This week Jack reviews Iron Man 2 while Luke sits around doing sweet nothing because he’s too lazy/apathetic/hates the concept of Iron Man to have seen it. Also Jennifer Anniston gets mauled again.
First Night Review: Much Ado About Nothing
Remembering the trips I used to go on with my school to see, among others, plays by Shakespeare being put on in London, I met an audience filled mostly with school children with mixed reactions. Testament to the Oxford Triptych Theatre’s production of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, however, the enraptured audience held happy witness to a solid performance of one of Shakespeare’s greatest works.
Set in post-war Paris, complete with oversized French flag, the actors move between a sparse café space on one side and a single bench on the other. Far from detracting from the production and requiring only two rapid scene changes, the pared down set plays into the pace with which we encounter each new Act and the rapidity of movement onstage. The wit and comedy of the piece, then, acts as focus. The actors project and articulate well, which means no jokes were lost. On the other hand, poignancy was sometimes problematic, with scenes of mixed emotion (Don Pedro’s rejected marriage proposal) and scenes of strong emotion (Hero’s ‘death’) needing much more forceful acting to bring through the unsettling mix of comedy and tragic pain. Focus on comedy paid off, however, with a superb Borachio (James Phillips) and an astounding Benedick (Will Hatcher) cutting across the action around them to deliver perfectly intonated lines and expressive reactions. The production saw Hatcher particularly hilarious hidden behind the giant French flag on hearing the news of Beatrice’s ‘love’.
The mixture of seasoned and student actors served to show just how much talent there is to be found in student acting. Hannah Lee playing Hero shone, from childish giggles to the sudden overflow of emotion from the wrongly accused. Likewise, Beatrice, played beautifully by Vicky Coleman, delivered her, “O that I were a man for his sake!”, with furious passion, raging against the tall figure of Benedick, an Act as much a credit to her as to the direction.
First Night Review: No Exit
The Frewin Undercroft, a vaulted crypt-like performance space which belongs to Brasenose, makes an unexpectedly fitting venue for the Oxford’s latest production of Jean Paul Sartre’s No Exit. It’s hot and dark inside; the seating is cramped, the set austere. Everything contributes to the audience absorbing the same feeling of being hemmed in that afflicts the play’s characters.
In a venue like this, there’s absolutely nothing for the actors to hide behind: no ensemble dance numbers, no stagey delivery to an audience ten feet away. Instead they must face the test of delivering the text realistically to people just inches in front of them. And in general, No Exit succeeded. All four actors listened well and supported one another. The casting was spot on, from the moment Jamie Randall opened the play with a short but well-acted appearance as the most insubordinate valet ever until the end.
Louisa Holloway was spiky and powerful in the role of Inez: she shows a great understanding of the character, and manages to be rather unnerving. Peter Drivas plays a sweaty, passionate Garcin and has some particularly good moments when revealing the dark side of his past. Olivia Charlton-Jones plays Estelle with great sensitivity to her character’s vulnerable side, and thickens the air with sexual tension.
The story was well told by the ensemble, and held the attention without any boring patches; at best, the performance was engaging and hilarious. However, I felt that sometimes actors spoke too loudly in what is rather a small space. I did occasionally come close to switching off due to excessive volume, but at least we could hear – and in fairness it could be argued that all the shouting was motivated by the dramatic need of angry arguments in a play where ‘hell is other people’.
Will Bland directed the play with great attention to clarifying the intentions of the characters. This was further enhanced by the movement, which was outstanding by the standards of student productions, as every move had a clear and illuminating purpose.
The set was simple but not bare: three leather armchairs, a table and a Buddha. It worked, although when the characters were sitting down it was sometimes difficult to see their faces. So try and get there in time for a front row seat. If you do, it’ll be worth it – this is a very thorough and entertaining take on a great modern play.
Maximus Marenbon
Online Review – Fourtissimo
‘The theatre,’ writes the poet Christopher Reid, ‘is a big, ramshackle, blindly trundling machine. / with bits falling off it, it clatters through the generations, / more wasteful of lives than a losing army. / You fed it your love, and it gave you too little in return.’
It is a brave man who writes new comedy for the Oxford stage. First, you have to make sure that your audience will actually laugh. Then, even when they do laugh, you have to make sure that they don’t feel guilty about it. You have to entertain them and stimulate them. If you don’t, all your loving care and painstaking attention to detail will be summarily dismissed. There are few trades crueller than student theatre, and hundreds of hours of tender labour are crushed beneath its wheels. You feed it your love, and all too often it gives you too little in return.
