Category: Theatre

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Fat Friends The Musical – Glasgow

    ★★★☆☆ | Fat Friends The Musical, Glasgow

    *Review taken from the Sheffield production*

    As her wedding day approaches, Kelly buys her dream wedding dress, even though it is two sizes too small for her.

    When Julia Fleshman, the head of a national slimming club chain, comes to town to judge a slimming contest live on TV, Kelly ends up going viral with her body confident comments; and seizing the opportunity for some publicity, Fleshman offers to pay for Kelly’s wedding if she can slim into the dress in time for the big day. But with the wedding only six weeks away, the pressure is on…

    Fat Friends is very much a piece of crowd-pleasing theatre. Pulling together multiple stories of the good folk of Headingly, a town near Leeds, the stage is filled with likeable, if slightly caricatured, characters and is a straightforward evening of undemanding fun.

    The show boasts a good cast, with Jodie Prenger taking the lead as Kelly, and doing so with a cocky northern confidence and a belting singing voice. Sam Bailey (The X-Factor) is great as Kelly’s Mum and Natasha Hamilton (from Atomic Kitten) is the scheming Julia Fleshman. Thrown into the mix is an affable turn from Kevin Kennedy (Coronation Street) and ex-cricketer Andrew “Freddie” Flintoff, who takes to the stage and fares better than expected with a slightly stilted, if not tongue in cheek, portrayal of Kevin, Kelly’s nice but dim fiancé.

    The songs are amiable enough and used to move the story forward, and whilst they were perfectly pleasant to listen to and shoehorned a few laughs into the lyrics, they served their purpose well enough in terms of keeping up the show upbeat and jolly, but were ultimately fairly forgettable. The live orchestra added to the atmosphere within the theatre and the set design was a colourful cartoonish affair which was well lit and effective in its simplicity.

    Written and directed by Kay Mellor, who wrote the original TV series that the show is based on; Fat Friends is a rather loud, boisterous and upbeat show, which really resonates with its target audience. It’s a rather clichéd musical by numbers, with a heavy-handed script, fairly trite lyrics and a rather unsubtle approach to its humour, but what it lacks in sophistication, it makes up for with likeable characters, a few good belly laughs and buckets-full of near the knuckle, northern charm.

    Fat Friends is at the King’s Theatre Glasgow, Glasgow until the 5th May 2018, book tickets click here

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Sunset Boulevard

    ★★★★☆ | Sunset Boulevard

     

    Sunset Boulevard celebrates the golden age of Hollywood, where fading silent screen icon, Norma Desmond is trying to put herself back into the spotlight, with the assistance of Joe Gillis, a screenwriter who literally crashes into her life and is seduced by the lifestyle she can offer. However, scratching beneath the surface of the glitzy show business veneer exposes a dark tale of unrequited love, obsession, jealousy and controlling and manipulative behaviour, which brings people to the brink of insanity and murder.

    Sunset Boulevard is not necessarily Lloyd-Webbers strongest work, although it does have a score which, at times, is reminiscent of Evita; but it certainly entertains. And whilst, in the words of the musical, Evita may have brought with her “just a touch of star quality”, Ria Jones brings an abundance of dazzling West End class with a powerhouse performance as Norma Desmond, proving that she is every bit the star that her character once was. Danny Mac (Strictly Come Dancing) is also very impressive as Joe Gillis, strutting the stage with a cocksure swagger and holding his own against such a strong leading lady.

    But this production it is not all about the performances. Colin Richmond’s set design is top-notch, with a real attention to detail and some inventive visuals; and the scenes transform smoothly and elegantly from one location to another whilst projected images enhance the multi-layered set. The staging is grandiose and inventive, moving from the large open spaces of the studio backlot to the intimacy of darkened rooms of Desmond’s mansion. The 16 piece orchestra is delightful and the lighting design washes the stage with the orange and gold glamour of Hollywood before fading into the dimly lit locations of the darker corners of the story.

    Sunset Boulevard is a standout touring production which oozes with class, sophistication and quality.

    Sunset Boulevard is playing at Sheffield Theatres until Saturday 28th April 2018, before continuing on its national tour

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Tina, Aldwych Theatre

    ★★★★ | Tina, Aldwych Theatre

    Adrienne Warren is astonishing as Tina Turner in the new musical aptly titled Tina. Now playing at the Aldwych Theatre, Tina charts the ups, and many downs, of Tina’s life. Born as Ann-Mae Bullock, in 1939, we are shown, first hand, how, as a little girl, she was brought up in a violent household where her father hit her mother, causing her mother to move away with her sister (leaving Ann-Mae behind).

