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Blog Archive
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2011
(122)
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September
(52)
- Interview: Rachel O'Riordan
- Singing Far into the Night, theatre review
- Para Handy, theatre review
- Mary Queen of Scots Got Her Head Chopped Off, thea...
- Men Should Weep, theatre review
- Liz Lochhead on Mary Queen of Scots
- My Romantic History, theatre review
- Marc Almond interview
- The Animals and Children Took to the Streets inter...
- Anish Kapoor preview
- David Greig interview
- Diana Quick interview
- Hiroshi Sugimoto interview
- Steven Berkoff interview
- Junction 25/I Hope My Heart Goes First preview
- One Thousand and One Nights preview
- Free Run: Confidential, theatre preview
- Steven Berkoff interview
- 101, theatre revie
- Allotment, theatre review
- Elegy, theatre review
- Emergence, theatre review
- Man of Valour, theatre review
- The One Man Show, theatre review
- The Golden Dragon, theatre review
- (g)Host City, theatre review
- One Thousand and One Nights, theatre review
- Und, theatre review
- Scotland on Sunday theatre round-up 28 August 2011...
- Scotland on Sunday theatre round-up 21 August 2011...
- Scotland on Sunday theatre round-up 14 August 2011...
- Alphonse by Wajdi Mouawad, theatre review
- Bashir Lazhar, theatre review
- A Reply to Kathy Acker: Minsk 2011, theatr review
- Cul-De-Sac, theatre review
- A Day In November, theatre review
- Steal Compass, Drive North, Disappear, theatre rev...
- The Diaries Of Adam And Eve, theatre review
- Entitled, theatre review
- I, The Dictator theatre review
- Lullabies Of Broadmoor: The Murder Club/Wilderness...
- Odd Man Out, theatre rivew
- The Table, theatre review
- Witzelsucht And Moria theatre review
- The World According To Bertie theatre review
- One Thousand and One Nights in rehearsal in Fes
- Belarus Free Theatre interview
- Interview with the Boy with the Tape on his Face
- Brett Goldstein and Bobby Gordon on their dads
- Technology on the Edinburgh Fringe
- Grid Iron's 10th festival show
- Tim Crouch interview about I, Malvolio
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Published in The Scotsman
THE high
heidjins at Perth Theatre wanted their new artistic director to make a
splash. Rachel O'Riordan, they thought, should arrive in style. So they
were all for letting her make her debut with a big cast and high
production values. For the Northern Irish director, that meant only one
thing. "As soon as I heard that, it was Shakespeare all the way," she
says, tucking into a baked potato in her rehearsal break. "There's no
more exciting writer on the planet. And Twelfth Night is probably in the
top ten plays of all time – it's exquisite."
Today she's buzzing
with excitement not only about Shakespeare's comedy, with its mixed-up
plot of cross-dressed twins and mistaken identity, but about doing it in
Scotland with Scottish actors. "Working in Ireland and being Irish,
you're aware there's a Celtic sensibility that is different from an
English one. I'm not saying Ireland and Scotland are the same, but there
is a cultural inheritance that is shared."
Determined to engage
with her new home, she and her creative team have been venturing into
the Perthshire countryside to find inspiration for the setting of the
play, which she is updating to the 1920s. She's not making an explicit
connection, but in her head, the play's Orsino could be the Duke of
Atholl, his home might be Scone Palace and Perthshire could be Illyria.
To maintain the geographical consistency, she's given the roles of the
shipwrecked twins, washed up in an unfamiliar Scotland, to Irish actors.
"It's
loose, but I wanted to get a sense of the country I'm directing in."
O'Riordan, is working with long-time collaborator Conor Mitchell, the
composer behind the Fringe First-winning Ten Plagues with Marc Almond
and Tuesdays at Tescos with Simon Callow.
"I've been going
around on the train a lot with the set designer and lighting designer
and just stopping off and spending afternoons in bits of the lower
Highlands. It's so mind-blowingly beautiful. The quality of light is
particularly stunning and I'm trying to get a sense of space and light
in this production."
Having had a masterclass in verse speaking
when she worked under Sir Peter Hall on Measure For Measure, she is
delighted by the way her actors are handling the text: "The way the
verse and prose is spoken in a Scottish accent is very exciting because
the last thing Shakespeare's actors would have spoken in is an RP
accent. There's such a muscularity and clarity in the Scottish accent,
really embracing the consonants, finishing words off, and it just brings
the text vividly to life."
O'Riordan switched to directing after
training at the Royal Ballet School and the Kirov Ballet and spent her
twenties as a choreographer and movement director, but she made her name
in 2002 when she turned director for Hurricane, a play about snooker
legend Alex "Hurricane" Higgins, starring her husband Richard Dormer.
Transferring
from Belfast to Edinburgh's Assembly Rooms and on to London, it took
her "from 0 to 60" and kick-started a career that has included stints in
Bath, London and Manchester. Seeing Perth Theatre for the first time at
her interview, she knew instantly this was the job for her. "I walked
into that auditorium and just went, 'Jesus!' because it's beautiful."
Cheered
by the reception of The Absence of Women, a play she directed for
Belfast's Lyric Theatre and which did a short run at Perth earlier this
month, she wants to entertain the theatre's existing loyal audience
while broadening its appeal with new strands of programming. In
February, she'll be directing Someone Who'll Watch Over Me, Frank
McGuinness's powerful play inspired by hostages Brian Keenan and John
McCarthy, followed in March by the Scottish premiere of Moonlight And
Magnolias, a comedy about the behind-the-scenes machinations on the set
of Gone With The Wind. That production will also play at Glasgow's Tron.
Additionally,
she'll be branching out with a visit from Grid Iron's Fringe
First-winning Barflies, performed in the bar, and a commission for Perth
playwright Ben Tagoe on a co-production with Glasgow's A Play, A Pie
And A Pint.
"The audience here is an educated audience that
knows what it likes," says O'Riordan, who is planning co-productions
with other Scottish and Irish theatres, toying with the idea of a
site-specific production of her own, and is excited by a plan to give
the theatre a more welcoming glass frontage.
"I'm not here to
change our audience, I'm here to add to our audience. My job is to lead
the audience, to be their friend, it's not to bully them or say, 'I know
better than you.'"
Until Orla O'Loughlin arrives at Edinburgh's
Traverse Theatre in January, she is the only woman in charge of a
building-based theatre company in Scotland, though she says that as a
director she has tastes that could be described as masculine. Perhaps
that's because she has three younger brothers or maybe it's simply
because she believes theatre should have a sense of urgency.
"What
I like on stage is a tough quality. I like brave choices. I like the
audience to feel something is happening that needs to be on a stage,
that couldn't happen on a telly screen or radio. That means a physical
understanding of the text and a robustness of how you convey it – and it
needs to be entertainment."