Kudos, then, to Tom Garton for taking the beast head on. His new play Fourtissimo purports to be a comic ‘laboratory-culture examination of what it is to be a modern man.’ Into the Petri dish go a Roman Catholic priest in love with stripper, a politician with hidden sexual depths, a lawyer in a dangerously-long-term relationship and a maniacal journalist who thinks he may be Byron, or at least Don Juan. They all live in the priest’s flat, and discuss their trials and antics with the opposite sex in four scenes.
This has all the ingredients of a sitcom – even the Beautiful South soundtrack. And it is, to all intents and purposes, a sitcom. Garton is forthright: he wants to entertain his audience. Will he? Quite possibly. The four actors play their subverted stereotypes well enough, and the script definitely has its moments, even if both performance and writing are short on panache. The sardonic David, played by Alex Jeffery, gets teed up for all the best lines, but the hero of the piece is Rhys Bevan’s Jacob, the shy priest groping blindly for faith and nipple tassels. I did not see enough of journo John – ‘half demented sex-pest, half romantic poet’ – to form a useful impression, and his unknown quantity will be central to the play’s success or smarting failure.
But Fourtissimo is also meant to be thought-provoking when the laughter stops. All four characters do jobs that would have guaranteed them success and influence in another time and another place, but they are all in their various ways pathetic failures. Especially in their relationships with the other half of humanity. Women come to symbolise everything these four men do not have but wish they did have. In the end, though, Fourtissimo does not seem to cast a piercing light on the soul of the twenty-first century man. It has its thoughtful moments, but they are usually defused within seconds by Garton’s pervasive irony. This is philosophy of the Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps school. Fourtissimo should provide a good evening’s amusement, though, and Garton will write better scripts in years to come.
Verdict: My Oxford Family
Fourtissimo is on at the Burton Taylor from Tuesday to Saturday of 6th Week at 9.30pm.
Online Review – Dangerous Liaisons
It is exactly twenty-five years since Christopher Hampton first adapted Laclos’ Les Liaisons Dangereuses – then a little-known novel – for the stage. ‘It’ll never work,’ they said. ‘It’s a novel full of letters; they never meet each other.’ With the bloody-mindedness of genius, Hampton persisted. Alan Rickman played the Vicomte de Valmont, and Lindsay Duncan the Marquise de Merteuil, and the play’s success hurled it from the West End to Broadway.
The script is brilliant, chilling and amoral – no, immoral, for the central characters actively flout morality as the most unforgivably boorish of commonplaces. Valmont and Merteuil were once lovers, and now the world exists only as a chessboard for their skirmishes. Pride is paramount, but unflinching control comes a close second. Merteuil has been slighted by her recent conquest Monsieur de Gercourt, who has become engaged to a demure fifteen year-old still blinking in the sunlight after her convent education. She avenges herself by having Valmont seduce Gercourt’s naive fiancee, in exchange for a night in her own bed. Meanwhile Valmont has resolved to scale Mme de Tourvel, a married lady of the highest repute for virtue and beauty and a philanderer’s Mount Everest.
Rachel Bull’s cast do a very fair justice to this adaptation. Merteuil and Valmont drive the performance. Chloe Courtney must be a contender for actress of the term as she plays Merteuil with an assured economy and lightness of touch. Quiet, almost ethereal, she spikes her gentle demeanour with shards of jagged malice. Lines such as ‘a poor choice is less dangerous than an obvious choice’ suggest some commonplace Wildean termagant, but Courtney sidesteps the cliches neatly. She delivers Merteuil’s inexhaustible quiver of aphorisms with barbed menace and subtle poison. The French have a word for this kind of performance: sangfroid.
Alex Krasodomski-Jones, meanwhile, has torn up Alan Rickman’s textbook on Valmont and plumped for a much softer interpretation. Once again the obvious thing to do with Valmont would have been to play him as a swaggering rake burning testosterone like rocket fuel, the kind of man who would speak of ‘the real intoxication when you know she loves you, but you’re not quite certain of victory’ over a brandy-and-soda. There is none of this ostentatious manfulness in Krasodomski-Jones’ Valmont, though – he is fey, flimsy, a little sleepy. You might even go so far as to call him effeminate. This makes for a sensitive counterpoint to Courtney’s Merteuil, and the dynamic between the two is tense and compelling. Their ‘single combat’ is fenced out with chilled steel and icy flair.
