Tag Archives: White Bear Theatre

Northanger Avenue – 4 Stars

Northanger

Northanger Avenue

White Bear Theatre

Reviewed – 22nd March 2018

★★★★

“Jack Saville’s darkly comedic script is satirically sharp”

 

English teacher Tom (Chris Born) has found a spare room online and turns up to meet his potential new housemates. There’s Sam (Rob Oldham), the trainee vicar-cum-DJ on ‘Preach First’ who spins techno remixes of Jerusalem; Jenn (Flora Anderson) the hedge fund intern with a passion for graphicly violent illustration; and the alpha-housemate Sarah (Kate Newman) who is a freelance ‘writer-slash-editor’ promoting clickbait for a living who sees the Guardian as the biggest threat to the British Left. Tom’s first encounter with the housemates suggests they might not be his cup of chai tea, but with rent at only £400 a month how could he say no? It’s only after he’s moved in that he starts to think that maybe he hasn’t been told the full story about the last housemate’s sudden departure.

Writer and Director Jack Saville’s darkly comedic script is satirically sharp, poking fun at the metropolitan, millennial, liberal elite. As a self-confessed ‘paranoid millennial’, Saville has taken the sage advice to ‘write what you know’; creating characters that are exaggerated without being unbelievable. As someone who discomfortingly fits this demographic myself, I recognised plenty of friends and acquaintances in each of the housemates, resulting in many laugh out loud moments that hit close to home.

The whole cast bring this original piece to life with nuance that avoids caricature. Rob Oldham as the bumbling, pill-popping vicar has the play’s most laugh out loud lines delivered with an arresting lack of self-awareness. Kate Newman on the other hand brings a chill to the stage as the frosty Sarah, who artfully manipulates the other housemates into her submission. Flora Anderson’s Jenn’s eccentricity appears to mask insecurity whilst Chris Born as Tom is the voice of reason, and the character the audience can most sympathise with.

Set and production design by Danny Tompkins and Lucy Murray Willis is thoughtfully detailed, with empty cans of Kronenbourg and bottles of gin stood next to a carton of chocolate soya milk; and bookshelves stacked with Orwell, Owen Jones and Lonely Planet guides to the Middle East giving an insight into the characters we can expect before they even enter the stage.

Writing like this has the brilliant power to acutely mock the everyday, but the self-reference and in-jokes can be quite exclusionary. Whilst much of the comedy is universal; the unease of your early twenties; the sad realities of ‘generation rent’; if this is not your milieu, the writing will not have the same bite.

 

Reviewed by Amber Woodward

 


Northanger Avenue

White Bear Theatre until 24th March 2018

 

 

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The Lady With a Dog – 4 Stars

Dog

The Lady With a Dog

White Bear Theatre

Reviewed – 23rd February 2018

★★★★

“warm, charming and delightful”

 

With the current news in today’s society being portrayed as very dark and upsetting, it was extremely refreshing to watch Mark Giesser’s bright and cheerful adaptation of Chekhov’s romantic comedy, ‘The Lady With a Dog.’

Set in Britain in the late 1920s, this simple “boy meets girl” love story (with the exception of a Pomeranian dog), is quite delightful. It was as fresh as the sea air that Anne Dennis (Beth Burrows) takes in when walking on the beach with her new acquaintance, Damian Granville (Alan Turkington). They soon begin to exchange their common interests – one of them being Pomeranian dogs. However, it is Damian who is up to his old tricks as he tries to seduce Anne, even though they are both married.

Something I found particularly peculiar, was the fact that both characters didn’t shy away from revealing the truth about their spouses. They were very upfront and honest, and still agreed to indulge in the secret love affair. Burrows and Turkington did a superb job at portraying the chemistry between these two devilish characters, and worked beautifully together at conveying their audacious relationship. The sexual desire between them soon escalates when they dance a passionate Argentine tango, (choreographed by Orley Quick), but later Anne admits to feeling “cheap” and “vulgar” after sleeping with the London banker. Here, Burrows succeeds in portraying an engaging story but also a very accurate one, where women in the 1920s wanted to escape from the mundane duties of a housewife and feel liberated.

There were also great performances from Duncan Maclnnes as Carl Dennis and Laura Glover as Elaine Granville, the cheated spouses who would often make the audience chuckle with their brilliant one-liners. Congratulations are definitely in order for Oscar Selfridge’s set design and Giulia Scrimieri’s costume design that both helped encapsulate the 1920s post-war feel.

There is no doubt that both the cast and crew have worked extremely hard at creating a very successful show. It was warm, charming and delightful, and was one that I very much enjoyed.

 

Reviewed by Jessica Brewer

Photography by Andreas Grieger

 


The Lady With a Dog

White Bear Theatre until 10th March

 

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