• Twelfth Night is at Perth Theatre until 15 October. www.horsecross.co.uk
© Mark Fisher 2011
Published in Northings
Brunton Theatre, Musselburgh, 23 September 2011, and touring
THERE’S a fascinating article by playwright Hamish MacDonald in the programme for this Mull Theatre production.
He writes about the experience of his father’s friend, a Royal Navy
rating, in 1931 when sailors of the Atlantic fleet went on strike. They
were furious about a 25% pay cut brought about by the austerity
programme of Ramsay MacDonald’s government. Their action at Invergordon
was tantamount to mutiny.
He writes also about his mother’s memories of journalists being
hounded out of the country because of their communist sympathies.
Supporting the striking sailors made them guilty of incitement to mutiny
and at risk of the death penalty. Getting out was the only option.
These stories have modern-day parallels (as well as the austerity,
the prime minister was responsible for a coalition government), but they
also evoke a very different time when class distinctions were extreme,
when young idealists gravitated towards Moscow and when collective
action by the workers could have such repercussions that the economy was
rocked and Britain had to pull out of the Gold Standard.
No denying, then, that the Inverness playwright, who is also a joint
director of Dogstar Theatre Company, has alighted on a story ripe with
dramatic potential and topical power. Unfortunately, in Singing Far into
the Night, the material seems undigested, sometimes giving too much
information, other times too little and, despite a cast of only four,
never establishing whose story is being told as it meanders across the
decades.
Inspired by his parents’ stories, MacDonald imagines two brothers:
one, Finlay (Barrie Hunter), is a far-left journalist sacrificing
everything to publish a revolutionary newspaper; the other, Connal
(Harry Ward), is an experienced sailor who, although sympathetic to the
cause, is no radical. Caught up in revolutionary times, however, Connal
becomes a scapegoat for the strike, persecuted by Greg Powrie’s
establishment interrogator, while Finlay and his activist comrade Erica
(Helen McAlpine) flee to the USSR, which turns out not to be the
workers’ paradise they’d imagined.
There’s a great story in there, but the script raises too many
questions. Who is the interrogator and why is he so single-minded in his
pursuit of Connal? Why does Connal appear to go mad? Why do Finlay and
Erica have to escape Scotland? What happens when they get to the USSR
that causes them to split up and what prompts Finlay to return home many
years later?
MacDonald gives some clues in his own programme note but, in this
dramatic form, the answers are as hard to make out as the gloomily lit
set. The second act is less obscure and the actors in Alasdair McCrone’s
production make of the material what they can, but it’s a story that
remains more interesting in theory than in practice.
© Mark Fisher 2011 (pic: Douglas Robertson)
Published in the Guardian
Three stars
Imagine Last of the Summer Wine set on a Clyde puffer
and you'll be close to the mild-mannered territory of Neil Munro's Para
Handy stories. Written initially as a newspaper column in 1905, they
are the whimsical tales of the eponymous Para Handy (a Gaelicisation of
Peter Macfarlane), the skipper of the Vital Spark, on his voyages from
the Inner Hebrides to Glasgow, shipping coal, herring and, on a
humiliating day, sawdust.
It is ephemeral stuff, but also much loved, not least thanks to the three television adaptations, the most recent starring Gregor Fisher.
It is in this spirit of affection that director John Bett has adapted
the stories for this mainstage tour. The show tootles about on gentle
waters, an episode here, an anecdote there, before alighting on the
slow-burning romance between Jimmy Chisholm's genial Para Handy and
Annie Grace's prim Mary Crawford, the baker's widow.
Typically,
this romance seems more to do with Mary's cakes than any primal lust. In
this world of minor misdeeds and gentle japes, the appeal of Para Handy
and his crew is in their sexlessness. Despite their years, they are
childlike innocents at large in an unthreatening world, a romantic
vision of Highland naivety, sweet tempered, well meaning and mildly
eccentric.
Endearing though all this is, Bett seems to understand
it's scarcely substantial enough for a proper play. Consequently, he
places equal emphasis on Robert Pettigrew's live score, a rousing
compendium of sea shanties and folk songs, sung with gorgeous harmonies
by musicians and actors alike. It often feels less like a play than a
ceilidh with the odd sketch thrown in.
The approach maintains the
breezy spirit of the originals while rooting the stories in their
Highland home. It's utterly inessential, but performed with too much
gusto to dislike.
© Mark Fisher 2011
Published in the Guardian
Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh
Three stars
What sets Liz Lochhead's
1987 play apart is the way past and present rub up against each other,
setting off sparks of recognition as text-book history clashes with
modern-day topicality. You hear it in the language: "cauldron o' lye"
one line, Princes Street the next. You see it in the dressing-up box
costumes, the frocks as much 1950s prom as 16th-century regal. And you
understand it in a story that makes the link between coin contemporary Scottish sectarianism and the power politics of the French Catholic Mary and the English Protestant Elizabeth, the virgin queen.
Director Tony Cownie's Lyceum/Dundee Rep
co-production is duly anachronistic. Neil Murray's set is a decidedly
un-period jumble: a phone box, a rusting car, a skip with a crucifix and
a hospital screen to shield us from Mary's beheading. The scavenging
eclecticism of the language is done justice by Ann Louise Ross as the
Corbie, a crow-like narrator, and Liam Brennan as the hot-headed
reformer John Knox.
But for all the cultural collisions of the
story, there is nothing abrasive about Shauna Macdonald's Mary or Emily
Winter's Elizabeth. They give merely pleasant performances when they
should be larger than life. A flame-haired Macdonald, whose dialogue is
hampered by an unconvincing French accent, seems less queen than little
girl lost. Likewise, Winter is glamorous and self-regarding but not
grand. Their modesty means there is too little at stake at the heart of
the evening and too little urgency to drive it home.
And what the
production doesn't muster – at least, not until the playground sequence
at the end – is the sense of a company coming together to tell a story
with a single voice. This is a show of moments – a nice performance
here, a jarring explosion there – but not of a unified ensemble spirit.
© Mark Fisher 2011
Pic: Louise McCarthy and Lorraine McIntosh Pic: Manuel Harlan
Published in the Guardian
Four stars
The tenement flat is claustrophobic, cramped and colourless. There is no room for manoeuvre between sink, table and bed, yet new people constantly arrive and are somehow absorbed. In Ena Lamont Stewart's 1947 slice-of-life tragedy, the inhabitants are caged creatures who can do nothing but lash out.
So when Arthur Johnstone walks on stage between scenes to sing a working-class folk song, he brings a heady shift in perspective. On the one hand, he offers a release from the grim intensity of so much 1930s deprivation, piled on by Lamont Stewart in an unflinching vision of poverty's social consequences. For the audience to join in The Day We Went to Rothesay, O' is like coming up for air.
