Sunday, 25 August 2013

This Is Not Goodbye: We'll Always Have Edinburgh


So long, farewell, aufwiedersehen, good … I didn’t actually see that show, or the comedy take-off of it which was up at the Fringe, but after four and a bit days ensconced in that festival, you tend to become a bit … musical … in your farewells. In fact, the shows force a hitherto unknown second musical personality out of you, and you end up prancing down the streets all thespy-schizoid and with jazz hands and adult humour songs buzzing on your lips (I’m blaming you, The Ruby Darlings).

Awkwardness of course ensues when you bump into non-Fringe tourists. Perplexed, scared, and frantically grasping for support/a phone to dial 999, they back off (‘don’t encourage it, Gladys, turn around, girl, hands in your pockets and gaze fixed forward and KEEP WALKING, love!!’). Oddly enough, a huge quantity of these tourists were swarming, be-raincoated and be-thermosed, up and down the Royal Mile, terrified and skittish at the sight of flyerers. How is it possible that they booked a holiday in Edinburgh in August and failed to notice that Europe’s biggest arts festival was happening there? A question for the ages.

But the Fringe is over for another year. Coming back to London (frigid air, torrential rain – who said the weather up north was worse than the south? At least rolling mists have the advantage of being dramatic) I feel a sense of sorrow – not lying, I really do. For a few days you live so large and loud and colourfully, and then you remember your end destination: the office. So, as one last hurrah for the bright lights and the sheer enthusiasm of Edinburgh, here are some final reviews:

The Bunker Trilogy: Agamemnon: Brought to you by former members of that Fringe staple Belt Up Productions, this is a claustrophobic and immensely impressive of theatre. Sat tightly packed and practically on top of your fellow audience members, you find yourself encased in a bunker, assailed as much by the action and emotion as the characters are by memories and mortar. The protagonist is dying in the trenches and in a series of memories and hallucinations he shows his belief that his wife back home – and his cousin, who has fallen in love with her – are conspiring to kill him. The only issue with this production is that it doesn’t need to reference Agamemnon, as within this context it doesn’t truly succeed as an invocation of the story – there is no Iphigenia to plant the seed of hatred in Clytemnestra, no children, no kingdom, no names, even. Taken out of the constraints of Greek fable, however, it is an astonishingly good piece of work – impeccable acting and an immersive setting collide to give a sense of watching a true drama unfold before you, as if it were on screen. ****1/2

Shakespeare for Breakfast: Another staple of the Fringe, Shakespeare for Breakfast has been delighting audiences for years. Furnished with a cup of coffee and a croissant, they settle down to see modernised, immensely funny takes on Shakespeare’s classics. Offered up to us this year was The Taming of the Shrew, couched in the context of the Royal Wedding and Birth. Prince Harry’s attempts to woo Pippa-Bianca remain one of the highlights of the show. With less audience participation than previous shows of theirs and slightly less engaging turns from a couple of cast members, it doesn’t quite reach the dizzyingly fantastic heights of last year’s Romeo and Juliet, but these are minor quibbles; Shakespeare for Breakfast remains a Fringe must-see. ****

Howie The Rookie: Unequivocally the best one-man show I have ever had the privilege to see. Tom Vaughan-Lawlor takes up a ferocious Atlas-like task, performing the monologues of two characters, who in other incarnations would be played by two actors. Fast-paced, relentless, careening as if written on a high through cussing and intoxicated lyricism, the script never gives you a break but for the two devastating moments of horrific pathos and tragedy which demarcate the end of each character’s monologues. Howie Lee and Rookie Lee are Dublin hoodlums, violent and seedy, but the honour and a bridge for sympathy is found in both. Vaughan-Lawlor gives a powerhouse performance – full-throttle, never resting, and with astonishing physical control and stamina – over the course of 80 minutes which could only end in a justly deserved standing ovation.  *****

The Only Way is Downton: Have you ever seen a young man do an impression of Maggie Smith as the Dowager in Dowton Abbey? Well, have you ever seen him do that in the same breath in which he impersonates Tom Daley as her unlikely bridegroom and Alan Carr as the possibly even more unlikely reverend marrying them? The Only Way is Downton is a brilliant one-man skit which brings together Downton Abbey and modern reality shows (The X Factor, The Great British Bake-Off) for an explosively funny culture clash – a clash unobserved by the characters themselves. The impressions are uncanny, and the ability to switch lightning fast between them all is impressive. ****

The Ruby Darlings: Ruby and Darling are to blame: I’m perpetually humming smutty lyrics now as I wander around and am scaring the neighbours as a result. Ruby and Darling are two girls reclaiming the female prerogative to have a good time on equal footing with men, with filthy lyrics and beltingly good singing voices. If they can tighten the comedy and the song introductions, they’ll have a damn fine show. ***1/2

Free Tea & Biscuits Comedy: The Brits like tea and they like biscuits with their tea; as a marketing ploy, this is a sure win. The atmosphere was very informal and comfortable – a surprisingly leisurely approach to performance – as was the comedy. Entertaining, with engaging compering, it was witty, understated, and full of laughs, albeit not hugely memorable. It was that jumper which always makes an appearance when you’re not going out – it fits, it’s comfortable, it makes you think of good times. ***

Chaucer All Strung Up: The Franklin’s Tale: Chaucer All Strung Up promised much – storytelling, acrobatics, puppetry, and more – but sadly delivered little. Despite the best efforts of the cast to engage the audience, chatting with them in character even as they were filing in and engaging them interactively throughout, they couldn’t overcome the fact that the production itself just didn’t have the energy or the focus to sustain interest. It seemed to be pitched initially at a younger audience than was there, with childish voices, and childish puppetry, which wrongfooted the audience from the start. It then lost its story and all of Chaucer’s charm in its conceit, namely to put the story mise-en-scene within the context of a girl (who tells everyone else the story) reliving it herself when she joins a circus and falls in love with the lead acrobat. The concept is laudable, but not its execution.**

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