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Dreams and Dreamtime

Streams of Evocation

Dreams and Dreamtime

by Anne Warrington

Poetry Performance at Garrick’s Temple to Shakespeare, Hampton, 29th March

Review by Hilary Jones

On a near-spring evening by the Thames, the classical pavilion, Garrick’s Temple to Shakespeare offers a beautiful venue, even in twilight drizzle. Here, Poetry Performance’s production of Dreams and Dreamtime showcased an array of themed poems written by the Bard and other talented writers. It was presented by fourteen poets, actors and musicians who were dressed smartly in black, giving the right touch of elegance to their splendid surroundings.

The venue took Poetry Performance away from its usual haunt upstairs at The Adelaide, “the Queen of pubs”, in Teddington where it meets on the first Sunday of every month, into the public’s view, in an exposition of pieces scripted and compiled by Anne Warrington, who directed the performance, with the support of Kenneth Mason.

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John Proctor is the Villain

TeenAngsters

John Proctor is the Villain

by Kimberly Belflower

RCT, Wagner Johnson Productions et al at The Royal Court Theatre, Chelsea until 25th March

Review by Eleanor Lewis

The well-known quote: “Men are afraid that women will laugh at them, women are afraid that men will kill them.” is usually attributed to Margaret Atwood, though Atwood claims she actually got the gist of it from a male friend. Either way, laughter plays a large part in Kimberly Belflower’s strikingly good play John Proctor is the Villain, currently running at the Royal Court having transferred from Broadway, with many, many award nominations in its wake.

It’s important to mention the laughter, because whilst the play’s title suggests a new and possibly unsettling take on Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, the work is very funny. In a small town school in Georgia, USA, six students are studying The Crucible in their English class at their equivalent of what would be A level, Year Twelve or Thirteen here. Their popular young teacher Carter Smith engages easily with the four girls and two boys, presents them with the basics of The Crucible Salem witch trials 1692 Cf. 1950s McCarthyism in the US — and sets them a project in which they must work in pairs to create a scene involving two characters who never meet in the play and imagine how that would go.

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A Mirrored Monet

Melancholy and Tranquillity Explode

A Mirrored Monet

by Carmel Owen

Mirrored Monet LLC at Charing Cross Theatre until 9th May

Review by Gill Martin

Beige. Beige set. Beige costume. Beige future as the world blows itself up in World War I.

The master of colour, Claude Monet, whose glorious Water Lilies are favourites in global galleries and adorn a million chocolate boxes and greeting cards, is a beige figure at the opening of the London premiere of an exciting new musical, A Mirrored Monet, which is authentically inspired by Monet’s own written records and those of his peers.

But beige is out and the production explodes into colour with energy and verve, sweeping us up in the sumptuous music and insightful script.

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The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

A Paws-itively Curious Night

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

by Simon Stephens, based on the novel by Mark Haddon

Questors Productions at the Juli Dench Playhouse, Ealing, until 28th March

Review by Andrew Lawston

There is a dead dog centre stage at The Questors Theatre. A garden fork is poking out from it. The grisly tableau ought to be shocking, but it’s so instantly recognisable from the cover of Mark Haddon’s iconic novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time that it’s a strangely reassuring sight. It’s an early sign that we are in assured hands for this production of the Simon Stephens adaptation of the bestseller.

For those unfamiliar with the book or the National Theatre and later West End hit play, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time opens with fifteen year old Christopher Boone in his neighbour’s garden in Swindon, making the unpleasant discovery that someone has killed Wellington the dog. As a keen Sherlock Holmes fan, Christopher decides to investigate the canine murder, and begins “detecting” by questioning his relatives and neighbours.

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Vincent in Brixton

Drawn Forth

Vincent in Brixton

by Nicholas Wright

OT Productions at the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond until 18th April

Review by Patrick Shorrock

It seems highly implausible that Vincent Van Gough spent time as a very young man in Brixton as an art dealer and was possibly entangled romantically with his landlady and-or her daughter, until things came to an abrupt end following a visit from his sister. But, as often, with implausible reality, this is all historical fact. Writer Nicholas Wright produces a well flavoured drama from these unlikely ingredients, even if, inevitably, he has to resort to speculation. It is a measure of his success that this would still be a fascinating play, even if it wasn’t about someone who became one of the world’s most famous painters.