On the other hand, Johnstone's songs put the play in a tradition of socialist dissent: "We've been yoked to the plough since time first began" goes The Workers' Song. These full-voiced songs emphasise that the hardships of Men Should Weep are not an anomaly, but part of a pattern. Like the scene of modern deprivation (shell suits, corrugated iron and barbed wire) that frames Graham McLaren's powerful production for the National Theatre of Scotland, the songs give this brutally unsentimental play a political and historical context.
Likewise, playing the stoic matriarch Maggie, Lorraine McIntosh brilliantly conveys the sense of being a product of her economic circumstances. She is merciless in criticising her neighbours, ferocious in disciplining her children, and vocal in her complaint that there is "nae work for the men, but aye plenty for the women".
Yet, behind her fury, she shows us a good-hearted woman making the most of the little she's got. As our own government demonises the poor, hers is an example as pertinent as ever.
© Mark Fisher 2011
Published in The Scotsman
When you hear the team from the National Theatre of Scotland
talking about the days before the opening night of Black Watch in 2006, you get
an impression of chaos and foreboding. Director John Tiffany, playwright
Gregory Burke and the rest of the crew were half expecting a flop. Certainly,
they had no inkling they were sitting on top of one of Scotland's greatest
theatrical exports.
The same was true 20 years earlier when director Gerry
Mulgrew, playwright Liz Lochhead and the performers of Communicado found
themselves hurtling towards the first night of Mary Queen Of Scots Got Her Head
Chopped Off on the Edinburgh Fringe of 1987. "We were working too hard to
know – or even to think about it," says Lochhead today. "The actors
must have been terrified, but the thing had a life of its own. It must have
been like that, on a much bigger scale, with Black Watch. They were working so
hard that they just didn't know."
The uncertainty was for similar reasons. In part, it was
because they were too close to the material to have any sense of perspective.
They couldn’t see the wood for the trees. And in part, it was because on the
first day of rehearsals, as was the case with Black Watch, they didn't have
anything they could confidently call a well-made play.
In fact, they didn't even have anything they could call a
title. Until the day they had to get the posters done, they were calling it the
Mary Queen Of Scots Show. "Gerry came in one day to rehearsals and said,
'I was at the designers and I just told them it was called Mary Queen Of Scots
Got Her Head Chopped Off,'" says Lochhead. "He said, 'I couldn't help
it.'"
Fortunately, she loved the title. In any case, she had other
things to worry about. It wasn't that she was unprepared. She had been working
on the play since Mulgrew suggested the idea nearly three years earlier. He had
realised that 1987 would be the 400th anniversary of Mary's
beheading and the two of them found if funny to imagine a play that would
commemorate her death rather than her birth. Lochhead was excited by the
project and did lots of historical research in the library. She even did a fair
bit of writing. Indeed, she had many scenes ready to be performed. What she
didn't have was a structure to put them in.
"Just as we were about to go into rehearsal I still
didn't have a play," says the playwright and poet, who was made Scotland's
makar at the start of this year. "I just had a completely incoherent mess.
I remember I had to go and meet Gerry. It was the day after the election and
Thatcher had got in again. I was actually going to accidentally on purpose get
on the wrong train and run away from Gerry. I did go and meet him and I said,
'We don't have a play! I'm completely stuck!'"
Mulgrew suggested she should write it like a fairy story,
beginning "once upon a time", an idea that unlocked her imagination.
Somehow in the heat of rehearsals, the show started taking shape. A scene from
the start moved to the end; a passage from the middle became the opening
speech; Lochhead wrote into the night and Mulgrew cast his theatrical magic.
Only when they showed it in public did they know what they had. Audiences and
critics loved it, the Scotsman awarded it a Fringe First and one reviewer
called it "full-bodied, subtle, humorous and virile".
"We were working so much right up to the wire that it
was a surprise to me that it was this enormous success," says Lochhead,
delighted to have seen subsequent productions at home and abroad, most recently
by the National Theatre of Scotland and, now, at Edinburgh's Royal Lyceum in a
co-production with Dundee Rep.
Directed by Tony Cownie, a long time Lochhead colleague, the
play is not only a boisterous retelling of the story of Mary, the French
Catholic queen, and Elizabeth, her Protestant English adversary, but also of
the Scotland of today, a place where sectarian rivalry is alive and festering.
Mulgrew, coming from a Catholic family, and Lochhead, from Protestant stock,
realised they were looking at Mary's story from different cultural
perspectives.
"It's about us now," says Lochhead, whose new
play, Edwin Morgan's
Dreams – and Other Nightmares, is part of this year's Glasgay! "It's about
interesting things that happened in the past and how that past is alive today
in Scotland. It deals with the roots of sectarian Scotland. The fact that we
were at war with ourselves about this stuff – Gerry was at war with himself and
I was at war with myself – made it very rich."
It'd be
nice to say that, nearly 25 years later, such concerns are no longer with us,
but as the Neil Lennon saga shows, we have yet to see the end of religion-based
conflict. "I think it's got real resonance just now because of the
sectarian debate in Scotland," she says. "We're largely a secular
country, so sectarianism is not religious any more; it's got to be cultural and
tribal. All these jokes – 'What kind of an atheist are you, a Catholic atheist
or a Protestant atheist?' – are coming from a real place."
Another
part of the play's richness is the built-in theatricality created by a
playwright knowing exactly the actors she was writing for. The original Communicado
company included Frank McConnell, who is known primarily as a dancer, and Ann
Wood, a fiddle player, as well as talented actors such as Myra McFadyen,
Anne Lacey and Alison Peebles. The knowledge of this team of people and their
various qualities is written into the fabric of the play. Even if Cownie
chooses to go down a different stylistic route for the 2011 production, he
won't be able to ignore the exuberance, direct address and in-your-face poetry
that is part of the play's make up.
"It's a play of patterns," says Lochhead. "In
the first scene that Mary has with Darnley, he's got measles and she's feeding
him soup from a spoon. On the last night she's with him, he's got smallpox and
she's feeding him from a spoon. That scene should mirror the one before and
should visually be the same. It's not boring to do it the same, it's in the DNA
of the play."
She is thinking also of the way Mary and Elizabeth occupy
the stage. In real life, the two queens never met, although they were endlessly
fascinated by each other. To have two lead characters who don't talk to each
other is a problem that Lochhead solved by having them mirror each other, so
they occupy the same theatrical space, even if it is not the same literal
space. In an instant, Elizabeth becomes Bessie, who is Mary's maid, and just as
quickly, Mary transforms into Marion, servant of Elizabeth.
