Quantcast

Jack Gordon in Tender Napalm
Jack Gordon in Tender Napalm

Jo Caird: When Theatre Puts on its Dancing Shoes

Date: 26 April 2011

Philip Ridley’s new play, Tender Napalm, is exhilarating to watch. This is partly to do with the emotional ride it takes you on, tracing the lineaments of a love story book-ended by tragedy. But it’s also to do with the kinetic energy fizzing around as Jack Gordon, who plays the unnamed male character, runs, jumps, rides, fights, slides and shouts his way around the stage.

After some plays, you’re ready to go home, put the kettle on, chat a bit about it and go to bed, but not this one – you’re too hyped for that. Which is why the show’s producers have made a deal with the management of Cable nightclub that allows holders of tickets to special late-night performances on Friday and Saturdays entry into the club for free. The purported aim is to ‘subvert the traditional notion of dinner and a show’, and while this has a nice ring to it, the theatre/clubbing partnership is actually about much more than clever marketing, tapping into the origins of performance as primal, ritualistic, tribal happening.

I’m no anthropologist, so I’ll leave my theorising there, but even if I can’t fully express the links between ancient ritual, theatre and modern rave culture, I can attest to the potential of high-energy, interactive performance when it comes to reaching new audiences and showing them what theatre can be.

One night, at the age of 16, I found myself at The Drome, a sprawling nightclub in London Bridge’s arches, just around the corner from where Cable is now. It was 1999 and the party was called The Warp, named after the epic 22-hour play cycle at its centre, a revival of Ken Campbell’s original production at the ICA in 1979. Writing about the show in his excellent biography of Campbell, Michael Coveney notes that the director’s “priority throughout was to create theatre, a show, with laughter, whereas (Neil) Oram (writer of The Warp) stated that he wanted to create ‘a shamanistic event capable of producing a magic carpet on which light-hearted souls could fly into a nourishing, ambient, alive question…and therein discover how to develop their true potential’”.

I only watched a few scenes of The Warp that night, in between bouts of frenzied dancing to psychedelic trance, but the experience stayed with me. Looking back, both Campbell and Oram achieved their intentions: the performance in the midst of the madness of the never-ending party created a scenario at once theatrical and shamanistic.

Around the same time I saw the Argentine circus and theatre troupe De La Guarda perform at the Roundhouse. Their show was a remarkable combination of breathtaking aerial acrobatics, high-energy dance and inventive physical theatre. It took place above, around and among the audience, who danced and screamed like they were at the best party of their lives. It was the most thrilling piece of performance I’d ever seen.

Growing up with both parents working in theatre, I was fortunate in being exposed to a great deal of the stuff from a young age. The Warp and De La Guarda, however, were theatre experiences that I discovered for myself and were very different from the types of show introduced to me by my parents. High-octane, boundary-blurring performance that takes place in non-traditional spaces is not necessarily more exciting or enjoyable to watch than two-act naturalist dramas performed under proscenium arches, but it is often more accessible to those who perhaps feel that straight theatre isn’t for them.

Tender Napalm, it should be noted, is a straight play, and not everyone who attends those special late-night performances will go dancing afterwards, but by making explicit the link between the energy of theatre and that of clubbing, the show arguably bridges the gap between traditional and non-traditional performance, and stands a chance of tempting young people into an art form that perhaps is not as alien as they might have thought.

- by Jo Caird


Any opinions expressed above do not represent the view of Whatsonstage.com nor any of its staff or contributors beyond the bylined author.



Jo CairdJo Caird is a freelance arts journalist and has been deputy Off-West End editor of Whatsonstage.com since June 2009. Jo tweets at @JoCaird. Her personal website is JoCaird.com

Related Content

Other Posts By Jo Caird
Globe to Globe Blog: Jo Caird on The Taming of the Shrew & The Comedy of Errors - 4th Jun 2012 blog
Globe to Globe Blog: Jo Caird on As You Like It & Love's Labour's Lost - 2nd Jun 2012 blog
Globe to Globe Blog: Jo Caird on a Korean Dream & the first production from a brand new nation - 1st May 2012 blog
Jo Caird: Theatre goes green - 27th Feb 2012 blog
Jo Caird: Three cheers for the NT & subsidised theatre - 22nd Feb 2012 blog
Jo Caird: Should there be a SOLT for London's Off West End? - 15th Feb 2012 blog
Jo Caird: Survey puts Fringe audiences in the spotlight - 8th Feb 2012 blog
Jo Caird: The trouble with statistics - 2nd Feb 2012 blog
Jo Caird: The changing face of arts journalism - 24th Jan 2012 blog
Jo Caird: My top 100 theatre people to follow on Twitter - 19th Jan 2012 blog
 More...
 
Internal Links
Tender Napalm starstarstarstar - 25th Apr 2011 Reviews
Ridley's New Play Napalm Debuts at Southwark - 7th Mar 2011 News
Fuerzabruta starstarstarstarstar - 6th Jun 2006 Reviews



Write a Comment
Give us your opinion on this entry
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.

Free Newsletter

Subscribe to our free newsletter


Featured Video

Twitter

Featured Editor's Picks

Dominic Rowan & Hattie Morahan in A Doll's HouseYoung Vic's award-winning Doll's House transfers to West End
Carrie Cracknell's critically acclaimed Young Vic production of A Doll's House, using an adaptatio...

Let it BeLet It Be extends booking at Savoy until Jan 2014
Let It Be, the concert show based on the music of The Beatles, has extended its run at the Savoy...

Tom Hanks plays Mike McAlaryWest End gets Lucky with Tom Hanks?
Oscar-winning actor Tom Hanks is reportedly in talks to reprise his role in hit Broadway play Lucky ...

Michael Coveney: Tales from New York in Kinky Boots
Broadway is in the grip of awards frenzy, with this Sunday night's Drama Desk bonanza in the Town H...

Benedict Nightingale at the launch of the 2013 Bruntwood PrizeGuest Blog: Benedict Nightingale on judging the Bruntwood Prize
Former Times theatre critic Benedict Nightingale is among the judges of this year's Bruntwood Priz...

The Victorian in the Wall
starstarstarstar
From previous Perrier award-winner Will Adamsdale comes this middle class musical about all the i...

Infographic: Regions at risk as London dominates private arts giving
A report published earlier this week by Arts & Business revealed that, though private sector suppo...

The Three GracesPhotos: Lloyd Webber unveils £4m restoration of Theatre Royal Drury Lane
Theatre Royal Drury Lane owner Andrew Lloyd Webber has unveiled the first phase of his £4milli...

Charlie & the Chocolate Factory reschedules two previews due to 'unforeseen problems'
The producers of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory have "reluctantly" rescheduled the first two prev...

Ripe for revival? The Pirate QueenTen of the Best: Theatre 'flops' ripe for reinvention
Defining a theatre 'flop' is no straightforward task. A general rule of thumb could be that it mak...
>> More Editor's Picks
>> Most Recent Stories
>> Most Popular Stories

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube