Friday 31 July 2009

THE BLACK ALBUM Cottesloe This is London

I haven’t read Hanif Kureishi’s well received 1995 novel on which his new play is based, but although he sometimes evinces a sharp turn of phrase and an astute awareness, the page to stage transition (in a co-production between the National Theatre and Tara Arts) proves disappointing.
At least partially autobiographical, it follows Sevenoaks born and raised student Shahid Hasan who comes to London in 1989 to pursue his education and literary aspirations but naively gets sucked into the world of extremists. Torn between family ties (his proud widowed mother and louche, drug-taking older brother Chili), his predatory white lecturer in post-colonial literature Deedee (who embodies the hedonism of Western liberalism and inspired him to apply to the college) and the increasingly violent activities of the fundamentalist students who have appropriated his room for their inflammatory anti-racist meetings, he’s a storm-tossed cipher without much will of his own.
Kureishi’s characters come across not only as stereotypes but frequently as mere mouth pieces for the various views he wants to put across. So on the one hand we get accountancy student Hat whose father owns the local takeaway, militant Chad who used to be called Trevor and flies into a rage whenever anyone uses his real name, and Irish-accented Zulma who keeps her head covered but can’t resist peeking when their jihadist leader Riaz is forced to relinquish a Paul Smith shirt and partially strip in her presence. On the other, there’s spliff-smoking Deedee offering readily available sex and Chili’s Pakistani wife who turns up like a fashion-plate to offer advice.
The Satanic Verses are burned before our eyes, but arguments are never fully explored and, under Jatinder Verma’s direction, the clumpy scenes, awkward dialogue and mixed acting styles fail to cohere as either political or comedy drama.

Saturday 25 July 2009

Arcadia **** TNT

Friday 24 July 2009 16:09 GMT

Quite simply, this is a brilliant play by a brilliant playwright – but you’ll need to keep your wits about you to keep up with Tom Stoppard’s dazzling playfulness.

One elegant set, two time periods centuries apart, a precocious aristocrat and her randy tutor (Dan Stevens), a tortoise, a hermit, landscape gardening, thermodynamics, Byron, and a cuckolded poet are just some of the ingredients stirred into the mix.

Delightfully witty, it’s a joy from start to finish with notable performances by Nancy Carroll as a 19th-century lady of the house, Ed Stoppard as a sensitive mathematician trying to plot the habits of grouse, and Samantha Bond and Neil Pearson, a pair of sparring academics proving that making sense of the past is as fraught as predicting the future.

Duke of York’s, St Martin’s Ln, WC2N 4BG Leicester Square (0870 060 6623). Until Sep 12. £15-£49.50

Death of a Long Pig ** TNT

Friday 24 July 2009 16:46 GMT

Despite its eye-catching title, Nigel Planer’s new play fails to provide much insight whilst purporting to explore a link between the Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson and the French painter Paul Gauguin. Both ended their days, prematurely and short of cash, in the South Pacific – the always sickly Stevenson on Samoa in 1894, the dissolute Gauguin several years later.

In Polynesia, “Long pig” is, apparently, “a white man to be eaten” and although both artists are heading towards their deathbeds, the play’s two very separate acts do not make a satisfying whole.

First, Sean Murray’s feverishly bronchitic Louis is seen happily making detailed preparations for his funeral and treating the Polynesian staff with more concern than he affords his querulous wife Fanny (Amanda Boxer). No sooner is he despatched than we’re transported to Tahiti in 1897 where Gauguin (a persuasive Murray again) is mixing a potentially suicidal cocktail of arsenic and morphine to put himself out of impoverished misery. A mishmash of characters appears (a neighbour, a guitar strumming store keeper, a blind mother-in-law) for no particular reason and the whole thing fizzles out without ever having sparked.

Planer has done his research but scuppers his project with cumbersome dialogue, barely relevant and sketchily drawn minor characters and scant narrative development. Full marks, though, to Alex Marker’s well thought-out set which provides a nifty evocation of ex-pat life on foreign shores.

Finborough, Finborough Road, SW10 9ED. (0844 847 1652) 1st August (£9 - £13)

Koos Sas: The Last Bushman of Montagu **** TNT

Friday 24 July 2009 16:53 GMT

Right from the start, writer/director/composer Daniel Kramer’s charmingly jaunty but thoughtful musical (the second production in the Tricycle’s South African season) proves unexpectedly beguiling. Inspired by the discovery of a skull in the local history museum of the small town of Montagu, it’s a tale of oppression and racism and robbing of graves, as well as of the white man’s insulting fascination with ”hottentot” skeletons as a means of proving his own superiority.

Kramer frames it within the context of a love story and has created a clutch of quirky, predominantly likeable characters to show another side of the sheep-stealing outlaw who could outrun a horse and possessed an uncanny knack for slipping through the clutches of the authorities.

The dubious diamond smuggler turned photographer Scotty Lennox speaks English, but everybody else sings in Afrikaans. Clear surtitles ensure that the audience understands exactly what’s going on, and the lilting music lulls you into a campfire intimacy as Loukmaan Adams’ sweet voiced Koos Sas falls for Natalie Cervati’s orphaned Lenie. Robert Koen gets to ride a wire-framed horse as the policeman determined to track his elusive quarry (and he sings like a dream as a clergyman) whilst Jody Abrahams invests Lenie’s simple brother Skilpad with a cheeky instinct for survival.

There’s a slight tendency towards repetition and blandness, but overall the unfussy staging and endearing performances ensure that this is an evening of gentle delight rendered shockingly poignant by the inhumanity of the bushman’s final fate.

Tricycle, Kilburn High Road, NW6 7JR (020 7328 1000) to 1st August (£10 - £20.00)

Saturday 18 July 2009

Eight **** TNT

Friday 17 July 2009 16:59 GMT

I don’t know whether the financial consequences were intentional, but this well-written production rather shoots itself in the foot as far as potentially doubling ticket sales is concerned. A hit at last year’s Edinburgh festival, it consists of eight 15 minute monologues – except, when it comes down to it, it doesn’t.

As the audience arrives at the theatre, everyone is asked to vote via touch screen for the quartet of individuals whose stories they would like to hear, selecting them with the help of mug shots and a brief summary of each character’s situation. In the auditorium, all eight actors stand facing the front until the lights dim and they take their seats in the wings. Cued by a snatch of music, only the four with the most votes are given the chance, one by one, to tell their tales, leaving the remaining quartet surplus to requirements on that particular (and possibly every other) night.

Perhaps that’s part of the point and mirrors the apathy which writer/ director Ella Hickson detected among her twenty something friends when she asked them what defined their generation. It’s a shame, though – who’s going to take the risk of forking out all over again when there’s no guarantee you’ll get to see the ones you missed first time round?

So, sadly, I’ll never learn more about Millie the hooker servicing her high class clients whilst dressed in tennis whites, gay Andre who finds his partner hanging in their art gallery, Danny back from Iraq, or the precise nature of Mona’s divine encounter.

Unfaithful Astrid’s early morning confidences as she sneaks home to her sleeping partner provide the least accomplished episode of those I did see. But I was impressed by Holly McLay’s struggling single mum Bobby who gets a wistful taste of what a family Christmas could be like, Simon Ginty’s teenage Jude, seduced (albeit temporarily) by the sexual allure of his 60-year-old hostess in the South of France, and by Solomon Mousley’s American Miles, a highflying Merill Lynch broker whose charmed life is splintered into amnesiac excess when the chance act of giving a July 7th suicide bomber a 10p piece for a Mars bar randomly saves his life.

Hickson is definitely a talent to watch – I just wish that for this West End transfer she’d ditched the gimmicky consumer selection process in favour of the chance to savour more of the engaging insight this young playwright so evidently possesses.

Trafalgar Studios (2), Whitehall, SW1A 2DY Charing Cross tube (0870 060 6632) ambassadortickets.com/trafalgarstudios till 25th July (£18 - £20)

Hamlet *** TNT (starring Jude Law)

Friday 17 July 2009 17:49 GMT

Problems seem to have dogged recent productions of Hamlet. Illness meant that David Tennant barely appeared in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s transfer to London last year, and now, owing to Kenneth Branagh’s clashing commitments, Michael Grandage has replaced him as director of the final play in the Donmar West End’s high profile, sell-out season.

It proves a sombre, monochrome affair, with only a few splashes of colour and shafts of daylight breaking the gloomy claustrophobia of a prison-like Elsinore castle. But the star remains – and Jude Law, dangerously moody in grey, holds the stage as the grief stricken, vengeful Danish prince whose mother’s swift remarriage to her murderous brother-in-law has left him teetering on the verge of breakdown.

Whether huddled against falling snow to deliver the famous “To be or not to be” soliloquy, or sussing out the motives of his recently returned student friends, his performance – like the production – is swift and lucid. Gugu Mbatha-Raw’s fragile Ophelia comes into her own in the mad scene, singing with a sweet desolation as she distributes her herbs, but elsewhere this is a rather low-key affair. Her prattling father Polonius (the lines have been cut, so robbing him of the verbosity which so irritates the court and usually adds humour to the tragedy) is, here, a cold fish, barely missed when Hamlet skewers him as he eavesdrops on Penelope Wilton’s restrained Gertrude.