"That
still leaves directors an enormous amount of freedom," she says. "All
theatre depends on the words, the actors and the audience. The director's job
is to make them all come together."
Mary Queen Of Scots Got Her Head Chopped Off, Royal Lyceum,
Edinburgh, 16 September–15 October; Dundee Rep, 19 October–5 November. Edwin Morgan's Dreams – and
Other Nightmares, Tron Theatre, Glasgow, 2–5 November.
© Mark Fisher 2011
Published in The Guardian
4 Stars
Borderline
theatre company is brandishing a lethal comedic weapon with DC
Jackson's workplace rom-com. The first gag comes after less than 10
sentences and, from then on in, the laughs strike home with machine-gun
efficiency. Jemima Levick's production is like a standoff between actors
and audience, a tense exchange of laugh-lines from the stage and
guffaws from the stalls with neither party giving an inch.
It proves that last year's debut production
of the play by the Bush and Sheffield theatres was no fluke and that
Jackson's comedy has staying power. This time round it's given a more
stripped-back staging in front of the large square panels of Lisa
Sangster's set, which doubles as open-plan office, one-bedroom flat and
boozy bar room, with a brief diversion to Glasgow's George Square for a
painful round of samba drumming.
Jackson's premise is simple. Tom,
played with everyman charm by Garry Collins, is the new boy at work,
where he finds himself the centre of sexual attention. Alarmed by the
enthusiasm of his colleague Amy, sharply observed by Jessica Tomchak, he
switches from "Don Juan in Dennistoun" to "a romantic Gandhi", using
passive resistance to extricate himself from their affair.
The
tables turn when we hear Amy's side of the story. She reveals Tom's
standoffish cynicism to be a front for his fumbling vulnerability, while
her own eager-to-please demeanour is a cover for a harder heart. Only
Katrina Bryan's relentlessly cheery Sasha, in spite of her new age
tendencies, seems to have got things right.
Spiced with hilarious
observational detail and, in Levick's production, an anthropologist's
eye for body language, it is a comedy of bad manners and embarrassments.
The only shame is that Jackson denies us the happy ending we long for
in favour of a bittersweet resolution that's too much like real life.
© Mark Fisher 2011
Think back to the chart-toppers of 1981 and imagine the
one least likely to end up performing a song cycle about 17th-century
pestilence at Edinburgh's Traverse theatre. Of all the candidates, Marc Almond
would score most highly. Thirty years ago, this slightly built man in black
eyeliner and studded wrist bands, whose cover of Gloria Jones's Tainted Love
had more passion than tuning, would have seemed the most unlikely candidate to
play the art-house theatre circuit.
Yet reset the clock to 2011 and here he is, gearing up for
a prime Edinburgh fringe slot in Ten Plagues, a sophisticated piece of
music-theatre written by playwright Mark Ravenhill and composer Conor Mitchell,
directed and designed by Tony-award winner Stewart Laing.
"It's been a great learning challenge," says Almond, now 53 but
looking puckishly younger. "I'll either sink or swim, but that's how I've
always gone for things."
Appearances, though, can be deceptive. Yes, he was at the
vanguard of electropop as the singer of Soft Cell. Yes, he sang about seedy
films, sex dwarfs and extravagant parties. And, yes, he would spend the next 20
years in a very rock'n'roll haze induced by cocaine, crack, ecstasy, ethyl
chloride, Halcion, heroin, LSD, MDA, mescaline, opium, purple haze, special K,
speed, sleeping pills and Valium – and those are just the ones he admits to.
"I look back on a lot of the 80s and 90s and I can't think of them with
fondness," he says. "I look back with a shudder. I wasn't in a very
good place for a lot of that time. It all ended in tears."
Where other acts of the era added detached vocals to the
mechanised beat of new musical technology, Soft Cell broke the mould with
Almond's vulnerable, impassioned and very human sound. The band forged the
missing link between Kraftwerk and northern soul, a strategy that, in Tainted
Love, got them to number one in 17 countries. Acclaim continued with Bedsitter
and Say Hello, Wave Goodbye, but Tainted Love remains the calling card.
"Thank God for Rihanna sampling it in her song," says Almond,
referring to the singer's 2006 single SOS. "I really like Rihanna – I
download her singles from iTunes – so I loved it."
This, though, is the same Marc Almond who, with only two
O-levels to his name, talked his way into Leeds Polytechnic to study fine arts.
Here, under the guidance of the late counter-culture activist Jeff Nuttall,
the sometime Guardian poetry critic and co-founder of the People Show, Almond
became a specialist in performance art. In one student show, he shaved half his
body and performed naked but for his boots and a "strategically placed
swastika". In another, he smeared his naked body in cat food.
When he met fellow student and future Soft Cell comrade
Dave Ball, he drafted him in to provide electronic "squelches, squeaks and
swoops" for highly theatrical performances about androgynous nightclub
singers and rent boys. His theatre credentials, in other words, are
long-standing.
As further evidence that he is not the man he once was, we
meet not in the kind of Soho dive he described in such lurid detail on Non-Stop
Erotic Cabaret, Soft Cell's debut album from 1981, but in the bare-brick
splendour of Wilton's Music Hall. The grade
II-listed relic in London's East End is the oldest surviving grand music hall
in the world. As its patron, Almond wants it to survive some more. The failure
in a recent bid for Heritage Lottery funding puts that in doubt.
Elements of the moody rock'n'roll star remain. This
morning, he has shown up in regulation rock-star black. He has black shades,
black leather jacket, black shirt, black hair . . . even his eyebrows are the
colour of coal. He has a skull ring on his right hand and another skull on a
chain round his neck. He was doing goth before the goths, yet one less lucky
break with the nascent Soft Cell and he could have been a man of the theatre.
"I always wanted to be a dancer rather than a
singer," he says. "But because I have no coordination, it never
worked for me. At art college I put on performances involving slides and films,
with me at the centre doing very theatre-based things. It evolved into
something more pop-orientated. My problem was I can't memorise lines, because
I'm dyslexic and I had minor learning difficulties when I was at school. Having
a stammer as well – it was very bad when I was young – meant music was a great
way for me to go. When you sing you don't stammer and for some reason I could
always memorise songs."
Despite his professed dislike of interviews, he talks in
an excited babble, animated, intelligent and chatty. He breaks off only for the
occasional giggle and refuses to be cowed by the mild stammer that returned
after a motorcycle accident in 2004 that also left him with a collapsed lung
and a punctured eardrum. When his assistant points out our allotted time is up,
he cheerfully carries on regardless.
It is because of Almond's love of theatre that Ten Plagues
came about. After seeing Ravenhill's Mother Clap's Molly House, a vision of 18th-century sex and commodification at the National
theatre, he told the playwright he would love to collaborate. Ravenhill
returned the compliment by writing a libretto with Almond in mind. It was about
the great plague of London and took inspiration from Samuel Pepys, Daniel Defoe
and Susan Sontag's polemical AIDS and its Metaphor.