    Then we are all aware of Tina’s 16-year violent relationship with Ike Turner, a relationship that she got into when she was very young (16), and which produced two boys. But once this depressing part of the story concludes (depressing because of the emotion and violence) we get to the good stuff;  how Tina reinvented herself ( with the help of manager Roger Davies – played by Ryan O’Donnell) and became a music superstar all on her own, and then had several chart-topping hits in the 1980s and 1990s, raising her level to icon status.

    All of this story is told in the songs of Tina (and Ike) Turner. ‘What’s Love Got To Do With It’ is, strangely enough, sung in an airport lounge, while ‘I Can’t Stand the Rain’ is performed with, yes you guessed it, umbrellas, while there are other questionable sequences that don’t quite fit the music. And some of the wigs most of the men wear to reflect the time period look a bit silly and fake at best, plus a couple performers go a bit overboard in their acting in a couple dramatic scenes. Kobna Holdbrook-Smith as Ike Turner doesn’t quite nail the role. However, it’s Warren’s show. Every time she opens her mouth and sings it’s electrifying, and without her, the show would not be a hit.

    Warren is just simply amazing, simply the best, and at the end, the audience is treated to a few more songs, and Warren truly does deserve the standing ovations she receives night after night after night. Warren is a star in her own right.

    140,000 new tickets went on sale Wednesday 18 April 2018 and is now booking to 16 February 2019.

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Talking Point, Wilton’s Music Hall

    THEATRE REVIEW | Talking Point, Wilton’s Music Hall

    ★★★★ | Talking Point

    What do you want from a diva? And please, don’t say precious, needy showboating, or reheating tired old douchebag showtunes way overdue for mercy killing! Isn’t life far too short for mediocrity, and as the very wonderful Iggy Pop says in the docudrama American Valhalla, ‘If you risk nothing, you gain nothing, no matter who you are’. Exactly – any performer petrified of pushing boundaries stays permanently locked in predictability. Naming no names, of course, but truly, what the f*ck do you have to lose in this life by being as raw and extreme as possible? The worst thing imaginable – death -hits us all, so anything less is pure bliss! Playing safe creatively is just the pure domain of grade-A assholes, not nuclear, passionate misfits!

    And yes, don’t X-Factor wannabees and terminal underachievers everywhere constantly whinge about their ‘style’ – AKA generic idiocy – being ripped off by more charismatic artists they seethingly envy? But Christ, as Bob Dylan said decades ago, ‘open your eyes and ears – get born, even – and you’re influenced!’ Exactly – it’s not what you soak up, but what you do with it that counts! So, forget Simon Cowell’s adored,  knackered human jukeboxes pumping out showtunes to bore punters stiff – they wish! Sadly,  the only sliver of sexual (dis)interest at X-Factor shows is a complete absence of mass erections! But – with all the above concerns duly noted – let’s turn to Camille O’ Sullivan, that ferocious fireball of feral, genius-level charisma!

    Her showcase, tonight – and until the 21st – is Wilton’s Music Hall, which, quite aptly and symbolically, is a perfect, Platonic metaphor for Camille herself; stark, raw, riotously functional, giving no concessions whatsoever to uber-bland notions of mass-consensus beauty, or Auto-tuned insipidness. Better yet, the theatre’s long, narrow, with a sumptuously arched, barrel-vaulted roof, simply ideal for killer acoustics!

    Like Camille herself, the stage set evokes a spurious, brash, carnival glamour, all scarlet curtains and papier-mache, fake animal heads – donkey, pig and fox – topping dress stands hanging tonight’s purely decorative gowns. What, then, is a diva? A diva, primarily, is neither sex nor gender; it’s not his/her penis or pussy that lingers immortalised in passive or enraptured ears, but, rather, pure, scorching, disembodied passion and meticulously conjured emotions. Still, that note of stroppy audaciousness that’s absolutely crucial to Camille’s humour and delivery shrewdly shapes even her set design; there’s an illuminated, lemon-yellow electric bunny onstage by the drum kit, an abstruse reminder of the pumping beat of both music and the fecund percussion of frenzied, sexual fertility itself.

