Category Archives: Uncategorized

The School For Wives

Nova @ India Buildings

3rd – 20th August (14.00)

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Script: five-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: four-stars

Designed around the 1662 comedy of the great French comedic Playwright, Moliere, The School of Wives is a play about desire and passion.  Known as one of the greatest actors in comedy of his time, Moliere gave us such classics as The School of Wives.  A Lord, a young lover and a pair of  inadequate servants make for a good tale of near misses and tribulations. The set is fine, the space is used well, & with an excellent use of period costumes the atmosphere is made comfortable and believable as our young, beautiful girl is plucked from the hands of poverty to begin her fight for love.

200px-Moliere2.jpgTSFW is a serious, yet shockingly funny take on an old classic born well before its time, brought to Edinburgh by Roll Up Theatre  With underlying jokes directed at the smug sexual part of the show, the laughs where creeping out between bright, crisp and finely tuned acting as all the cast delivered their parts with intent. The two servants are played beautifully, using their ability to mock the master they create a chamber of laughter. At all times this is a show of great physicality – bodily movembents combine with facial expressions to describe the feelings at hand, & furnish in the viewer an emotional attachment to the characters & their situations. The leading male shone in particular, & to witness such ability tocompletely pull in an audience with such skills is endearing.

When a production is taken from centuries ago and brought forward to the modern world, it requires remouldingto suit the changing tastes of a zeitgeist. With that in mind, does TSFW achieve this? I would say yes, & after the performanceI got the head’s up from Roll Up Theatre themselves, who told The Mumble, ‘Our adaptation invigorates Moliere’s classic with new dialogue and new characters, promising to bring both razor sharp wit and the darker subtexts of paranoia and possessiveness to the fore in this masterful exploration of male fragility and domestic politics.’ Step-by-step their show pulls you in, until you arrive at the crux & crossroads of the play – a decision has to be made regarding this raging love triangle. Uncle, young lover or the loyal maids… who will it be?  Funny, serious, twisted and gripping, this is a must see show for any Moliere adept or any lover of live theatrical drama… & you will be, like I, happily surprised!

Reviewed by Raymond Speedie

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Of Wardrobes & Rings

Greenside @ Nicholson Sq

Aug 16-20 (18:30)

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: four-stars

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The Real CS Lewis

David Payne is becoming rather famous for being another man – the 20th century literary heavyweight, CS Lewis. He is already doing one reflective piece on the life of Lewis at this year’s Fringe, but is also sandwiching this little baby into the middle of proceedings. The scene is Oxford, 1963, & we are witness to the singing swan of a life-long friendship between the two progenitors of the fantasy genre – Lewis & Tolkien – played in a fatherly fashion by David Robinson. What follows is a brisk survey of Jack & Tollers years together, romantic reminiscences from their youth flow into sabre-rattling regrets from their decisions in later life, such as Tolkien’s Catholic rejection of Lewis’ divorcee wife. The tone is best exemplified by, when at one point, Tolkien ruminates on how he did not work hard enough on getting Lewis the poetry chair at Oxford, to which Lewis remarks that his friend was, ‘The Lord of the Strings.’ That Lewis never got the chair is no great loss to the establishment (I’ve read his poetry) but what we do learn – if Payne’s performance is to be believed – is that when Lewis died, he was a loss to humanity & to one human in particular.

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The two parts are perfectly cast – especially when Tolkien’s brooding brow battles with Lewis’ angelic countenance while they discuss the nuances of creating their fledgling fantasy genre. They share sparkling & serene conversation, punctuated occasionally by Meg Ellisor’s Hatty, a young American lady who brings in the tea like the chorus at the altars of a Pindaric ode. The entire play is something of a confessional by Tolkien, who is really the central figure in the play, & an excellent paced & poised one too. They are only doing the play this middle week, so I urge any lover of both theatre & said literary giants to catch ‘Of Wardrobes & Rings,’ before it is too late.

Reviewer : Damian Beeson Bullen

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The Man Who Built His House To Heaven

Greenside @ Infirmary St

Aug 15-27 (13.50)

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: three-stars   Performance: four-stars

As you enter the theatre for ‘The Man Who Built His House To Heaven,’ you are faced with a striking scene. Against the black velvet curtainrie & under a bright spotlight stands a set of scarlet red step-ladders, to which is soon drawn, like a moth to a flame, our protaganist. Welcome to the world of Keenan Hurley, who delivers an extremely detailed all-American soliloquy with DeCaprionic ease. His tale is of the golden boy at college who built his life to order – wife, kids, house, job, he was living the suburban dream. ‘It felt good, a little, for a moment…’ But was that enough? It was time to add space & storeys to his home.