Composer Conor Mitchell was drafted in, turning
Ravenhill's text into a song cycle set in 17th-century London, where a
decimated population is struggling to maintain social order. "It's about
loss, grief, survival – and shopping," says Almond, who plays a man
journeying through the city, observing the devastation. "You could take
Ten Plagues literally, as a historical piece, but you can also see parallels at
a time when we seem to be obsessed with fear, pandemic and viruses. Turn on the
television today and it's all about E coli. Last year it was bird flu. It seems
apt that plagues are still in our mind."
One such "plague" is HIV. That Almond himself
survived his sexually adventurous years (he calls himself an
"inquisitive" person) without contracting the virus is to his great
good fortune. "I came very close," he says. "It's not that I
haven't come unscathed from those times – I suffer bouts of ill health now
which are probably a consequence of earlier times of my life – but I was very
lucky to avoid having HIV. It could have easily happened to me."
It was on his first trip to New York in 1981 to record
Soft Cell's debut album that he heard about AIDS. "On the radio in the
taxi on the way to Manhattan they were talking about how a handful of people
had died from what they were calling a new gay plague," he says. "I
spent a lot of time in New York in the 1980s with the downtown arts crowd and
it became more and more visible. Places closed down and the whole landscape of
New York seemed to change. It seemed to go very dark, desperate, fearful and
unfriendly."
In the 30 years since, he has lost friends and colleagues
including avant garde opera singer Klaus Nomi,
Freddie Mercury and Derek Jarman. The experience has taken its emotional toll.
"In Ten Plagues, the character becomes very hardened towards death,"
he says. "I can understand that. Whereas I used to get very affected by
somebody dying, now I feel a grief but I take it in my stride. That's a thing
of getting older anyway; we're all on this conveyor belt and dropping off the
end of it. As you get older, the diseases start coming, often the consequences
of the things we did in our hedonistic days, we become more frail, more fragile
and you do take death more in your stride. Being someone who's had a number of
near-death experiences myself, it doesn't frighten me."
Today he has been free of drugs for over a decade and
never goes to pubs or clubs. He is awake by 6am and in bed at 10.30pm. It
pleases him to be booked into an afternoon slot on the Edinburgh fringe because
ill health (he suffers from anaemia, food allergies and aching joints) means he
gets tired easily. There is, however, still something of the night about the
man who has chronicled the lives of outcasts and outsiders in over 20 albums
with Soft Cell, Marc and the Mambas and under his own name. He admits he
doesn't care for the sun and he needs some gentle cajoling by the Guardian
photographer before removing his shades. But, more than a decade after going
through rehab, he seems more comfortable with himself. "The years from the
Millennium to now have been the most satisfying, creative and happy time of my
life," he says.
The move into the theatre is typical of a career that has
rarely played to expectation. There was nothing obvious about marrying an old
northern soul track to an electro backing with Tainted Love and if he was
concerned about keeping the Soft Cell fan-base on side, he'd never have
embraced Spanish rhythms with such enthusiasm on Torment and Toreros, his
second album as Marc and The Mambas in 1983. Subsequent releases took on
similarly wayward influences, from Gene Pitney to Jacques Brel, right up to this year's, Feasting with Panthers, a sumptuous
piano-driven collaboration with Michael Cashmore,
in which he makes songs from the poetry of Jean Cocteau, Gérard de Nerval and
Jean Genet. "It's decadent poetry translated by Jeremy Reed, who's like a
glam-rock poet," he says. "It's a beautiful, emotional record and
it's more narrative, which puts me in a good setting for Ten Plagues and
getting away from the verse-chorus-middle-eight of the classical pop
song."
He says he is as creative as ever, but also, at last,
reconciled to his past, in particular that one song. "I've had to learn to
love Tainted Love. There was a period in my life when I never wanted to sing it
or play it again. That's always a big mistake, because then it comes back even
more. People say: 'Why don't you ever do it? Why do you want to disrespect our
growing up? Why do you want to deny it.' And they're right. It's like a theme
tune and you have to accept that people will want it until the day they die –
and thank God they do because it's something that brings you down to earth. You
can do all kinds of artistic, esoteric or theatrical projects and then you can
come back to earth and sing a few pop songs. You go on stage and sing Tainted
Love and everybody loves you and forgives you everything."
He lets out another big giggle. "You've made them all
happy for three-and-a half minutes."
Ten Plagues, Traverse, Edinburgh, August 6–28; Feasting
with Panthers is out now on Cherry Red Records.
© Mark Fisher 2011
SUZANNE Andrade is a
girl out of time. She is a woman captivated by the 1920s, not only in the way
she dresses, but also in the work (and indeed the name) of her multi-award
winning theatre company, 1927.
Edinburgh Fringe
audiences got a taste of this obsession in the run-away hit Between the Devil
and the Deep Blue Sea, a sepia-tinged gothic cabaret that evoked the pioneering
days of cinema. And now, four years later, they will get another taste in The
Animals and Children Took to the Streets, a darkly comic amalgam of animation,
live music and archly spoken narration set in a pre-welfare state world of
deprivation and cruelty.
"I just really like
early cinema, crude drawings, grainy old film and having my ear and eye to the
past," says Andrade, sitting in London's Battersea Arts Centre in an
ever-so 1920s beret.
She developed this retro
interest at university while studying grand guignol, the Parisian horror shows
that peaked in popularity in the inter-war years. She says she loves to listen
to early musical recordings, not so much for the music itself as the crackly
quality of the period technology. When it came to naming the theatre company
she founded with animator Paul Barritt, it seemed appropriate to pick one
particular year. "1927 just came up because it was the year the first
talkie came out," she says. "It's got some resonance with what we do,
the look of it and being about storytelling."
At the same time, she
does not feel hidebound by the name. The Animals and Children Took to the
Streets marks a move into colour and a step away from the deliberate graininess
of her Fringe First-winning show of 2007. "This one is slightly less set
in the 1920s era," she says, "although a lot of it came from looking
at some Otto Dix and George Grosz pictures, looking at this decadent side of
the 20s as opposed to this romantic, black-and-white grainy side."
A big hit in London
before Christmas, the show is a creepily comic tale of disappearing children in
a decaying tower block known as the Bayou Mansions. There is perfect
synchronisation between actors and images, as animated insects crawl the walls
and characters sweep the stage just as a cartoon dust cloud blows up behind
them. With the speech all emotionally detached BBC English, it is both funny
and disturbing.