    So, do yourselves a favour, and instantly dismiss the glib snottiness of Dua Lipa, tediously epitomised by her ‘IDGAF’ – I Don’t Give A Fuck‘- track. Rather, instantly slam Camille in your veins, all liquid, napalm fury and supercharged, exotic desire! Okay, sadly -to date- she’s written no self-penned, genuinely anthemic bangers, but her raw mastery of reinterpreting definitive, art-rock songs for the ages is so astounding any aspiring covers queens should abdicate ASAP!

    Fittingly, Camille’s introduced by the eerie tinkling of the classic, ‘Twilight Zone’ TV series, an immediate statement of intent to expect nothing but the extraordinary. Does she deliver? Oh God, yes – in spades! From the rasping, smoked-honey raunchiness of Peggy Lee’s ‘Is That All There Is?’, a hymn to existential angst, which Camille memorable concludes by shattering a glass, it’s clear we’re in for a night of prime, Bette Davis excess. Similarly, Tom Waits’ ‘Misery Is The River Of The World‘ is dispatched in a rousing, transfixed cabaret trance, while Brel’s ‘Amsterdam’- sung acapella, and punctuated only by Camille’s thrillingly stamped boot-heel- is raw, raucous and revelatory.

    Tonight, mercifully, is a semi-miraculous rendition of Camille’s preferred and Deeply Alternative Great American Songbook, as ambitious and fully-fleshed as the woman herself, who’s nothing like the preferred, half-starved waifs routinely served up by the X-Factor and its’ ilk, all riding an anorexia express to probable and lasting oblivion. Camille, however, has flesh, venom and talent by the bucket-load, and- as she tears into Bowie’s ‘Five Years‘ and ‘All The Young Dudes‘ – makes Bowie’s recorded originals seem pallid and restrained, not the demented, sheerly brilliant, derailed train-wrecks that tear so thrillingly from Camille’s orgasmically dilated lips! Still, both songs are queer, Holy scripture from Bowie’s early 70s supernova brilliance, which unquestionably pioneered the entire, genderfluid lexicon, and so Camille – radiantly transfixed by her complete adoration of Bowie – reworks his masterworks as fierce, non-binary dispatches even new, queer icon Ezra Furman would bow down and die for!

    There’s much more, of course – Nick Cave’s supremely tender ‘Ship Song‘, and Dylan’s ‘Simple Twist Of Fate‘- but the pure killer, indisputably, is a pin-drop, whisper-quiet take on Prince’s ‘Purple Rain‘, where Camille, arguably, makes the only mis-step of the entire show, asking her unfortunately tone-deaf audience to participate!

    That catastrophe aside, the show’s a ravishing, opium dream, the epitome of being comprehensively, aurally pleasured by an impossibly glamourous – and ultra-ballsy – gay-friendly diva! If Camille only originated material, she’d be untouchably superb, but currently, we’re forced to be satisfied with the heavyweight, sonic boxing punch Camille routinely delivers, easily on par with Rolling In The Deep, Adele’s smoking, steamroller portrait of lacerated angst! And Christ, that’s the least Camille delivers, and I’m in shell-shocked awe imagining what she’ll eventually unleash! Beg, borrow or buy tickets to her next show – November 29th@London’s Union Chapel – because it’s way past time to have your gay-friendly possibilities massively expanded!

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Fat Friends The Musical – Edinburgh

    ★★★☆☆ | Fat Friends The Musical, Edinburgh Playhouse

    *Review taken from the Sheffield production*

    As her wedding day approaches, Kelly buys her dream wedding dress, even though it is two sizes too small for her.

    When Julia Fleshman, the head of a national slimming club chain, comes to town to judge a slimming contest live on TV, Kelly ends up going viral with her body confident comments; and seizing the opportunity for some publicity, Fleshman offers to pay for Kelly’s wedding if she can slim into the dress in time for the big day. But with the wedding only six weeks away, the pressure is on…

    Fat Friends is very much a piece of crowd-pleasing theatre. Pulling together multiple stories of the good folk of Headingly, a town near Leeds, the stage is filled with likeable, if slightly caricatured, characters and is a straightforward evening of undemanding fun.

    The show boasts a good cast, with Jodie Prenger taking the lead as Kelly, and doing so with a cocky northern confidence and a belting singing voice. Sam Bailey (The X-Factor) is great as Kelly’s Mum and Natasha Hamilton (from Atomic Kitten) is the scheming Julia Fleshman. Thrown into the mix is an affable turn from Kevin Kennedy (Coronation Street) and ex-cricketer Andrew “Freddie” Flintoff, who takes to the stage and fares better than expected with a slightly stilted, if not tongue in cheek, portrayal of Kevin, Kelly’s nice but dim fiancé.

