic, chart toppers added to the mix, Hugo’s flat feels like a space in which anything could happen. As the gathering of strangers increases, however, there is a feeling that the stage is about to burst. There are nine actors in this play. Though they are all in tune with one another, the sheer number of people on stage does detract from the most poignant points in the play. Some of the tenderest moments are skipped a little too quickly. And then, of course, there is Schrödinger’s Dog, which, despite being the title, seems like the least important part of Hugo’s night.

This is the work of a young and promising theatre company, Break the Verse. It has set out a distinctive LGBTQ agenda, and, in that respect, hits the mark. There is a brilliant subplot with Simon and Nick, a couple in the midst of their own problems. It is so refreshing to see members of the LGBTQ community who are written and performed as fully fleshed out characters and not there to just drive the plot.

There are some side-splitting one-liners in this play, as well as some hard-hitting ones too. Monty Jones’ writing bears resemblance to the wit and absurdity of Almodovar’s Women on the Edge of a Nervous Breakdown. Though the chaos may get a little out of hand, at no point does the play make light of pain or sadness. Instead, it inspects the unbearable lightness with which depression can be treated or misunderstood. ‘I don’t feel how I’m supposed to feel,’ Hugo tries to explain. But Hugo reminds us how hard it is to talk about depression, particularly to those who haven’t the tools to listen. Schrödinger’s Dog’s comedic value is not in making fun of something serious, but in looking at the ludicrously funny things we do when we at the end of our tether.

 

Reviewed by Tatjana Damjanovic

Photography courtesy Break the Verse

 


Schrödinger’s Dog

White Bear Theatre until 3rd November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
This Story of Yours | ★★★ | January 2018
The Lady With a Dog | ★★★★ | February 2018
Northanger Avenue | ★★★★ | March 2018
Grimm’s Fairy Tales | ★★ | April 2018
Lovebites | ★★★ | April 2018
The Old Room | ★★ | April 2018
The Unnatural Tragedy | ★★★★★ | July 2018
Eros | ★★ | August 2018

 

Click here to see more of our latest reviews on thespyinthestalls.com

 

 

Eros – 2 Stars

Eros

Eros

White Bear Theatre

Reviewed – 30th August 2018

★★

“There are certainly moments that have potential, where the dramatic tension begins to draw you in, but unfortunately, these are few”

 

Click. Flash. Boom. A picture is worth a thousand words. As the saying goes. With a press of a button, a moment can be encapsulated forever – a piece of reality on film. But what happens when reality has been manipulated to supply a fantasy? What happens when the fantasy wants to take over? Eros makes a good attempt at dealing with the notion of consent within the art world, but fails to delve as far as it could have gone.

Ross was once a well-known photographer, capturing stunning women. He says he took photos to depict the art of beauty. Kate, a previous model and love affair of Ross remembers things differently, in front of the lens. Kate makes a surprise visit to Ross’ studio, after twenty years apart, and now she is looking for answers and justice for what he did. Terri, a young runaway who has recently been living in the studio in exchange for doing odd jobs, finds it hard to believe the past of a man she has come to know as only showing her pure kindness.

Living in an era where historical sexual assault or ‘sexploitation’ cases have risen to the surface, Eros seems, on paper, to be a highly relevant piece of theatre. Playwright Kevin Mandry makes a thought-provoking decision of setting the play in the nineties, a good twenty years before the recent eruption of people bravely stepping forward, illustrating our change in attitude to dealing with such matters of physical or mental abuse. Back then, only small steps were being made. If the play was set in present day, I’m sure the character Kate would go to the police.

What comes across as odd within the play is the dynamic between Kate and Ross. One minute Kate is filled with hatred towards Ross for his past behaviour, the next, she is reminiscing the old times, drinking, dancing, laughing. It would be understandable if this was a tactic Kate uses to push Ross into a false sense of security. If this was Mandry’s intention, it certainly does not come across this way. Instead, the character arc just seems confused with Kate’s motives not ever being clear.

Felicity Jolly as Terri offers the most genuine performance, giving a believable turn as a naïve, confused, young woman, seeing only the best in people. Stephen Riddle and Anna Tymoshenko as Ross and Kate have moments of true connection, which you can’t take your eyes off of, however, most of the time, dialogue feels forced, as they stiffly move about the stage as placed by the director (Stephen Bailey).

As previously mentioned, Eros seems to tick the right boxes on paper, yet fails to deliver the goods in its execution. What could have been a tense, high-stakes psychological drama, set in the claustrophobic studio, ends up being rather lack-lustre. There are certainly moments that have potential, where the dramatic tension begins to draw you in, but unfortunately, these are few. A provocative idea that misses the mark.

 

Reviewed by Phoebe Cole

Photography by Stephanie Claire Photography

 


Eros

White Bear Theatre until 15th September

 

 

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