Wednesday 21 May 2014

Road – Apollo Theatre

‘Road’ is now in its second and final week at the Apollo Theatre, Newport – and if you haven’t yet been, and you like a play that leaves you thinking – go!

In fact, even if you have already been, ‘Road’ is one of those plays that not only bears seeing more than once, but each time you see it, you notice something you didn’t see before.

It is multi-layered and complex, and does what drama does best: provides not merely an entertaining way to spend the evening (though it does that too, and there are plenty of laughs along the way) but a thought-provoking way of making you look again at our society.

It is nominally set in the 1980’s in a small Lancashire town – probably because this was familiar territory to its writer, Jim Cartwright (of ‘Little Voice’ fame) and the accents and cultural references place it in that timespace.

But – almost tragically so – it transfers seamlessly to contemporary society, for the themes explored are, although maybe in a slightly different way, still relevant.

If you are expecting a ‘traditional’ storyline with all the loose ends tied up in a pink bow at the end, you will not find such neatness in ‘Road’ – or indeed in life.

Instead, we are shown a slice of the existence of various residents of the ‘Road’ of the title by our guide the vagrant Scullery, and the stage, cleverly compartmentalised, takes us, with very simple sets, from a living room to the exterior of another house, to yet another bedroom.

Along the way we meet a series of characters who could so easily be forgettable and one-dimensional, but who, as portrayed by the cast of this production, manage to make a real impact in the short space of time we spend with them.

Each is battling against the forces of society which seem to be against them, trying to find their own way through. From Valerie, the battered housewife who, through her own anguish somehow still recognises that the husband she has come to hate and fear is acting in response to his own despair and sense of failure, to the ex-skinhead who remembers the adrenaline rush of the fight but has turned to Buddhism to seek some form of peace; from the lads and girls -young and not-so-young – seeking oblivion through alcohol and sex to the hopelessness of young Joey who rejects the world that has failed him by starving himself in his lonely bedroom, joined by his girlfriend, to Scullery himself getting by on rum and petty theft, the residents of ‘Road’ are beaten down by unemployment, poverty and squalor.

It could so easily be a very depressing piece, but is saved through the humour and the natural humanity that somehow shines through despite everything. The drunken banter between Marion and her paramour Barry over the whisky bottle; Scullery’s vain attempts to find something worth pinching in a house he mistakenly thinks is empty; the Prof’s mission to compile a dossier of the  area and its residents and the over the top DJ Bisto are all very funny, though underpinned by pathos.

The play bears comparison in tone to ‘Under Milk Wood’ but I see a stronger parallel in TS Eliot’s ‘The Wasteland’ which also shows us an array of characters all trying to find some way through the futility of their existence. Like Eliot though, Cartwright does not let us quite leave in despair – just as ‘The Wasteland’ ends with the possibility of redemption, so ‘Road’ finishes on the chant of ‘Somehow – might escape’, and the small lights burning in the dark are an apt final image.

It would be wrong to identify any one actor as the star of this ensemble piece – most of the cast take on more than one challenging role, working as a closely knit team to bring the ‘Road’ to life so effectively.
Challenging it may be but the play is also very funny and always entertaining – and definitely worth seeing.

Tuesday 20 May 2014

Raymond Froggatt and his Band – Shanklin Theatre May 17 2014.

An evening to remember! 

My relationship with Froggie goes way back – though he’s blissfully unaware of this – to the mid 1970’s when I was invited to stay with a schoolfriend for the weekend. Her sister Jeannie, who did indeed have light brown hair, played the Frog’s first two albums over and over all weekend, and I was hooked.

I still have the cassette tape Jeannie illicitly made for me (I did invest in the originals later!) of ‘The Voice and Writings’ and ‘Bleach’, complete with the sound of a door slamming just after the first verse of ‘I’m Sure’, and I have loved his music ever since. 

Although Raymond himself would no doubt reject this comparison, I love his work for the same reason I love Bob Dylan – the beauty and poetry of the lyrics and the often deceptively simple melodies that carry the words straight into your heart. Whether you are singing along to ‘Froggie Went A’Courting’, crying at ‘Teach Me’ or ‘The Old Accordion’ (which I can’t hear or sing without tears to this day) or finding parallels in your own life with ‘The Invisible Chain’, the songs touch some chord in your heart.

