Tag Archives: William Nash

To Drone in the Rain
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Tristan Bates Theatre

To Drone in the Rain

To Drone in the Rain

Tristan Bates Theatre

Reviewed – 11th June 2019

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“a valiant attempt to speak to modern anxieties but it falls far short”

 

To actually drone in the rain is to stand outside as it rains and to go on and on about the same thing. To perform To Drone in The Rain is to stand inside as it rains and to go on and on about the same thing. The play, written by Michael Ellis and directed by Lorenzo Peter Mason, is like a flat Black Mirror episode for the stage: a young man (Tom – Michael Benbaruk) with extreme social anxiety is being cared for by Drone Girl (Nell Hardy) and it only gets darker from there …

Well, not exactly. The production stands on some interesting themes which would certainly be likely to resonate with a typical London audience. Drone Girl isn’t just supporting Tom, she is infantilising him. Drone Girl agonises at length about the morality of this decision as Tom descends into total helplessness shouting β€˜change my diaper’ by the end. Through their characters, the writer and director worry aloud about society’s over-reliance on technology and particularly on Artificial Intelligence. But that dependence is so outright and divorced from contemporary dependence on mobile phones, that it always feels far away rather than close in. Drone Girl is tempted by Drone Boy (Lino Facioli) to run away from this life of enabling human helplessness and transcend her human shackle. Drone Girl’s struggle to decide whether or not to leave seems to be the main story arc yet mostly expresses itself in drawn-out on-stage agonising and arguing rather than journey, change or development.

Where the script and direction leave a lot to be desired, the acting also fails to light up the circuit boards. The actors had precious little to work with in terms of tension – the stakes were invariably very low – but the performances were mostly flat and without connectivity or personality. Thigh slapping, door slamming and pained looks replaced most of the human connection. If this was deliberate, to symbolise the robots of the show, then the collateral damage was an audience’s desire to actually care about the characters.

Nicole Figini’s set really took centre stage. Looking like an Ikea showroom it set the piece in a world inhabited only by professional Hikikomoris. The white walls and plain furniture were reminiscent of the specific Black Mirror episode Five Million Merits and served the storyline well. The solid audio-visual work and good lighting design break up and structure the moody rants on stage.

Taken together, the show is a valiant attempt to speak to modern anxieties but it falls far short. The politics are blurted out by characters – climate change, social alienation, β€˜the bees are dying’ – and the themes aren’t explored or developed. Instead, the characters perform a moody teenage hurley burley that doesn’t do justice to the high-quality production values and intimate venue.

 

Reviewed by William Nash

 


To Drone in the Rain

Tristan Bates Theatre until 15th June

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Butterfly Lovers | β˜…β˜… | September 2018
The Problem With Fletcher Mott | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2018
Sundowning | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | October 2018
Drowned or Saved? | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | November 2018
Me & My Left Ball | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2019
Nuns | β˜…β˜…β˜… | January 2019
Classified | β˜…β˜…β˜…Β½ | March 2019
Oranges & Ink | β˜…β˜… | March 2019
Mortgage | β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2019
Sad About The Cows | β˜…β˜… | May 2019

 

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

 

The Dysfunckshonalz!
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Hen and Chickens Theatre

The Dysfunckshonalz!

The Dysfunckshonalz!

Hen and Chickens Theatre

Reviewed – 28th May 2019

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“challenging and clever … while being fun, funny and downright exhilarating …”

 

Punk isn’t dead. And, if it is, then the body still smells. That smell is tHe dYsFUnCKshOnalZ! – coming up through the floorboards and still offending, still challenging but somehow thought-provoking. The play, written by Mike Packer and directed by Steve Thompson has all of that punk spirit but takes advantage of the time passed and the theatrical format. The delivery is a moving and hilarious story of a band coming back together so they can sell out to corporate America.

Packer has written a deeply challenging and cryptically sincere play that drives the audience through the late lives of four estranged bandmates, skewered together by the offer of hundreds of thousands of pounds from an American credit card company for their song to be in an advert. Billy, the band’s lead singer, disappears after a mysterious event in Copenhagen but each of the band’s members grows into a complicated, meaningful and developed character. The show rises and crescendos with clever themes about capitalism, integrity and death served to the audience enciphered as offensive and simple-seeming punk rock behaviour. Despite the shouting and screaming which sets a world record for fucks and shits and the awesomely loud on stage punk performances, the show whispers its ideas and never thrusts them on a single audience member.

The direction from Thompson is superb as the actors navigate a tight space at the Hen and Chickens Theatre. The music and on-stage band are weaved nicely to create a real sense of the punk in each set change, each prop and the stubborn refusal to turn anything down for an older, more mature, Islington audience. With the script setting each scene well, the musical instruments in the back of each conversation give a sense of thematic space rather than a physical location.

The acting was fantastic with Danny Swanson leading the way as Billy Abortion but others in the cast giving equally comprehensive and intense performances. Swanson finds the paradoxes in Billy the washed-up lead singer but somehow resolves them with clarity – his erratic and destructive behaviour end up enigmatically making total sense. As the evening progresses, Emily Fairman as Louise Gash delivers emotional depths that are best experienced in person, not through a review.

tHe dYsFUnCKshOnalZ! Is not to be underestimated. Although it pays homage to a genre of the past, the production is entirely of the present. Its questions, anxieties and characters make sense in our world of β€˜brand authenticity’ and Instagram art. A challenging and clever play that rejects forced intellectualism without throwing away thoughtfulness – all while being fun, funny and downright exhilarating.

 

Reviewed by William Nash

 


The Dysfunckshonalz!

Hen and Chickens Theatre until 1st June

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Abducting Diana | β˜…β˜…β˜…Β½ | March 2018
Isaac Saddlesore & the Witches of Drenn | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | April 2018
I Will Miss you When You’re Gone | β˜…β˜…Β½ | September 2018
Mojo | β˜…β˜… | November 2018
Hawk | β˜…β˜…β˜… | December 2018
Not Quite | β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2019
The First Modern Man | β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2019

 

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