So this is very much Law’s night and (though the production’s dull modern dress suggests that the sumptuously costumed Madame de Sade which preceded it swallowed up most of the costume budget) he proves that he’s more than capable of delivering in black and white on stage as well as in full Technicolor on screen.

Wyndham's, Charing Cross Road WC2H 0DA Phone: - 0844 482 5120 (donmarwestend.com/hamlet/) Until 22nd August (£10-£32.50}

Saturday 11 July 2009

Medea/ Medea * TNT

Friday 10 July 2009 16:43 GMT

I don’t mind spending Saturday afternoon at the theatre – even when, for once, the sun is shining and everyone else is heading for the great outdoors. But it’s really too much to ask of anyone to sacrifice a chunk of their weekend to sit through this 76 minute interpretive muddle of the classic Greek myth.

I’m not usually so precise about running times, either, but there on stage is a pair of TV monitors, one of which counts the interminable seconds from start to finish. It’s something of a mixed blessing – I knew exactly when I’d be released, but also how many more minutes I’d have to endure.

If that seems cruel, then any director who says in a programme note that “the theatre is a toilet” is setting himself up to be judged on what his freshening up efforts produce. What Dylan Tighe has done is to render the myth of the jealous Medea completely unintelligible to anyone who isn’t already familiar with the story and irritatingly pretentious for those who are.

It’s possible, of course, that the man’s a genius and I’ve failed to realise just how clever he is - but a quick exit poll revealed an audience (both young and old) that had been confused, bored and frustrated in equal measure by the productions slow, over-crowded progress.

Suffice to say that Helen Schoene brings a commendable intensity to the role of the vengeful Medea who not only hangs her children but also takes a blowtorch to a canary, whilst Glauce (her replacement in the marriage bed) spends most of her time on stage either naked or sporting a horse’s head.

And despite all the surrounding paraphernalia which this installation employs (including a light box, washing powder, slug killer and a fish tank) the multi-media, multi-lingual trappings do little to turn this into a theatrically satisfying account of a tragic woman driven to infanticide when her husband takes a new wife.

Gate, Pembridge Road W11 3HQ (020 7229 0706) Until 18th July (£11-£16)

The Cherry Orchard *** TNT

Friday 10 July 2009 16:50 GMT

The long-awaited Bridge Project, a potentially richly rewarding enterprise between the Brooklyn Academy of Music and the Old Vic, brings together actors from across the Atlantic and the UK.

Playing in repertoire and cross-cast with The Winter’s Tale, Tom Stoppard’s new version of Chekhov’s classic is sometimes cheekily updated, but always clear, yet it proves the weaker of the two inaugural productions. It’s also the one in which the mix of accents tends to jar, despite the efforts of Ethan Hawke’s slightly grubby perpetual student.

On the whole, the Brits fare best. There are nice comic touches from Richard Easton as the ancient retainer Firs who’s losing his mind though not his loyalty to Paul Jesson’s bumptious, lazy Gaev. Sinead Cusack commands the stage as the spendthrift Ranevskaya, hanging on to past ways and scattering money she can’t afford as her estate – and beloved cherry orchard – are snapped up for development before her eyes.

But the acting honours are stolen by Simon Russell Beale’s parvenu Lopakhin, a businessman whose financial success is itself a sign of times to come and who can’t shake off the big chip of his peasant origins perched on his wealthy shoulders. Harbouring a secret admiration for Ranevskaya, he gives a masterclass in hesitation as he gets on one knee to propose – perhaps – to Rebecca Hall’s sad Varya.

But, overall, there’s something indefinable missing from Sam Mendes’ perfectly adequate production – it’s almost as though the director has tried too hard to impose his own vision on a masterpiece and has somehow diminished both.

Old Vic, The Cut, SE1 8NB (0870 060 6628)

The Winter’s Tale **** TNT

Friday 10 July 2009 16:56 GMT

Part of the Transatlantic Bridge Project, Sam Mendes’ production of Shakespeare’s tale of all-consuming jealousy is more comic celebration than tragedy once the glimmering candles of Sicilia give way to the rustic pleasures of Bohemia, with its fun-loving comedy characters.

Ethan Hawke’s guitar-strumming, light-fingered Autolycus and Tobias Segal’s Young Shepherd bat brilliantly for the US contingent, while Brits Richard Easton (as the Old Shepherd), Simon Russell Beale and Sinead Cusack are equally effective.