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What follows is akin to what Imhotep must have gone through when building the burial pyramid of Pharaoh Djoser in 2,700. A yearning for something beautiful, but making it up as one goes along. As we watch Hurley unfold his multi-layered tapestry of words, one discovers his creation is a metaphor for man’s spiritual wasteland, & that certain something which dwells deep in us all, that is to say the dissatisfaction in the futility of existence. A tale of obsession that is both dark & light, & one which has the crowd chuckling throughout, Keenan Hurley’s charisma & the excellent mood-swathing lighting add to a psychological journey of some merit.

Reviewer : Damo Bullen

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Paper In My Pants

Greenside @ Infirmary Street

Aug 15-20 : (16.10)

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: three-stars

It a tough market, the Edinburgh fringe, everyone trying to do something different, to stand out from the ground. Well, this year’s offering from Birmingham’s Blue Orange Theatre has certainly done that. As we take our seats, we are invited into the manic mind of writer obsessively struggling against his deadlines & the creative flow of his book. Intriguingly, wondrously, his characters are clad in in angel white upon the stage, & slowly become parley to the creative processes of the writer… nagging & nit-picking away as they try to reshape & improve their individual lots. In essence, then, Paper In My Pants is a play which offers a fascinating glimpse inside the mind of a writer very much wrestling with his creative demons

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Its all a bit like the Shining & a bit like the Numskulls, a comic strip I used to read in my youth, or that recent Pixar animation, Inside Out.But its better, of course, because the characters are deeper, with real-life concerns & conversation. As they manifest themselves outwith the writer’s imaginations & trip through their glitzy chit-chat, I’m like this is really good stuff, & one of the few plays I’d like to see again, just so I can get to grips with the many nuances involved in Paper In My Pants.

.Reviewer : Damian Beeson Bullen

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I’m Doing This For You

 Summerhall

5th – 28th August

 £10.00 – (£8.00)

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: four-stars

Waiting in the bustling corridors of Summerhall we are approached by this eccentric blond headed, red-dressed diva. Handing us birthday balloons, her seductive accent gets you thinking… ‘What’s going on here?‘ Ushered to our auditorium-like seats, we are then offered up a warm-hearted shot of Vodka… with this show beginning in complete darkness, you are becoming bemused. A simple stage-set of balloons, black curtains and a tray of cup cakes makes it easier to concentrate on the polite, yet simply committed character that Haley McGee has created.

This is a show of incredible facial expressions and acting, theatre, comedy , drama, story-telling and sexual innuendos all wrapped up in one.  The audience its dragged into the show with reasonable anticipation, whilst being allowed to interact with pleasure. A gutsy performance which was delivered with shock laughter, mind-provoking images and dramatic outbursts. It is clever, yet simple !!  Take a surprise birthday party for your partner and turn it into a production of lust and disaster ..  Genuinely surprising,  this show had my attention.

Following Haley attentively from one side of the stage to another, she uses and commands the stage well.  With occasional light blackouts you are thrown head-long into cacophony of sexual squeaks and satisfactory love making sounds, which left the audience looking a bit bewildered. To open, to breathe and to receive, the audience starts to feel educated in the art of seduction..  With the fall and demise of her relationship, she then goes into meltdown… love turns to vengeance, sex to hatred and then blond to brown.  Undressed and wet, upset and stressed her future is set.

This show is one of a kind at the Edinburgh Fringe, well-crafted and produced with a good deliver to follow. With many a throat-curdling laugh this show is funny, shocking, sexy, mysterious, spooky, dirty and courageous. If you want to be transfixed for an hour, go see Im Doing This For You. You wont be sorry !!

Reviewed by Raymond Speedie

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Electric Eden

Pleasance Pop-Up: The Club (Venue 320)

Aug 15-22, 24-29

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: four-stars

This year the award winning Not Too Tame Theatre Company brings us a site specific and immersive, party production. Upon entering the club the cast are already in full swing: dancing energetically, there is a protest taking place and audience members are adorned with Electric Eden wristbands and neon face paints. This is a story of seven individuals with conflicting viewpoints making a stand against everyday injustices. The plot is centred around an eighty something folk singer who dies at the hands of developers moving him on from his favourite busking spot. The play forces us to look at the bigger picture, not only to look out for ourselves but to work together for a better society.

Each scene is blended together with nostalgic rave music and choreographed dance routines, where the audience is encouraged to participate. Every character delivers an engaging performance which highlights social dilemmas in everyday life, but more impressively the cast not only perform the show but also wrote the script along with Director Jimmy Fairhurst and Producer David Mumeni. The experience leaves the audience feeling they were a part of the community ready to join the protest. The only aspect that would have improved the finale would have been a last dance to unite audience and cast. Perfectly choreographed dance routines, creative monologues, a banging sound track together with a dynamic cast makes this show a must see on your Fringe calendar.

Reviewer : Laura & Emma Murray

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The Curious Sole of Luna Cobbler 

Greenside @ Nicholson Square

Run Completed      

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: four-stars

 “Soulmate: A person ideally suited to another a a romantic partner or friend.”