    The songs are amiable enough and used to move the story forward, and whilst they were perfectly pleasant to listen to and shoehorned a few laughs into the lyrics, they served their purpose well enough in terms of keeping up the show upbeat and jolly, but were ultimately fairly forgettable. The live orchestra added to the atmosphere within the theatre and the set design was a colourful cartoonish affair which was well lit and effective in its simplicity.

    Written and directed by Kay Mellor, who wrote the original TV series that the show is based on; Fat Friends is a rather loud, boisterous and upbeat show, which really resonates with its target audience. It’s a rather clichéd musical by numbers, with a heavy-handed script, fairly trite lyrics and a rather unsubtle approach to its humour, but what it lacks in sophistication, it makes up for with likeable characters, a few good belly laughs and buckets-full of near the knuckle, northern charm.

    Fat Friends is at the Edinburgh Playhouse, Edinburgh until the 22nd April 2018, book tickets click here

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Chicago, Phoenix Theatre

    ★★★★★ | Chicago, Phoenix Theatre

    Chicago London review

    It turns out that Velma Kelly and Roxie Hart hadn’t gone away for good, they were just polishing their revolvers, sharpening their tongues and napping in a cell somewhere. To celebrate the 21st anniversary of the West End production of Chicago, those murderous bitches are back to shake things up and take a well-aimed pop at the madness of celebrity culture. They’ve also bought their own dose of celebrity culture along with Oscar winner Cuba Gooding Junior playing slime-ball lawyer, Billy Flynn.

    If you’ve never seen Chicago on stage and only know it from the Hollywood film then you’re missing out. It has to be seen in the flesh (and there’s a lot of flesh on show). The men are beefy and scantily clad and the women are Vaudevillian and slinky. The set and costumes are pared back with an on-stage orchestra belting out all those classic Kander and Ebb hits. The choreography is note perfect with all the shoulder shrugs, finger clicks and pelvic thrusts that you expect from Bob Fosse. Yes, it’s the same old show that we got in the 90s but who cares? It’s a veritable classic. With murderesses this stylish and camp who needs anything new.

    Two choice musical theatre actresses take the key roles with Sarah Soetaert giving us a cheeky not so dumb blonde Roxie and Josefina Gabrielle excelling as an embittered Velma. Cuba Gooding Junior might struggle with the singing but he’s got the moves and the charisma needed to sleaze it up a little.

    As one drag queen said to another once on Rupaul’s Drag Race: ‘Bitch I’m from Chicago. I will whoop your ass.’. You can certainly rely on these scintillating killers to whoop any ass on offer.

    At the Phoenix Theatre in London

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Art

    ★★★ | Art, Sheffield Lyceum Theatre

    Art centres on a picture. A picture of some white lines. Some white lines on a white background. A picture which costs Serge £200,000. But is it art? His friend, Marc doesn’t think so, but Marc is a traditionalist and not a fan of modern art. Their friend, Yvan, is fairly indifferent, but is too busy focusing on his pending marriage and doesn’t want to offend either of them by agreeing or disagreeing. But over the course of an evening, the debate rages, and the three of them bicker, fall out and deliver some home truths; as the painting proves to me more of a talking point than they expected.

    Mark Thompson’s stage design is deceptively simple. The blank walls, the clean lines and the minimalist furniture all reflect the canvas in question, but looking closer, the set also reflects the three main characters, with three differently styled chairs reflecting each of their tastes.

    With so little on stage, Art heavily relies on its script and performances to hold the audience’s attention over the play’s 90-minute runtime. Yasmin Reza’s script (translated by Christopher Hampton) is wordy, fast-paced and remains sharp and witty, with some nice comedic elements and a satisfying pay off. Nigel Havers is well cast as Serge, carrying an air of superiority and condescension; Denis Lawson satisfies as Marc who favours the traditional over the modern; whilst Stephen Tompkinson upstages both of them, with a surprisingly impressive turn as Yvan, bringing laughter, pathos and emotion to the stage as the piggy-in-the-middle of the bickering group.

    Over 20 years since it landed in the West End, Art remains an enjoyable piece which in itself provokes debate as to whether its real intention is a serious point about the appreciation of art from an individual perspective, whether it is poking fun at the pretentiousness of the superiority that can accompany a highbrow point of view, or whether, Like Yvan, it sits somewhere in the middle.