The rest of the characters are not touched by the same stardust as the principals. Charlie Mulliner mars an otherwise convincing performance as de Tourvel with a bit too much bosom-heaving. Danceny – the fifteen year-old Cecile’s lover – and Mme de Rosemonde, Valmont’s aunt, are very credible, but some of the other actors look a little uncomfortable. It’s no big deal, though: it actually helps the play along if the characters duped by Merteuil and Valmont are somehow not quite real. My only concern for this play is that it might be a bit spoiled by the microphones and other paraphernalia of an open-air performance, when it would really benefit from the immediacy of a theatre like the BT.
Dangerous Liaisons is taut and poised. Watching this production, you feel that you are being treated to a ninety minute-long advert for some potent, high-class spirit. Absinthe, perhaps. Its cold-blooded depravity makes Dorian Gray look like the Little Prince. This is sexy, intelligent, elegant theatre, and if you only watch one garden play this term, make it this one.
The Alternotive Perspective
Singing, speaking, but mainly thrusting from the mixed acapella group, ‘The Alternotives’.
The Beautiful Game’s greatest stage
As Jonathan Pearce so passionately exclaims in that rousing opening to the re-release version of ‘Three Lions’, ‘The crosses of St George are flying all around me’. Here we are, several weeks before a World Cup, and the iconic commentator’s jingoistic words are relevant yet again: even in mild-mannered Oxford, countless car-windows and house-fronts have already become prime prominences for conspicuous demos of pride and patriotism. Expect to see plenty more flags in the coming month too. World Cup fever is infectiously contagious, and a wide majority of our population seems severely susceptible to it.
Forgive my own ebullient excitement, but the World Cup is big news (not to mention big business). Hype hits us with the force of a freighter; we simply cannot resist the awesome power of the greatest show in world sport. Every TV advert is either explicitly about football or bears the near-ubiquitous logo of the upcoming tournament: who can watch Nike’s stunning epic (3 minutes of cinematic genius, if you ask me) without an intoxicating sense of bursting anticipation? It’s times like this that you feel sincere pity for all those un-initiates who still don’t adore the beautiful game: their lives are worse off without football, and they don’t even realise what they’re missing. If the world’s having a party, why not come along for the ride?
Football might be absolutely huge as a global phenomenon, but a World Cup launches it into the stratosphere. Over one-sixth of all living people will watch the final, and innumerable others will follow it in any way they can; even the staunchest of anti-football dissenters will rise from their ignorance for a month or so, captivated by 64 games of top-class sport. Only at the World Cup does Honduras vs. Switzerland become essential viewing, and only at the World Cup is every kick of the ball so delectably savoured and meticulously scrutinized. Nothing compares (in this country, not even a general election), and the sheer volume of media coverage is staggering. The whole spectacle’s scale and immensity must reduce weaker-minded players to slim shadows of their usual selves. Ultimately, excellence can create a legend where errors can breed a fool: an international footballer cannot escape from the eager lenses of the world.
As for those who don’t share our quasi-religious enthusiasm, you can forget any pretensions of cultural snobbery or superiority: this summer, the World Cup could contain more drama in South Africa than is in the entirety of Shakespeare, and there might be more poetry in Messi than Milton ever dreamed of. Some of the most sublime aesthetic achievements in human history have been produced on a football field, a space where sport and art can fuse and intertwine. No other sport is so regularly described in terms of its beauty and its attractiveness.
A World Cup is the supreme platform, a unique canvas for the conjuring of masterpieces: think of Maradona in ’86 (the magisterial slalom, not the satanic fist), or Bergkamp in ’98. Words cannot do justice to these moments, magnificent moving images that are etched into the popular consciousness like great songs or paintings.
This summer, be sure to enjoy every possible minute of the competition: revel in the creation of fresh immortality and celebrate with the voices of a billion fellow fans. After all, Earth’s favourite pastime is about to explode into our lives, once again, with the full-blown impact of a FIFA World Cup.
A Lovely Labour, Well Found
Following the success of Bad Jazz and Stoning Mary earlier this year, St. John’s Mummers effortlessly bring their usual vitality and dynamism to Shakespeare’s Love’s Labour’s Lost.
The deft abridgement of the original script’s obscurity contemporises the play, and is enhanced by the 1920s costume, uncluttered set and simple use of props. This sunny romantic comedy encapsulates the Trinity Term experience: four young scholars attempt to devote themselves to their studies, but are soon tempted by the promise of summery shenanigans with the opposite sex.