Derived from the poetry of Tim Burton, this uncanny play, directed by Kat Osborn & acted upon by the Burnley Youth Theatre crew, follows the story of Luna, the altruistic sole of the moon & her reprobate, The Cobbler.

The story embraces the weird & wonderful in all of us & wholeheartedly accepts that our ‘sole’ mate may not always be our perfect match. Told through rhythmically synchronised young actors (ages 15-21) who are appositely accompanied by eerie piano music (Jack Herbert), this play genuinely touches the soul whilst taking you on a journey of realisation & self-exploration.

Taking on our ‘soul’ as the sole of a shoe, the characters set out to find their perfect match, in their case, a shoe which typically contrasts the attributes of their own. The problem is that they are held by The Cobbler, a lonely but spiteful sole who forces his captivates to work for him by day. His powers are overdrawn by night when Luna seeks to find each sole tangled in The Cobbler’s spite a match.

The talent these young actors possess is really something special, they captivate the characters they play profoundly & professionally, entwining multiple storylines into one, & along with the delightful music, it almost feels like you’re watching a Tim Burton movie in the flesh!  This charming play was definitely worth the watch, highlighting the importance in attracting our opposites to create a truly superlative match.

Reviewer : Robyn Donnelly

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Scorch

Summerhall Venue

16-28th Aug

18.05

£16 (£14)

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: three-stars  Performance: four-stars

Scorch is a one person theatre performance, based on real life events. The script relays the real life event as a self confessed story; about a gender confused young person whom becomes besotted in love and unwittingly makes the mistake of a lifetime, without ever intending to cause harm or loss to anyone.

Different aspects of Kez’s routine are played out using the cylindrical stage space. Each area becomes known as a place in Kez’s life. Monologue is spoken as though daydreaming but occasionally is recited with full awareness of the audience and interactions are gestured, so Kez can undo emotionally in front of imaginary friends.

An engaging performance with dynamic use of mime and dance, it leaves one with big questions about sexual consent, the judicial system and should the media need to be held responsible for the effects they can have on someones mental wellbeing?

Great use of light to reflect emotion and also to indicate social media interaction; supported by good sound effects. The imagination invented a prop which was far more elaborate than anything possible on stage with the space available. I somehow saw a futuristic style alien spaceship bedroom, with the ship windscreen being a double interactive user interface. Just for a moment, then the mind would travel off into new space and time with Kez somewhere else.

Reviewer : Bobbi McKenzie

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Head In The Clouds

Botanical Gardens
Tickets £5

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Script: three-stars Stagecraft: three-stars  Performance: four-stars

Anyone who wants to go and see Edinburgh’s amazing Botanical gardens, and has kids, would do very well to tie in their visit with Igdip’s multi-sensory puppet theatre performance, Head in the Clouds.

Crammed into 35 minutes, the two energetic actors Sophie Rose McCabe and Euan Cuthbertson gave us all a happy mix of slightly, but intriguingly, odd musical inspiration, storytelling, and touchy-feely moments.

IMG_7296The audience – largely made up of brand new babies and toddlers – was the biggest indicator of just how much an impact Sophie and Euan made.  They were quiet.  They were attentive.  They responded.  They laughed.  And, most crucially: they did not cry.

Using a tent, a few pieces of cut Ikea matting, some balloons, boxes of instruments, and the patter of poetry; the Patrick Geddes’ room came alive with the action.  The story was a little hard to follow at times, but it didn’t really matter.

Hats off to writer and creator, Charlotte Allan, who first conceived Igdip in 2011.  And larger hats off to the actors – you can’t get anything past kids (even tiny ones), so it’s a testimony to their thespian talent that they could do that with so much dedication and honesty.

Reviewer : Monica Sutcliffe

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Little Prince

St Mark’s Art Space

Aug 8,10,12 

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Script: four-stars Stagecraft: four-stars  Performance: three-stars

This is what the festival is all about, I believe. The Walford Wayfarers are an international wonder, a blend of 12 Australians & 12 Taiwanese (& one Italian), all shepherded by Australian composer, singer, artist, writer and educator Judith Clingan. Edinburgh is the first port of call on a European adventure which will see them perform the Little Prince in places such as Aberdeen, Iceland & Switzerland.

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Based upon the 1943 novella by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, the Little Prince is a curious tale of an otherworldy being & a crash-landed aviator, & their quest to find a certain rose. En route they meet explorers & scientists & connect with what it is really like to be alive. A wonderful allegorical tale, the Wayfarers bring it to life with music & costumes, while watching the Little Prince himself, young Sigmund Nock, convinces me of how the Elizabethans enjoyed boy-actors so much — he was a marvel to watch. St Mark’s is a great space for a show such as this; the series of summery songs which came from the Wayfarers filling the room like pleasant-wafting incense. The action was also 4-dimensional, with birds on sticks being flown around us about the pews… I found the entire production of this Little Prince a joy to witness.

Reviewer : Damian Beeson Bullen

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