Reviews
•Sorcerer
Baklava A World in your Shell-like Puppet
Centre Trust/BAC, Battersea February 2005 Review by Cath Connolly |
•Spirit The Little Angel Theatre,
Islington April 2005 Reviewed by Beccy
Smith
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•Little
Angel Theatre The Grass is Greener The Little
Angel Theatre, Islington March 2005 Reviewed by Penny
Francis
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Sorcerer Baklava A World in your
Shell-like Puppet Centre Trust/BAC, Battersea February
2005 Review by Cath
Connolly This piece was presented as a work in progress by
this young company, prior to their taking it to the Edinburgh
Fringe, August 2005. The show began with the three female
puppeteers walking to the front of the playing space and putting on
enormous wellie-boots and disappearing underneath the set, which
consisted of tables covered in white cloths and a big projection
screen at the back. The wellies were our first clue to the recurring
theme of nature and the elements and our relationship with our
struggle against those forces which affect our daily lives. The
puppets were table–top and the different scenes were made by
ingenious use of cloth and clothing and everyday objects such as
lampshades. There was a lovely shower of rain made by shaking a
sleeping-bag over the main protagonist, and a fine drift of feathers
tumbled from a squishy rain cloud. The puppeteers played about
with scale, having three diminishing sizes of the main character, a
human-ish androgynous puppet with a soft leather skin, and a
pet/companion which he/she met and befriended. At one point the
puppets became so tiny that they were filmed and projected onto the
screen as they battled their way up the side of a mountainous duvet
whilst snow and wind pushed against them. The shell referred to in
the title was given to the little person by a bird and whenever
things got really tough, the puppet would put the shell to its ear
and a beautifully calming melody was played, in contrast to the
elemental chaos which was occurring. The soundscape was an
original composition and contributed greatly to the performance,
enhancing the action onstage and reinforcing the fact that puppetry
need not rely heavily on text and works so well with music. Although
the show was low-tech and the design simple, there was judicious use
of technology. Lighting and projections were there to add to the
performance and the lighting designer conjured up a desert and an
ocean on the same plain white cloth, aided of course by some
excellent manipulation. I particularly liked the depiction of the
relationship between the puppet and his pet (dog? deer? I asked the
puppeteers afterwards and it’s anything you want it to be) finding a
poignancy there as they clung together on a raft, buffeted by the
sea and at the mercy of the wind. I was sad when the show ended, so
completely had they conjured up a world in which I could lose
myself. Although there were some little mistakes and a feeling that
the show could be a little longer, Sorcerer Baklava showed us what
they are capable of achieving.
Spirit The Little Angel Theatre,
Islington April 2005 Reviewed by
Beccy Smith Spirit’s subject matter was a weighty one –
questioning the meaning we project onto contemporary life and living
– but its touch was light. This may largely be attributed to the
sensitive counter-pointing of verbal narrative (in the form of
recorded interviews) with visual animation both scenic, puppetry and
video (by Litza Jansz). There was a sense that the stage itself was
suffused with sentience, movement and, well, spirit. The pleasure of
watching the unfolding transformations perfectly balanced the
various seriousness, mundanity and occasional bizarreness that
emerged from the diverse voices and displaced subjectivity of the
interviews. The staging of the piece was continually surprising.
Opening images of miniature animated scenes in William Beattie’s
translucent, lit boxes stacked across the stage effectively and
ingeniously created a sense of a teeming, multiplicitous world. A
single piece of cloth anthropomorphising into a graceful dancing
figure before vanishing back into shapelessness seemed perfectly to
capture the sense of elusiveness characterising many of the
interviewees’ sense of the subject matter. In rendering this, it
suddenly seemed to matter less and we were led into a world where it
was enough to be simply engaged by the diverse ideas of others on
the theme, whilst your own imagination was stimulated by the images
before you. An extended contemplation on the possible meaning of
it all, with an inspiring use of shadow, light, movement and
manipulation (by the excellent Susan Beattie, Kate Middleton and Rob
Humphries), Spirit managed successfully to avoid the earnest
pitfalls of the subject matter, instead creating a theatrical
experience which allowed the audience to experience sensually and
emotionally the wealth of ideas it expressed. What a
treat!
Little Angel Theatre The Grass is
Greener The Little Angel Theatre, Islington March
2005 Reviewed by Penny
Francis Directed by Steve Tiplady, the piece purports to
be about the Turkish cousin of Punch, the anti-hero Karagoz and his
sidekick Hacivat. It is aimed at children over five of both the
Turkish and English-speaking communities, although, like Punch,
Karagoz originated as a rebellious, priapic anti-hero and his author
put to death by the Sultan. In this version, we are at first
treated to some shadow play which gently echoes the rumbustious
slapstick and wordplay of the original, but the manipulation is not
exact enough and much of the action, though based on original texts,
is inconsequential. The performers are more at home with the glove
figures that come later. If ever a show cried out for a good
writer or dramaturg this is it. The storyline involves a journey by
Karagoz to London, and the idea of juxtaposing Karagoz and Punch,
usually referred to as cousins, is a good one. Karagoz is given a
hard time in England, press-ganged into working with Punch (a
three-dimensional puppet of quite another aesthetic), but the story
is without flow or tension, meaning that there is little of the
attention captured by the ‘what’s going to happen next?’ factor. The
children and I were, I’m afraid, restless and even bored. However
the good news is that the live voices of Ronnie Le Drew (especially)
and Mohsen Nouri are strong and full of the energy the images and
story lacked. What I will remember are some of the scenic shadow
effects and transformations - modern, beautiful, magical - even if
they do not accord with the aesthetic of the Turkish shadow
characters or the English Punch. Sally Brown is the designer.
But by Little Angel standards disappointing, I’m sorry to
say.
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