It is also a step
forward in the sophistication of the company's singular technique. A dazzling
combination of live performance and pre-recorded cartoons, it is a multimedia
marvel. To make sure it works as a piece of theatre with seeming spontaneity,
Andrade is exacting in rehearsals, repeatedly returning to the editing room to
get the pace right. "What I do theatrically is all about rhythm," she
says. "Because we're combining performers, live music and the film, it's
really important that the rhythm doesn't drag and it's tightly
choreographed."
WHERE & WHEN
THE ANIMALS AND CHILDREN
TOOK TO THE STREETS
Pleasance Courtyard,
19–28 August, 4.10pm.
£12,
Tel: 0131 556 6550
© Mark Fisher 2011
SPARE a thought for the
poor curators who have to install Flashback in the sculpture court of Edinburgh
College of Art. There are only two pieces involved in the Anish Kapoor
exhibition, but one of them is massive.
Untitled (2010) is a wax
bell the colour of blood. Previously unseen in the UK, it stands at 5m high and
5m wide. 'It’s absolutely huge,' says Natalie Rudd, sculpture curator of the
Arts Council Collection. "It's incredibly ambitious for us to be showing
it in Edinburgh and we won't be showing it anywhere else. So it's a real
coup."
With Kapoor's work, it
is often sheer volume that makes the first impression. The Turner Prize-winning
British sculptor creates pieces that are elemental in shape and arresting in
scale. A case in point is the ArcelorMittal Orbit. When this twisting steel
observation tower is completed, it will stand at 115m high, a permanent legacy
of the London Olympic Games in 2012 and the largest piece of public art in the
country.
"Anish has always
been interested in this idea of something being self-made,
auto-generated," says Rudd. "So in the wax installation, this arm
sweeps around and creates this form. There's an absence of the artist's hand,
it looks like it's been touched by a robot rather than by a human. Its sheer
volume will dwarf everybody standing alongside it."
Edinburgh gallery-goers
have already been enjoying the Indian-born sculptor's Suck the Neck at Jupiter
Artland. Locked in a 5m square cage, it is a vortex of smooth cast iron
spiralling into the ground in such a way that you can never see the bottom. For
the duration of the Edinburgh Art Festival, that piece is being joined by
Untitled (2010) and also White Sand, Red Millet, Many Flowers. This work from
1982, when Kapoor was an up-and-coming player in the new British sculpture
movement, is a set of four organic-looking objects made from plaster and coated
in bright, primary coloured pigments.
"We feel this is a
really special Anish Kapoor work and it's one he returns to in his
thinking," says Rudd. "He talks about it as a critical piece for him.
Many of the subsequent themes and ideas in his practice can be visualised in
that initial piece. They look like icebergs rising out of the floor or piles of
pigment you might see in Indian market places. This approach to sculpture
catapulted Anish into the international art scene in the 1980s."
To get the full
Flashback experience is no easy task. The touring exhibition is designed to
highlight the way the Arts Council Collection has supported artists at the
start of their careers through the purchase of their work, hence the piece from
1982 as well as from 2010 in Edinburgh. But although Flashback is showing in
Manchester (run ended), Nottingham (in the autumn) and the Yorkshire Sculpture
Park (next year), it will have different sculptures in each venue.
"It is a bespoke
exhibition that changes because of the nature of the spaces," says Rudd.
"Some are historical, some are purpose-built galleries, so we’ve had to
adapt. We see that as a positive because it means every venue will be
different."
Working in consultation
with Kapoor, Rudd and the head of the collection Caroline Douglas put together
this mini-retrospective. "We invited Anish literally to flashback on his
career to date," she says. "It's been fascinating to work with such
an esteemed artist. We wanted to put Anish back into contact with those early
works to see where he took it. He really appreciated the opportunity to
reflect."
WHERE & WHEN
ANISH KAPOOR: FLASHBACK
Edinburgh College of Art,
4 August–9 October,
10am–5pm
Free,
Tel: 0131 221 6000
© Mark Fisher 2011
WHEN David Greig was asked
by Glasgow's TAG Theatre to write a play about young carers, he thought he'd
better talk to the teenagers themselves. The company hooked him up with a group
of young people in Fife who were responsible for looking after family members.
He asked them how they would like to be represented on stage and their message
was clear: make it funny.
"My initial instinct
was informed by quite a lot of assumptions," says Greig. "I thought
of them as poor things in a terrible situation. And, of course, they're just
normal teenagers who are in a particular situation which they respond to just
as you or I would, and there's a great deal of joy and humour in the
situation."
That was all the
inspiration he needed to write The Monster in the Hall, a highly entertaining
four-hander about a girl called Duck who has to keep an eye on a father with
multiple sclerosis while getting on with the serious business of dating a boy.
"I started to think about some of the dilemmas inherent in teenage life
about authority or doing as you're told," he says. "And it was
interesting to think about those dilemmas in a reversed situation."
By chance, the play is one
of two teen-friendly plays by Greig on the Fringe. In Short Productions, from
the University of Bristol, is reviving his Yellow Moon: The Ballad of Leila and
Lee, a tremendous piece of storytelling theatre about two teenagers who are
forced to go on the run. Both plays work equally well for adults (and are
definitely not for anyone younger than 14) but by taking teenagers seriously,
they strike a particular chord with an age group often neglected by the
theatre.
Performed in stripped-down
fashion by four excellent actors, Monster in the Hall plays with a young
carer's fear of being taken into care. Many such teenagers go to great pains to
appear to be in control and that made Greig think of farce – what he calls the
funniest form of theatre.
"Farce is exactly
about pretence," says Greig whose CATS award-winning comedy The Strange
Undoing of Prudencia Hart is also appearing on the Fringe. "It's about
someone desperately trying to hold up a picture of the world that is
respectable, while in fact it is crumbling all around them. My assumption was I
would write a very tragic, noble story about a brave young person and their
struggle, but in fact I realised I had to write a farce about a girl
desperately trying to pretend everything's OK when it plainly it isn't."
It was an approach that
worked and, although it was critically lauded, there was only one audience
Greig cared about. "The young carers saw it at a gym hall in Methill and
they responded fantastically. They were very nice about it and I was thrilled.
It got a great response on tour, and that was extremely gratifying, but I felt
immune to any responses because my primary audience had enjoyed it."
WHERE & WHEN
THE MONSTER IN THE HALL
Traverse Theatre,
4–28 August (not 8, 15,
22), times vary.
From £11,
Tel: 0131 228 1404
YELLOW MOON: THE BALLAD OF
LEILA AND LEE
C Soco,
3–29 August (not 16), 7pm.
From £8.50,
Tel: 0845 260 1234
THE STRANGE UNDOING OF
PRUDENCIA HART
Traverse @ Ghillie Dhu,
2–27 August (not 8, 15,
22), 3pm.