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Waiting for Hamlet

Parliament of Fools?

Waiting for Hamlet

by David Visick

Take Note Theatre and Smokescreen Productions at Theatre at the Tabard, Chiswick until 4th April

Review by Gill Martin

We, the audience at the Tabard Theatre, are directly in the line of the fire. In the firing squad are two actors with laser focus, bullseye accuracy and the delivery of a manic machine gun. Their ammo is words, just words, but what wordplay, thanks to a brilliant script by David Visick. If this ammunition was in the armoury of any warring power no drone would stand a chance of hitting its target.

And apart from their unwavering aim the two actors, Tim Marriott as the Old King Hamlet, and Nicholas Collett as the Fool, have only as back up a pair of hats. Yes, hats! One a bejewelled golden crown for King Hamlet, or rather his ghost as (plot spoiler) he’s but a ghost since his murder most foul by his brother who, incidently, is bedding the Queen. And a colourful cap’n’bells for the Fool, who is much wiser than the foolish King.

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The Dawn of Reckoning

Past Mistress

The Dawn of Reckoning

by Mark Bastin

MBA Productions at The White Bear Theatre, Kennington until 28th March

Review by Harry Zimmerman

A play for two actors is a popular construct these days, especially for the burgeoning fringe theatre scene. In his introduction to Mark Bastin’s The Dawn of Reckoning, director Matthew Parker, in a piece entitled The Lure of the Two-Hander, says that this format enabled him to work with his actors to “…create something quite powerful and intense”.

He has certainly succeeded in this production.

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You Stupid Darkness!

Dying to Help

You Stupid Darkness!

by Sam Steiner

Putney Theatre Company at the Putney Arts Theatre Studio until 21st March

Review by Heather Moulson

On night shift in an office setting, we see four volunteers working as the world around them falls apart. This may presumably be the aftermath of nuclear fallout, but alongside it sits a personal fallout, and the crumbling of four lives, as the volunteers grapple and struggle to stay strong for desperate telephone callers.

A triumph for the Putney Theatre Company, You Stupid Darkness is well crafted, yet deeply disturbing. The two and a quarter hour production is deftly intensive as we are drawn into an on-going battle with self-control.

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The Deep Blue Sea

Emotional Depths

The Deep Blue Sea

by Terence Rattigan

Teddington Theatre Club at the Coward Studio, Hampton Hill Theatre until 21st March

Review by Gill Martin

If you are seeking vintage Terence Rattigan look no further than The Deep Blue Sea, Teddington Theatre Club’s latest offering at Hampton Hill’s Coward Studio.

It’s an intimate setting, with just fifty seats for its first night sell-out, with a faithful reproduction of the 1950s with floral curtains, cafe chairs and fringed standard lamps, popular in post-war Britain.

The atmosphere is claustrophobic and unsettling with both acts set over a single day in a north-west London boarding house complete with landlady (Melanie Richardson) in obligatory headscarf and housecoat.

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Double Indemnity

Spark Gap

Double Indemnity

by James M Cain, adaptation by Tom Holloway

Trafalgar Theatre Productions at Richmond Theatre until 7th March, then on tour until 9th May

Review by Eleanor Lewis

Insurance salesmen don’t immediately bring to mind the idea of suspense and high stakes, passion-fuelled murder carried out in great style. This didn’t matter to James M Cain who wrote the book upon which this adaptation by Tom Holloway is based, nor did it prove an issue for the ensuing film based on Raymond Chandler and Billy Wilder’s screenplay, but a stage is a different arena and presents a new set of challenges.

The current touring production of Double Indemnity, at Richmond this week, has risen boldly to some of those challenges. Ti Green’s grey, industrial but indistinct set dominates. At times it seems to be a vast ventilation system giving the human characters scurrying about in it the look of insects, or rats. It morphs into train stations, living rooms and offices, and together with Joshua Gadsby’s stark lighting it is an appropriately film noir evocation of depression-era America where life is hard, familial relations are strained, and no allowances will be made. Convincingly driving and parking a car however, albeit a stylised car on a stage with an audience willing to go with it, is a detail that’s been rather overlooked.

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