The famous “exit pursued by bear” stage direction raises a laugh (even though it proves a lanky specimen), and sausage-pink balloons are put to saucy use when a bucolic hoedown gets under way.

» Old Vic, The Cut, SE1 8NB (0870 060 6628). In repertoire with The Cherry Orchard until Aug 15. £9-£45

Tuesday 7 July 2009

The Observer This is London

The observer herself is being carefully observed in Matt Charman's interesting and, it would seem, well-researched new play set in a fictitious former colony in West Africa as preparations are made for its first democratic elections.
The incumbent president is expected to romp home with a resounding victory, but the initial results prove inconclusive and Fiona, deputy chief of the international observation team, becomes aware that by extending the polling hours – and thereby enabling more of the rural population to cast their votes – a change of government might become a possibility. But herposition is meant to be completely impartial, and Charman raises important questions of whether intervention – with the best intentions and the most fairminded of motives – is permissible or even in the best interests of those it is meant to benefit.
Anna Chancellor gives a fine, determined performance as the hardworking and dedicated Fiona, and is well supported by, amongst others, Chuk Iwuji's local translator, Lloyd Hutchinson's cynical BBC journalist, James Fleet's somewhat seedy Foreign Office civil servant (whose covert reports on her activities include intercepted personal e-mails to her husband), and Cyril Nri in several roles including an intimidating General.
Richard Eyre's fluent and engrossing production makes it clear that what was meant to be a free and fair process has been tainted by offstage violence, and designer Rob Howell incorporates a tension-boosting ticker tape style to monitor the countdown to the final result.
Cottesloe at the National Theatre

Saturday 4 July 2009

Apologia *** TNT

Friday 03 July 2009 17:35 GMT

There’s some nifty writing in Alexi Kaye Campbell’s new play – and some pretty good acting, too - but there are also some jarringly manoeuvred exits and entrances which disturb the flow of respected art historian Kristin’s birthday get-together. Not that things are going particularly smoothly anyway – she’s a sharp, intellectually shrewd Left Winger, still campaigning in her sixties, who won’t say something kind if she can deliver an insult instead.

She hasn’t been much of a mother, either, and her recently published memoirs don’t even mention her two sons. So, not surprisingly, things are rather tense when her older son Peter (a banker) arrives to introduce his new fiancĂ©e Trudi, an over-enthusiastic American with a strong Christian belief.

Then there’s TV soap actress Claire (Nina Sosanya) in her designer dress, unaccompanied by her partner, failed novelist Simon.He arrives later, and the midnight confrontation between him and his mother forms the still, central section of the piece – a moving account of a pivotal childhood memory epitomising her habitual absence whilst she was busy pursuing her career and political protests.

Sarah Goldberg’s kind, wholesome Trudi is the polar opposite of Paola Dionisotti’s brittle Kristin, and John Light crumbles affectingly as the damaged Simon. But it’s Philip Voss’s camp Hugh, (Kristin’s loyal, protective old friend and fellow marcher), whose expertly timed one-liners get the biggest laughs as he tries, with limited success, to forge some understanding between the differing ideals of different generations.

Bush Theatre, Shepherds Bush Green, W12 8QD, (020 8743 5050) till 18th July (£15)

Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme **** TNT

Friday 03 July 2009 17:48 GMT

The Hampstead Theatre’s 50th Anniversary season really hits its stride with a fine revival of Frank McGuinness’s award-winning drama which was first staged here in 1986. Compassionate, hard-hitting and sometimes very funny, it follows (in flashback) a handful of Ulster volunteers during the Great War, from their first days as raw recruits to their final stand at the Battle of the Somme.

Yet it isn’t just the war with Germany which concerns the playwright (surprisingly, he comes from a Catholic background) but the vehement antipathy with which these Protestant Ulstermen view their Papist countrymen. United, ostensibly, only by their religion, his eight privates are a very mixed bunch – ranging from a preacher to a pair of Belfast townies, to Owen Sharpe’s colour-blind weaver (whose chirpy disposition is battered into terror by what he has witnessed at the front) and to the cynical black sheep of a privileged family (who welcomes the prospect of death and is, ironically, the sole survivor).

Richard Dormer is outstanding as the mercurial, trouble-maker who finds brief happiness with Eugene O’Hare’s solid blacksmith. But John Dove’s production is commendably acted throughout and it proves a lasting, poetic tribute to young soldiers who died, ultimately, not just for their beliefs or for their country, but for the men who stood next to them in the trenches.

Hampstead, Eton Avenue, NW3 3EU (020 7722 9301) until 18th July (£15-£25 -under 26’s £10)