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In Times of Strife
@The Lochgelly Centre
Yesterdays Mumble mission was a trip back in time to a not too distant past. Two notable events in history that shaped the need for disobedience to the capitalist elite, that were hell bent on making the common man suffer without a voice.
I left school in 1983, while Thatcher was reigning her tyranny of political terrorism on Northern English, Welsh and The Scottish working classes. A time when unions had a voice and the fabric of British industry was being dismantled. In 1984 the miners strike began, a long and fraught stand to protect the lives and livelihoods that they had only ever known. There were no winners, but they did make a stand, that will resonate as an historical statement forever more.
Rebellion was a key factor in this play. Written in 1924 by Joe Corrie, as a social statement to the conditions of hardship experienced by the first wave of Industrial Action, when the common man took a stand against the corporate machine that wanted people to work longer hours for less pay. to protect corporate profits from slipping.
This modern take on the play is set in Lochgelly itself, & could not be any more than disturbing because of its subject matter. Poverty, sickness and dissent are key issues that are explored while in them selves represent human suffering and the fight against oppression. A message that drives home the true nature of Socialism and what the Labor movement was initially intended. To convey the voice of the common man to the elite, that were enjoying the profits of the harsh conditions, that were experienced by men who worked in the local coal mines, mining coal in dangerous and unhealthy conditions.
Now. Imagine this brilliant social statement, turned into an all dancing musical. With a Rock n Roll band sat in the back ground. (Electric guitars in 1924?). Joe Carries brilliant poetry translated well into this contemporary performance of Rock N Roll, while the dancing and choreography was also excellent. However, for me an already complex script became even more complex and difficult as a result, & somewhere along the line, something got lost in translation. Stillm ‘In Time O’ Strife, is being performed at The Traverse Theater,’ Tue 9th to Sat 13th of September… then nationally…
Reviewer : Mark ‘Divine’ Calvert
Domestic Labour : A Study In Love
Summerhall
August 23rd
What a charming play this really is, a blend of physical theater & a snappy dialogue that shows the menial sufferings of womanhood. Six vacuum cleaners litter the stage, & are subsequently used to create scenery about which the cast of three women relay their tale. Touching themes such as contraception & cleaning, they recite the script in stagger’d unison, & even use clips from 1954’s film Johnny Guitar in a surreal sidestep through the show.
The play has been brought to Edinburgh by Cambridge-based 30 Bird, an internationally minded group who collaborate with artists and practitioners from as varied a background as the UK, Iran, Germany, Italy, Poland, India, Japan and Turkey. This particular play touches Islamic marriage, & is deliver’d with a certain, surreal charm. Its a shame I saw it so it so late in the run, butr if the play is coming to your neck in the woods in the future, I thoroughly recommend a watch.
Reviewer : Damo Bullen
La Clique
The Spiegeltent, St Andrews Square
21-24 August
22.00
I have followed La Clique’s magnificent conception of ground-breaking performance art since 2004, from The Adelaide Fringe to George Square Gardens as part of The Garden Of Unearthly Delights, the Spiegel’s former Edinburgh Fringe mainstay. Before Assembly so rudely stole the idea and concept, replicating it under their own banner and making this show homeless in Edinburgh in 2011. La Clique resurfaced in the newly housed Spiegeltent on George St in 2012 and 2013. Now located in St Andrews Square, with a back drop that resembles Glastonbury Festivals winning art project.,Bloc 9, La Clique has landed at long last, two weeks into the Fringe. With a Cabaret Review that lives up to the Royal Variety Show standards that we have become accustomed to. Yes, The Pole Dancers have arrived, after having been stuck in Kiev. A late addition to proceedings & well worth the wait.
Although slightly more expensive than other Fringe shows, the price represents value for money because of the exquisite and original performances of world class Cabaret. Breathtaking and athletically acrobatic, with enough eye-candy to satisfy, astonish and turn on the most critical of Bohemians. Thirteen individual performances that deserve an independent review (a work currently in progress which will be an exclusive to The Mumble.net… Divine has friends in high places). My only critique of this spectacular show is the rude, arrogant nature of the magician who insulted a member of the audience for laughs. (Bring Back Paul Zennon)
A show that doesn’t buckle under its own weight of ambition,
La Clique doesn’t need good press, its reputation as the greatest show on Earth ensures a capacity audience. If you are going to treat yourself or are looking for entertainment, then La Clique cannot fail to entertain. I believe the show is sold out, but some tickets are available on the door Book in advance.You will be pleased that you did.
This would have been a deserved 5 Star performance, had the magician not lowered the tone with rude and insulting comedy, scraping the barrel for laughs and detracting from the exceptional quality that is so skillfully represented in La Clique. FOUR STARS
Arabian Nights
Gilded Balloon
21-24 August
£6-£8
11.15
The remit of Story Pocket Theatre, set up in 2013, is to keep classic stories alive & to perform them with as much beauty as possible – & this hour-long version of ‘ One Thousand & One Nights’ & certainly realises their dream. Like Chaucer’s Cantebury Tales, & Bocaccio’s Decameron, the Persian One Thousand and One Nights is a collection of stories held together loosely by an over-plot. In this case the ruler Shahryār has ordered the execution of his wife, Scheherazade, who delays this event by telling him a story every night.