£15,
Tel: 0131 228 1404
© Mark Fisher 2011
WHEN it comes to the
Edinburgh Fringe, Diana Quick has pedigree. She made her debut in the city as
an 18-year-old undergraduate performing on the Royal Mile with the Oxford Revue
in a show directed by Michael Palin. She remembers her impression of Marlene Dietrich
going down well. "It was enormous fun and I met lots of people who I still
know," she says.
She was back again in 1992
with her own sell-out adaptation of Simone de Beauvoir's The Woman Destroyed.
Two years ago, she was at the Book Festival after the publication of her family
memoir A Tug on the Thread. She has only happy memories of the place.
So the actor who played
Julia Flyte in Brideshead Revisited and, more recently, our very own monarch in
the Channel 4 docu-drama The Queen is delighted to be back on the Fringe, even
if she's a trifle alarmed at being in a one-woman show. "It's much more
challenging when there's only you," she says. "You have to be very on the ball."
Nervous or not, Quick, 64,
is in the privileged position of having a play specially written for her. As a
sponsor of the HighTide new play festival in Suffolk, she got to know Adam
Brace, a 31-year-old writer starting to make a name for himself. He wrote
Midnight Your Time with her in mind. "Adam is a very interesting
playwright," she says. "He's a real talent."
The play is about a
retired lawyer whose controlling instincts are put to the test when her
daughter takes up a five-year contract in Palestine. Their only contact is via
weekly Skype conversations, which only intensifies the mother's helplessness at
a point when she is still adjusting to retirement. "It's a subject that
speaks to people," says Quick, whose own daughter, the actor Mary Nighy,
is in her mid-20s. "It's the problem of parents letting their children go
and letting them be whoever they want to be. It speaks to both the parent's
generation and the child's generation. I was just as bad at that age; I wanted
to get as far away from the family as possible."
In the play, the mother is
a lobbyist, while the daughter believes in direct action. But the play is not
about the particularities of the Palestinian conflict as much as the idea of
seeing your offspring put themselves in any kind of danger. As such, the
preview performances have been striking an emotional chord with parents.
"One man came out with tears running down his face, saying, 'That's my
relationship with my son,'" she says. "There are things that really
seem to touch people, that they recognise."
Glad to be in a play
that raises the question of the invisibility of older women, Quick is all too
aware of the paucity of roles in Britain for her generation. At the same time,
she is not the type to be defeated by it. "Life continues to be
interesting," she says. "There's enough to keep me focused."
WHERE & WHEN
MIDNIGHT YOUR TIME
Assembly George Square,
3–28 August (not 8, 15,
22), 5.20pm.
From £12,
Tel: 0131 623 3030
© Mark Fisher 2011
PHOTOGRAPHY is all around
us. There's a picture on my computer screen, a Polaroid snap stuck to the wall,
an image on the side of a book jacket and a glossy face staring out from a
magazine. The form is so ubiquitous it is easy to forget the technology was
still in a rudimentary state as recently as 170 years ago.
That's why when leading
Japanese photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto looks back at the work of Henry Fox
Talbot, who invented the calotype process in 1841, he is full of admiration.
"Not only was he the inventor of negative/positive photography, he was a
mathematician, a botanist, a politician, an archaeologist, a poet, a physicist,
and one of the first decipherers of the Sumerian written language of
Cuneiform," he says. "He was truly a 'Gentleman Scientist'."
Investigating Fox
Talbot's techniques for himself, Sugimoto found himself humbled by the
achievements of the British pioneer. His attitude, he says, went "from
curiosity to awe". It is that sense of awe he hopes to convey in his
Edinburgh Art Festival exhibition – a collaboration with the Edinburgh
International Festival – which is deeply rooted in the story of photography.
"I feel it is important to understand the history of the medium I work
in," he says. "My Photogenic Drawings series is meant to bookend
the birth and death of traditional photography."
On show in Europe for
the first time, Photogenic Drawings (a term coined by Fox Talbot) are
enlargements of the master's earliest negatives unearthed by Sugimoto in the
darkest corners of museum collections. Fox Talbot himself never saw the
startling, painterly effects because these negatives pre-date his invention of
a reliable technique to turn them positive.
Also on show is
Lightning Fields, a series of amazing light effects created by Sugimoto using a
Van der Graaff generator. "It took many years of testing – different
generators, film emulsions, techniques, et cetera," he says. "Using
the scientific method, I would change one parameter for each
experiment and keep detailed notes of the results. This technique is very
similar to the procedures Fox Talbot used in developing his Photogenic Drawing
process."
So detailed were his experiments
that he came to have considerable control over the seemingly random bursts of
light and spiky streaks of energy. "While the results may seem somewhat
unpredictable, depending on the tools and techniques I use, I can predict the
character of the spark," he says. "I discharge the electricity onto
large sheets of film that come on a roll and then cut the film down to a
printable 8x10 size, so I have complete control of the final composition."
These defiantly
old-school methods are a reaction to the chemical-free processes of 21st-century
cameras. "With the rise of digital photography, perhaps traditional
silver-based photography can have a self-reflexive moment, since it no longer
has concern itself with representing the world around us, much like what
happened with painting after the invention of photography," he says.
"As for deciding
what looks good," he adds, "well, that is my job as an artist."
WHERE & WHEN
HIROSHI SUGIMOTO:
LIGHTNING FIELDS AND PHOTOGENIC DRAWINGS
Scottish National Gallery
of Modern Art,
4 August–18 September,
10am–6pm.
£7 (£5),
Tel: 0131 624 6200
© Mark Fisher 2011
THE scene is the Sahara
desert. Jean-Claude Van Damme and Steven Berkoff are on location, filming a
movie called Legionnaire. The shoot is going painfully slowly. There is time to
kill. But Berkoff has a solution. "In a trailer you go mad," he says
today. "You read books, you read the papers, you roll up cigarettes. What
is better to do in a trailer than write? I wrote two works over two or three
weeks – and I suddenly got involved with Oedipus."
It wasn't the first time
Berkoff had focused on the Sophocles tragedy. His 1979 play Greek relocated the
myth to the modern-day East End of London. Here the story of the king who
inadvertently murders his dad and marries his mum was told in terms of
waitresses in a decaying Britain and a hero called Eddy. Like his debut play
East, Greek became a mainstay of student theatre groups in Edinburgh and helped
secure Berkoff's place as an unofficial Fringe figurehead. Now he has brought
his new, more faithful, version of Oedipus published in 2000, to the stage for
the first time.