Director Philip Bartlett nurtures excellent performances from the seventeen-strong St. John’s cast of varying acting experience, led by Joel Phillimore who delivers a likeably playful and engaging performance as Berowne. The Mummers’ interpretation is refreshingly bright: the ‘ooh er, missus’ humour of the piece is brought to the fore of the sparkling dialogue through confident, though never patronising, delivery. The pudding of Shakespearean wit is by no means over-egged by nudge nudge, wink wink performances, but accentuated by quickfire dialogue and the evident enjoyment of the cast onstage. It is a delight, for English students in particular to genuinely enjoy an Elizabethan comedy for being funny! Moth’s (Tess Ellison) and Armado’s (Fiona Guest) fast-paced interchanges are a highlight, although every scene, and set change, is as elegantly brisk as Shakespeare intended.
If Pinter’s pauses aren’t your cup of tea, the twinkling script of Love’s Labour’s Lost should have you packing your picnic basket instead. The production, staged in the beautiful gardens of St. John’s, has adopted a BYOB (bring your own blanket) policy, and runs from Monday to Wednesday of Fifth Week at 6.30pm.
Verdict: A Royal Treat
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Saturday – Pembroke W1 Blades – Ollie Ford
Friday – Bumped! Summer VIIIs 2010 – Rachel Chew
Thursday – Hugh’s Cat – Will Granger
Wednesday – Building Bonfires – Sophie Wells
Tuesday – ‘No Exit’, Frewin Undercroft – Ollie Ford
Monday – Time on hands – Ursa Mali
Sunday – Oxford university engineering science robot – Jeremy Wynne
Preview: Magdalen Film Society Screenings
Ever wanted to see a Japanese woman lay an egg? Do you occasionally wonder how a human corpse would look cooked, seasoned, and served with carrots? If so, head to the Magdalen auditorium this weekend. The college’s film society will be showing Nagisa Oshima’s In the Realm of the Senses (1976) on Sunday, and Peter Greenaway’s The Cook, the Thief, his Wife and her Lover (1989) on Monday. Although they are not being presented as a double bill, the two films have points in common: both centre on the explicit depiction of carnal love, both end with one of the principal characters losing his penis, and both were partly financed by France.
In the Realm of the Senses tells the true story of prostitute Abe Sada, who in the 1930s was caught wandering the streets of Tokyo, her lover’s testicles in hand. The film shows the relationship between the two, which ends in her arrest. We witness the couple making love again and again, in ever more sordid fashion, until the suffocating claustrophobia of the bedrooms is mirrored in their games of erotic asphyxiation. Oshima shoots everything in reds and yellows, and he gradually ups the saturation as the film progresses. In the final scene, Abe chokes her partner to death and robs him of his member; never was Japan’s patriarchal society more vividly emasculated onscreen.
The Cook… is another film about a woman asserting herself in a dominantly male environment. Albert (Michael Gambon) is a gangster and restaurateur, Georgina (Helen Mirren) his reluctant wife. While Albert holds court in his restaurant night after night, drunkenly abusing his staff and spitting at his guests, Georgina pursues a secret affair with a regular client, the gentle, bookish Michael. Albert soon finds out, and has Michael killed. In revenge, Georgina asks the restaurant’s chef to cook the corpse, which she then forces Albert to eat. The plot is bonkers, but played out in the confined space of the restaurant – where people are constantly consuming – it makes sense. As Georgina and Michael make love in the kitchen, the larder, anywhere they won’t be found, the link between food and flesh becomes plain to see.
So Oshima associates sex with death, and Greenaway with gastronomy (although he also plays Michael’s naked corpse for erotic effect). I hesitate to ascribe this to cultural differences, even if The Cook…‘s vision of greed and decadence is a caricature of Thatcherism. Ultimately, both films get carried away with smashing taboos, and as documents of sexual customs in their respective societies they are unreliable. Japan may have a history of truly out-there sex offenders, but Oshima doesn’t care why Abe loses her marbles, or whether she represents a genuine social malaise; by cutting the two protagonists off from the outside world and confining them to their bedrooms, he suggests that they are an isolated case.
Greenaway too is more interested in style than characterization. He hints at domestic violence in Albert’s and Georgina’s relationship, which he suggests may stem from Georgina’s inability to bear children, but instead of expanding this plotline he trots off into cannibalism territory. The best things about The Cook… are Michael Nyman’s stately score, Jean-Paul Gaultier’s costumes and the deliberately artificial set, which wobbles when struck. There is nothing realistic about the film’s environment or its characters. As with In The Realm of the Senses, it is a theatrical chamber piece, too bizarre for the outside world.