    Art is at the Sheffield Lyceum Theatre (www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk) until Saturday 21st April 2018 before continuing on its national tour. Visit www.arttheplay.com for full details.

  • THEATRE REVIEW | The Little Mermaid – Milton Keynes Theatre

    ★★★★| THEATRE REVIEW | The Little Mermaid – Milton Keynes Theatre

    THEATRE REVIEW | The Little Mermaid - Milton Keynes Theatre

    *This review was taken from the Leeds Grand Theatre review*

    Northern Ballet return with their third new ballet this year, The Little Mermaid. Based on the much loved fairy-tale, the ballet tells the story of Marilla, the little mermaid who dreams of life above the waves, and who falls in love with Prince Adir after she saves him from drowning. But her love is unrequited; as the Prince falls in love with another young woman who he mistakenly believes saved him. Exchanging her tail for legs, and with her voice lost, Marilla sets about trying to win his heart.

    David Nixon’s choreography is well conceived, and executed, with a keen eye for detail and a style that lends itself well to the underwater setting.  The nuances of the choreography are impressive, with a real fluidity of movement in the underwater setting, reflecting life beneath the ocean and the gentle swaying of the current. Nothing stays still underwater, whether it is the beautifully designed flowing costumes, the mermaids held aloft as they weave and bob across the stage, or the ever-active limbs of the ensemble cast, with the sequential movement of the dancers accurately depicting the ebb and flow of the tide. But perhaps the crowning glory to this is Nixon’s use of the ensemble cast at one entity – the sea – and using these multiple bodies as one to form the ocean into a character in itself.

    The original score, which has been composed by Sally Beamish, flits between the primarily light and playful to the romantic and finally to the dramatic, feeling cinematic and engaging. The costumes work very well, with long flowing skirts that accentuate the gesticulation and mobility of the cast. Joseph Taylor was engaging and charismatic as Prince Adair, whilst Abigail Prudames enchanted as the titular character and the delicate movements of the cast as a whole was technically well executed.

    The ballet itself appears deceptively simple.  The demarcation between land and sea seems to be little more than a lighting change, and two large concave structures are used to good effect to set each location; thrusting the narrative to the forefront and portraying that with ease and clarity.  The narrative is decidedly darker than the familiar saccharine Disney version, adhering more closely to the source material, but is all the better for it. What the audience is left with is a production which requires very little thought as a viewer, allowing you to simply be able to be swept away by the music and movement on stage.

    Visit Northern Ballet’s Website for details.

     

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Northern Ballet’s Jane Eyre

    ★★★☆☆ | Northern Ballet’s Jane Eyre

    THEATRE REVIEW | Northern Ballet's Jane Eyre
    THEATRE REVIEW | Northern Ballet’s Jane Eyre

    In a timely revival, Northern Ballet celebrates one of the great literary heroines of all time, Jane Eyre, a fiercely strong and independent woman who moves from the unloving care of her Aunt to the strictness of the Lowood Institution; and subsequently on to Thornfield, the home of her employer and subsequently her true love.

    Cathy Marston’s choreography nestles neatly between traditional and contemporary ballet, and is set to a score which moves between being playfully uplifting and darkly dramatic. The Northern Ballet Sinfonia was on point with their performance, having swelled their numbers from the previous tour of this production.  The set is deliberately sparse, primarily comprising of screens and curtains which are used to focus the attention on particular areas of the stage and its simplicity compliments to complexity of the narrative and provides for a workable dance space; whilst the costumes give a flavour of the bleakness of the Yorkshire Moors which are occasionally peppered with bold colour

    Dreda Blow charms as the titular character, whilst Javier Torres gives a brooding and charismatic performance as Rochester; and Victoria Mason breathes life and insanity into the role of Rochester’s wife. In a company which danced with technical precision across the board, Mlindi Kulashe and Kevin Poeung both stood out from the ensemble and their consistency of performance and development from ballet to ballet continue to impress.

    Given the rich story and the numerous events depicted in the book, there is a lot for Marston to fit into the ballet’s two hour run time, and whilst the key plot points are hit; the narrative is not always as clear as it could be. Those familiar with Bronte’s work will find much to enjoy within this production, whilst others may find the programme notes useful in keeping track.

    That aside, Jane Eyre is a ballet which contains a flowing visual style, rich characterisations and a faithful adaptation of a timeless story which manages to maintain a feeling of freshness and originality in a frequently told tale.