In this version, our three cast members skip across the stage, move scenery, change coustumes & alter voices in such a pleasant & dreamy fashion, there is nothing but a positive energy in the room. The timelessness of several of these classic tales is brought to life, the highlight I believe is the tale of the Little Beggar, into which is introduced a puppet. Next comes the more famous tale of Aladdin, after which the show ends with a moment of touching beauty, as the king & his queen are reunited as two sillouhetted puppets.
As I was leaving the theater, I heard a young boy say to his dad, ‘Thats the best one I’ve seen so far.’ I could not help but agree, which really tipped the balance for me when awarding the stars. I loved it, the kid-in-me loved it, & the word on the street with the other kids is thats its brilliant, so here’s a happy FIVE STARS
Reviewer : Damo Bullen
Made in Ilva : The Contemporary Hermit
Summerhall
20 – 24 Aug 2014
A16.20
£5
When one man can command the intensity of the theatrical experience just by flexing his sinewey muscles, we must find ourselves at the Parnassian peak of physical theater. Nicola Pianzola, of the experimental Instabili Vaganti company of Bologna, is just that man, & his hour of incantantion-like speech & gymanastic movements is nothing but a piece of pefect drama.
The story he tells is that of the posionous effects of the ever-polutant-belching Ilva steel works in Taranto, southernmost Italy, whose dioxin emittants have simply murdered many locals. Layers of black & red powder covers every pavement in the town, glittering in the gutters, & it is in such a sandy bedsoil that ‘Made in Ilva’ has its roots.
Cue a desperate & work-addicted Pianzola watching his friends die around him, & delivering the translated script with a stylish panache which belies his non-English nationality. A mini-modern classic that drives a needle into the nerves. FOUR STARS
Reviewer : Damo Bullen
The Bastard Son Of Remington Steel.
Underbelly Cowgate
Aug 19, 21, 23
15.30
£9-£10

I am pleased to say that I have reviewed some magnificent examples of performance art since I have been writing for the Mumble. So, it is fair to say that this ill-informed play on the trauma of becoming an Orphan has buckled under its own ambition. It was also far too short. It was this level of armature dramatics that I had been expecting from the off-set this Fringe. Thank goodness this was the exception and not the rule.
Were the cast suffering hang overs? I mean whats the rush. The venue didn’t help things, as the sound of Sunday revelers in The Cowgate distracted what attention span I had from trying to fathom my way through this play, which I assume can only be a work in progress. Good in parts but not fully formed. 2 Stars!
Reviewer : Mark ‘Divine’ Calvert
Near Gone
Summerhall
19 / 21 / 23 August
12.30
£8-£10
The amphitheater style Demonstration Room of the majestic Summerhall is an interesting beast/ An unsettling performance space for an unsettling performance that represented a Bi Lingual Primal Scream Therapy Session performed in the dungeon of Hannibal Lecter.
Two siblings recreate the traumatic morning when one of the family members was seriously injured in an accident, with the Dialogue acted out in bulgarian by the Sister and translated to English by the brother. There was also quite a Bonkers dance blooming with white carnations, prformed not once but three times.
Its Art Jim
But Not As We Know it.
THREE STARS
Reviewer : Mark ‘Divine’ Calvert
Pomegranate Jam
Venue13
10.00
2-23 August
£6-£8
An early start for Divine on this Sunday of Theater. Arriving at the venue with only minutes to spare before the start of the performance, I took my seat in the packed theater. A packed theater at 10.00am two weeks into the fringe just doesn’t happen. It was this that told me something of merit was about to unfold. I was not mistaken.
The Performance is titled.”Pomegranate: A Shadow Ballet” A story of unrequited love told through the medium of puppetry and Ballet. All silhouettes of a very talented cast acting and dancing behind a screen. Performance art as good as this doesn’t need to be explained but it does need to be experienced. An interpretation of every hard luck story about giving ones heart away to a ball breaker. And just how painful the consequential process of such an action is. Ouch!
We follow our hero’s through the stages of heart break and renewal, expertly Interpreted through choreography and dance. The Shadows Of Love are laid to bare in such an exquisitely beautiful way. 45 minuets of eye candy performed to a haunting soundtrack,played by one achingly beautiful violin.
This wonderful work of art I can not recommend more Highly. Sexy and another Masterclass. Five Stars.
Reviewer : Mark ‘Divine’ Calvert
Beyond Zero (1914-1918)
Beyond Zero
Monday 18th August
Festival Theatre
This offering from the Edinburgh International Festival began with a recital of music composed by Aleksandra Vrebalov and performed by the world famous Kronos Quartet to a massive screening of film footage photographed from the start of the first world war to the Bosnian conflict in the 1990’s and called “Beyond Zero 1914 to 1918” A contemporary classical composition of music accompanying the footage of the soldiers who had no choice,other than to fight in this clumsy, barbaric and sad war.
[embedhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FskOzt6INlQ[/embed]
The cello was played by Sunny Yang, violins played by David Harrington and John Sherba, while the Viola was played by Hank Dutt, the latter being the most emotive of instruments to reproduce this contemporary master piece. Seductive and powerful are words that describe the sensations that the music summoned. Death and destruction never sounded so romantic and dare I say it. “Healing.” One has to ask. If the film had not been screened at the same time as The Kronos Quartet’s performance of this sublimely beautiful score, would the association of war have been so forth coming? Music and the way that we receive it is such a personal thing, as are the images that music summons. So on this note I will have to leave that question open,as I do not have the answer. It was an amazing experience. FIVE STARS
Reviewer : Mark ‘Divine’ Calvert


