As a youngster in Norfolk I would go to venues like Snape Maltings to see him, and have been lucky enough to enjoy his live performances many times, so when I discovered he was coming to the theatre down the road from my house I naturally immediately snapped up front row seats.
Froggie is in his 70s now, and you know how singers can, as they get older, start to lose their voice and their charisma? I’ve seen it with several of my old favourites from 40 odd years ago.
But not Froggie! Nor his band – and in particular Hartley Cain, who has played guitar by his side so long they are an integral part of each others’ music. Froggie without H Cain would be like – well, May without Mercury. 

Raymond may be a bit slower on his feet than he was all those years ago but his voice is as rich as it ever was, and his humour as sharp and self-deprecating.

Many of my old favourites – and newer favourites – got a look in, from ‘Somewhere Under the Sun’ to ‘Roly’. Yes, I know others have recorded Froggatt songs, but no one sings them like he does – and with all respect to singers like Cliff Richard, I still prefer the author’s versions of ‘The Singer’ and ‘Red Balloon’ – and thanks Froggie for finally explaining the meaning of that song!
A slightly more political note was sounded with the self explanatory ‘Nobody Believes It Any More’- so true. 

But the central message of most of his music has always been the love that binds us all together in our lives, and I could only agree with him when he said that it is evenings like this that we will remember in our lives, thanked the audience in his typically humble way for enjoying his music and told us that ‘an old Brummie’ loved us for that. Well, the audience clearly loved this old Brummie too!

As he has for almost the last half century, Froggie made us laugh, made us cry, touched our hearts and thoroughly entertained. He sent me out of the theatre with a smile on my face and a song in my heart.

Thanks Froggie!

Thursday 1 May 2014

The Rose - Revealed!



A couple of weeks ago, strolling along the South Bank, I was just passing The Globe Theatre, one of my favourite London spots....

...OK, I admit it – I wasn’t passing the Theatre: I was heading for the door as I usually do, to soak up the ambience and just possibly part with a bit of cash in the bookshop...

..when I saw a small sandwich board informing me that The Rose Theatre had an Open Day, with Free Admission.

The Rose Theatre?

I mean – THE Rose Theatre??

As in the theatre where two Shakespeare plays premiered? Where Will himself trod the boards?? Along with Kit Marlowe et al???

Surely not. That Rose Theatre disappeared 400 or so years ago, along with the Bear Pits and the Stews – or brothels – that littered Southwark in the late sixteenth century.

Didn’t it?


Intrigued, I followed the sign round the corner into Park Street and sure enough, there was an open door leading to a theatre, and on the wall next to it was a blue plaque confirming that this is the site of the original Elizabethan theatre.

I walked into a small foyer area and was welcomed and shered straight through to a gallery space where 50 or so chairs were set out round a central performance area, and a film was playing to a couple of seated visitors.

I joined them for the end of the film which proved to be a potted history of the Rose theatre narrated by Sir Ian McKellan, and as it finished the lights went up and I was suddenly aware of a large empty space below the gallery, lit only by red LED lights:



And yes, as you can see, most of it is under water...

By the time I had listened to a lovely volunteer called Suzie enthuse about the project I was hooked.

I learned that not only was I sitting directly above the still existing foundations of the actual Rose Theatre where Shakespeare actually performed, which have managed to cheat time and the property developers for over 400 years (to say nothing of the Luftwaffe) but that dedicated people are raising money to excavate the site – some of it was explored in 1989 but there is lots more to find out about – and that the final intention is to open the site to the public as a preserved space with galleries used as educational and display spaces along with somehow continuing to use the Rose for the purpose it was originally built for so long ago.

Eventually I, along with many other Shakespeare admirers I’m sure, hope to stand on the very spot where the Bard of Avon once acted and no doubt directed. I will also be able attend a performance of one of his plays in the same theatre in which it was performed four centuries ago.

In fact, I have already achieved the second, as you will see if you read the review below!

In the meantime, we have some money to find!

So I will be taking part in a Readathon on 31 May, at the Rose, in which we aim to read through 12 of Shakespeare’s plays in a day – 12 hours in fact. If you would like to sponsor me, please email msullivan58@hotmail.co.uk
 
If you would like to come along, either as a reader or a member of the audience, please do visit the Rose Theatre’s webpage for the event here: http://www.rosetheatre.org.uk/events/event/readathon-at-the-rose/

And if you would like to know more about the Theatre, their website is here: http://www.rosetheatre.org.uk/