    Northern Ballet’s Jane Eyre is at Sheffield Lyceum Theatre (www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk) until 14th April 201, moving to Cardiff New Theatre, London Sadlers Wells and The Lowry, Manchester. Visit www.northernballet.com for details.

  • THEATRE REVIEW | The Service at Café de Paris

    ★★★★★ | The Service, Cafe De Paris

    Café de Paris in Central London is host to The Service – the best burlesque and cabaret show in town.

    The Service is a theatrical and highly immersive show that is unique in that it takes the audience back to the time that Café de Paris was a roaring club back in the 1920s, through to the 40s – it’s one of the world’s most renowned clubs. The Service plays such jaw-dropping performances that capture the history of the club – it’s amazing nine-decade history. The Service is fast-paced, hilarious, outrageous – it’s a fun and sexy night where the ghosts of every era of Café de Paris come alive.

    Told by the very funny and sarcastic Reuben Kaye – the evening’s host and Maitre d’ – who guides us through the evening by a gang of performers who bewitch, bewilder, and excite the audience. it’s an unforgettable experience and an unforgettable night. And hot and sexy Craig Gadd ends the show in a moving and memorable performance of balancing on one hand while war footage is displayed on his chest – it’s a pinch-me moment. Even Josephine Baker makes an appearance. The Service is must-see cabaret in a venue made for cabaret.

    THE CAST

    Prepare to be captivated by the brilliant, award-winning, internationally acclaimed cast. Princess Margaret is played byBettsie Bon Bon– known as ‘the body of burlesque’ and voted Best Burlesque Performer 2016; whilstSammy Dinneen, aka the Valet, is one of the best and most technical hand balancers in the UK. Ken ‘Snakehips’ Johnson, the star of Britain’s black swing movement in the 1940s, is played by Korri Aulakh, who trained at the National Centre for Circus Arts and the National Circus School of Montreal.

    Anna the Hulagan, who plays The Club Kid, is one of the UK’s leading hula hoop teachers, best known as ‘London’s cult hula hoop artiste’ (The Times). As the winner of the Triple Crown award at the World Burlesque Games, Hulagan delivers performances that are as fun as they are sexy.

    For an unforgettable evening of entertainment, there is nowhere more magical to celebrate than at the world-famous Café de Paris.

    Tickets for Café de Paris’ The Service can be purchased via Design My Night

     

    Café de Paris

    The Service: 18:00 – 22:15 Nightclub: 22:15 – 03:00

    3 Coventry St, London W1D 6B

    The Service launched Friday 23rd March and takes place every Friday thereafter.

    Ticket Information

    General Admission – enjoy the show from Café de Paris mezzanine with waiter and bar

    service – £20 per person

    2-course dining (starter and a main) in the main ballroom – £55 per person

    3-course dining (starter, main and dessert) in the main ballroom – £60 per person

    Gold Package (6 guests minimum) – Reserved seats, canape platters & drinks – £75 per person

    VIP dining – 3-course dining, half a bottle of prosecco per person and best seats: £80 per person

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Devil With the Blue Dress, The Bunker

    ★★★★☆ | Devil With the Blue Dress, The Bunker

    THEATRE REVIEW | Devil With the Blue Dress, The Bunker
    Devil With the Blue Dress, The Bunker

    If you’re old enough to remember 1998 then you’ll recall a lot of fuss about a certain chalky stain down the front of Monica Lewinsky’s dress and a gag-worthy tale of a cigar being inserted into somewhere distinctly non-oral. Old news? Well, yes and no. Whilst Monica might not have dry-cleaned that dress, Hilary Rodman Clinton certainly cleaned up in the popularity polls and a chain of events began that came to an abrupt halt during the recent election. Sometimes being the wronged wife has its fringe benefits and the other woman isn’t always the villain of the piece.

    Kevin Armento’s witty take on the tale is a meta-theatrical absurdity. The characters know they’re in a play and the story is told by five women who featured in the story of Bill definitely ‘having sexual relations with that woman’. Hilary and Chelsea and the Bill’s secretary/go-between meet on stage with Monica and her confidante/betrayer Linda. Bill doesn’t appear but is voiced by the women around him as well as a plaintive saxophone. Whilst it’s a clever piece, it occasional lacks dramatic climax (unlike Mr Clinton) and feels more like reportage but it’s fun and thought-provoking nonetheless.

     

    Booking now