It’s been a busy couple of
weeks, theatre-going-wise; headlined by three notable adaptations of extant
pieces.
Simon Harris and his
Lucid
Theatre Company presented “
Little
Wolf” at
Chapter, his take on
Ibsen’s “
Little Eyolf” – as stylish
as a tale of parental loss can be. Also there was
August 012’s minimalist version
of Steinbeck’s “
Of
Mice And Men” – typically oddball and adventurous from director Mathilde
Lopez.
 |
"Of Mice And Men" (photo: Jorge Lizalde)
|
 |
"Little Wolf" (photo: Jorge Lizalde) |
The highlight, though has to be
Gary Owen’s updating of Chekhov’s “
The
Cherry Orchard”, set in Pembrokeshire on the brink of the Thatcher “revolution”.
Playing in the main auditorium at the
Sherman
Theatre, and having extended its run even before it opened, it’s slickly
done, and both funny and moving.
 |
"The Cherry Orchard" (photo: Mark Douet) |
And then there was “
My
Name Is Rachel Corrie”, from
Graphic at
The Other Room – a very well acted
revival of Alan Rickman and Katharine Viner’s love letter to a martyred student
activist.
 |
"My Name Is Rachel Corrie" (photo: Kieran Cudlip) |
Not to mention the most high-profile
and large scale event of all – “
P.A.R.A.D.E.”
from the
National Dance Company of Wales at the
Wales
Millennium Centre – conformity-themed dance pieces by Caroline Finn and
Marcos Morau preceded by a spectacular revolution-oriented outdoor event featuring
a robot walking down the side of the building. Impressive, if ultimately
unclear in its intentions.
 |
"P.A.R.A.D.E." (photo: Mark Douet) |
There was also the local Made
In Roath festival, where, as well as seeing a rehearsed reading of “
Little N”, a tender tale of aunt-hood
from Kelly Jones, I presented something of my own – a video installation
comprising my film “
In Limbo”, the aria I wrote with Carlijn
Metselaar, and a new film of Edwin Markham’s poem “
Brotherhood”.
I also had a couple of short
plays performed last week. Firstly, I took part in the Scriptdawg event at the
University of South Wales’ Atrium, where I wrote a short relationship comedy
over a couple of days to be presented and appraised. Then, most recently, a piece
I’d submitted to a “Seen” event at
The
Other Room was read, along with work by Catherine Lucie and Annie Thomas.
This was “
The Actress”, part of a mini-trilogy
I’ve been working on, which was performed by Caroline Berry. There was enough positive
audience reaction to give me confidence in a female-centred script which
contains both comic and potentially difficult elements; and some pleasing
post-show feedback.
No comments:
Post a Comment