Showing posts with label play. Show all posts
Showing posts with label play. Show all posts

Friday, 6 March 2015

Back down - play review

Back Down - The Birmingham Repertory Theatre

The other night, I was explaining the plot of the play I’d just seen to my sister. The main thing she took from it was, “oh my gosh, Matt from Casualty was in it? Did you speak to him?” He was good. The way his expressions changed from character to character (as he told a story to the other people in the play) was immense. I felt completely drawn into the different spaces, times and people he was emulating and talking about.

The way the 3 teenage characters related to each other was brilliant. Sometimes screenplays don’t always implicate the characters’ back stories in general in the language so they over-explain things, but the relationship between the characters was palpable and, because this sort of coming of age/legend trip is so relatable, the play was easy to follow. 

The set was sparse, really simple. It consisted of a red ladder, which became a tent, some boxes as seats and a hillock of grass which became a car and a hill. They were really well-used by the actors and they were obviously completely comfy in the set.

This video link from The Roundhouse has Polarbear talking about Back Down so check it out, if you want.

I’m never sure if I should dress up for the theatre so I was just sitting in the togs I’d been wearing all day on the farm where I work but I love that cosy feel to a theatre, sitting in the dark, and the action on-stage made me feel like I was in Snowdonia with these 3 young lads celebrating their friendship (before one of them went off to Uni). I love that about stories and, to me, the play felt like a mixture of stories and a play. The lads recount memories on stage so it feels like they’re looking back on something that has happened and showing the fact that they survived it in a funny way.

I’d only heard a little bit about Polarbear from Twitter but he’s this spoken word artist who has worked with actors and created this play. This link to one of his pieces is really cool. I’m still not sure about the difference between telling stories and spoken word, but spoken word seems shorter, purposeful, there’s a rhythm to it and it’s like rap or poetry, something that leads to action like Jess Green’s open letter to Michael Gove: That was amazing too.

I thought the play was really fun and realistic, emotionally and with what happens on stage. I suppose it feels like that time has gone for me but it’s nice to snuggle back into those feelings again. I also like that they say they might as well have gone to Snow Hill if they weren’t going to climb up the whole of Mount Snowdon. That feeling of locality was great – because I know where Snow Hill is and I know the little places they talk about, that aren’t so little to me - BirminghamUK

Thursday, 26 February 2015

Fig Leaf Wars review

@Fig_Leaf_Wars
@Fig_Leaf_Wars
There were about 20 audience members who were slowly tempted out of the Blue Orange Theatre café in the Jewellery Quarter and into the theatre. On the night of the 2014 Brazilian World Cup Final they were doing pretty well for patrons. Although we were a small group it only increased the closeness between the audience and the man and lady dressed up as a giant penis and a giant vulva. The tagline was:
A human-sized walking Vagina and Penis are going to meet again for the first time. How will the meeting go? Will they meet each other’s expectations? What are they supposed to do and how will they know?

Dick timidly broke out of the shadows and came to chat to the audience about how excited (no pun intended) he was to be free. He’s usually attached to someone, and it was a while before Fanny came on-stage to tell us that they’d been having a fight for thousands of years.
Not only were Fanny (or the Vulva of Venus) and Dick representing individual lady parts and man parts, they were also representing those of everyone in the world. This created an easy bond, and slight uncomfortableness, (which I think we soon got over - through much giggling) with their audience.
Throughout the partly-improvised show the characters demonstrated the trials and tribulations, as well as the pleasures, of being human genitalia. This sincere and welcoming pair gave us a hilarious and open night out. They spoke with the audience about the relationship between genitalia, in the olden days, and wondered aloud why people turn the lights off to have sex. With tunes such as “Sexual Healing” and “Floating through Space” (it might be called that – I’m not really sure!) they took us on a sensitive journey around the most intimate regions of humanity. Fanny showed us how she felt about rape and Dick told us how many rapes go unreported.
Far from being an after-school special this was a very playful yet grown-up, real platform from which to discuss sexuality and how we are all going to afford to get up to Edinburgh to see them again.
Follow this Facebook link for more info: https://www.facebook.com/thefigleafwars/timeline
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I can't find the link to a great Huffpost article about what our brave cast members, Dick and Fanny, get up to when they’re not on-stage! It involves a man in Glasgow attacking Dick (AKA Chris Murray, in costume) and Fanny (AKA Joanne Tremarco, also in costume) saving him! If you find it please post the link!

Blog posted on Wordpress - 17.12. 2014

Saturday, 31 January 2015

Custard Walk

As a Non-Newtonian fluid, the more force exerted on the custard powder+water mixture, the more the particles of the fluid huddle together to become a solid! Basically you can do a pretty good Jesus impression - or cartwheel through it as one of my crazy Scouts did!

I think we had a good 80 kilos or more of custard powder/cornflour!

Making the custard mixture
Lining up our troop ready to walk on the custard

It was great fun. Not as messy as I thought it would be! We definitely needed 3 leaders to run it. We just kept adding custard powder to water and mixing it. I think the space there is about 8' x 2' x 5". We just put a tarp over some benches which worked really well. The kids lined up and ran across it and had a right laugh. I'm not sure who had more fun, the Scout leaders of the Scouts!

Wednesday, 28 January 2015

My Artsy week!

As someone who sees The Arts as somewhat of a guilty pleasure, I feel like I've been snaffling cookies all this week!

Saturday 
Creative Producing Masterclass with Alex McCorkindale & IdeasTap

Sunday
Budgeting my new craft workshops
Marketing/designing flyers for my craft workshops

Monday
Babysitting (AKA climbing up + downstairs together, giggling A LOT, feeding the chickens - she's a pro, watching Peppa Pig and attempting to draw quilt patterns whilst showing my niece how to scribble)

Tuesday
Met up with Tiger Skins of Sunlight to chat about their Summer plans at Martineau Gardens. Promoted my craft workshops by putting up flyers around Moseley
Popped into Transition Arts Gallery by The Dark Horse in Moseley (follow this link!)

Wednesday
After tutoring French (my first lesson and it went really well!) I went to an immense workshop run by Chris Cooper and put on by The Gap Arts project - Who knew enacting reading a newspaper could be that tricky? The stuff discussed developed rich content and more interesting discussions!

So, yes, I had a very exciting week. Tudor sewing club on Friday and I'm really looking forward to meeting and planning my friend's birthday with her soon, too - It's going to be funky and exotic! Feeling a little bit sleepy but very content. It'll definitely be well-earnt sleep!