Having directed it in
Liverpool and Nottingham earlier this year, he is joining the cast himself to
play Creon on the Fringe. Simon Merrells – last seen in Edinburgh in Berkoff's
adaptation of On the Waterfront – reprises the central role of the arrogant
king and is joined by Anita Dobson as Jocasta, his wife and mother. Performed
around a long table, with imagery drawn from renaissance painting, the
production is a prime example of ensemble playing – heightened, intense and
visceral.
"My theatre is
actor-led," says Berkoff, 73, sitting in his East End studio flat
overlooking the Thames. "In a Greek play, you have the ensemble who are
the storytellers and the chorus who reflect the events. I see the ensemble as
the backbone of the company, therefore they must have absolute control and
command over the material and over the play. They are a dynamic reflection of
the events, telling the story and articulating the doubts of the people. The
leading actors are enhanced by this meteor tail of the ensemble. For that they
must be ambitious, versatile and physically dextrous."
To return to the Greeks,
he says, is something audiences have an appetite for, but it is an appetite
rarely satisfied. "The Greeks do speak to us very profoundly," he
says. "It's unfortunate that we don't see enough of them – or, when we do
see them, they're not put on in a way that expresses the underlying depth of
humanity."
It makes perfect sense
that filling the wall opposite him should be a collection of nine Peter Howson
originals. The Glasgow artist, with his bold, masculine directness, finds an
ideal match in Berkoff's muscular theatre. "All my savings go into Peter
Howson," says Berkoff, who played Bond villain General Orlov in Octopussy.
"There's an intensity, a compassion, a strong feeling, an identification
with the common man and also the poetic description of labour. That's something
you don't get very much of in the present art world."
Today Berkoff, dressed
in black tracksuit and rolling a cigarette, is in benign spirits – breaking off
only to rant about the bourgeoisification of his beloved East End – but whether
as an actor, director or writer, he is a tough-talking artist who despises
mediocrity. Far from the prim Greek tragedies of the classroom, his version of
Oedipus is an abrasive play that talks of "new-born brats",
"black bile" and "sceptic poison". "You've got to make
it real, give it substance, give it gravity, give it some kind of
grittiness," he says. "Most Greek plays are dull as dishwater.
They're so boring: 'Oh! Great Zeus, mighty king – la, la, la!'"
He demands a similar
kind of forcefulness of his actors and knows exactly what he's looking for:
"I can just see the rhythm of their body language, the swiftness of
response, the way they read, good timbre in their voices."
As a director, he has no qualms about cutting his own script when he needs to,
but he also enthuses about it as if someone else had written it. "The text
flows, it has a drive," he says. "It's rhythmic, because I'm a very
rhythmic person – I've studied dance, I love music – so it's great to work on
this text. It's not so much about muscularity as the jazz of text. It was the
same in the blues, in black music, when the people took hold of music and made
it their own. When the working man started making music, it was the sound of
the people that was exciting. You have to make theatre as dynamic, thrilling,
awesome as possible. I want the audience to see something they have never
before seen."
WHERE & WHEN
OEDIPUS
Pleasance Courtyard
Aug 3–29 August (not 9,
10, 17 or 24), 1.20pm
£10–£17.50, 0131 556 6550
© Mark Fisher 2011
Published in The List
The
youth will out
I
Hope My Heart Goes First has been given the thumbs up from the Made in Scotland
fund. Remarkably, finds Mark Fisher, it is performed by teenagers
Say
what you like about Junction 25, but don't call it a youth theatre. 'The young
people we work with experience the world the same as an adult would,' says Jess
Thorpe, co-director of the Glasgow company. 'We reject youth theatre as an
idea. It suggests young people are somehow less able to perform or less able to
have an idea.'
It's
certainly true your average youth theatre doesn't get asked to tour to London
and Norway, nor end up with backing from the prestigious Made in Scotland fund
for a two-week run on the Edinburgh Fringe. It's also true your average youth
theatre doesn't get reviewed in the daily papers, let alone attract five-star
raves. 'Pure joy,' said The Scotsman. 'Outstanding,' said The Herald.
Those write-ups were for I Hope My Heart Goes First, an hour-long amalgam of theatre, dance, music
and comedy in which 20 teenagers expound on the workings of the human heart. At
the centre is Adam, the group's youngest member, now 13, for whom adult
relationships are a mystery. While he sets to work writing an improvised list
of all the things he loves – anything from Shredded Wheat to computer games –
the rest of the cast put him right by sharing their experiences of romance.
'It came from adults
saying, "Oh, you don't understand it when you're only that age – it's not
real love,"' says Thorpe. 'But the show expresses that it is.'
What
distinguishes the company's work are two things. One is the high production
values. 'When we started, our remit was to produce a young company with a
professional aesthetic,' says co-director Tashi Gore. The other is that what
you hear is the true expression of the actors themselves. 'We make really good
theatre and it's us that makes it,' says Megan Reid, 18, a member for five
years. 'It's our input, our performance. You're performing as yourself and
you're performing something you've made and you're proud when you show it.'
Francesca
Lacey, 19, was the first member to sign up to Junction 25 when it launched at
Glasgow's Tramway six years ago. She is now a student on the contemporary
performance practice course at the RSAMD, but still acting in *3I Hope My Heart
Goes First*2 for as long as it tours. 'I'd gone to drama groups when I was
younger and they'd give you a script and you’d learn your lines,' she says.
'Junction 25, I found really different. It was all about your opinion, your
voice and what you wanted to say about the world as a young person. That was
really exciting. It felt as though I was being listened to.'
It
also feels to the performers as though they are being treated as artists. 'Not
only is Junction 25 a place where young people can take ownership of the
material, but also it is the opportunity to be part of something that is quite
professional,' says Megan's sister Rosie, 19, also at the RSAMD. 'The work speaks
for itself, not only in terms of young people making it, but in the wider
theatre context.'
For
the directors, the trick is not to impose their ideas but to tune into what
interests the young performers. In this way, the actors become raw materials
for Gore and Thorpe to shape into a finished production. 'We get excited about
their different qualities and then build something using those qualities,' says
Thorpe. 'People ask us how we got that performance out of them, but that's what
they're like all the time. There's a poetic framework around it and a craft
that goes alongside it, which is what we do.'
It's
a democratic process in which the directors allow the actors to be heard,
perhaps as a slightly exaggerated version of themselves, but close enough to
let them speak with confidence about real experiences. 'The stories I tell are
stories that have happened to me – ridiculous stories about failures in love,'
says Lacey, blushing. 'Every time I tell them it's funnier for me. I think,
'Why did I do that?' It's so embarrassing. And if the audience are in a
particularly funny mood, I'll throw some things in that'll make them laugh even
more.'
I Hope My Heart Goes
First, Remarkable Arts, St George’s West,
0131 226 0000, 5–16 Aug, 2pm; 24 Aug,
8.30pm, £10 (£8).
© Mark Fisher 2011
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