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Kes - Liverpool Playhouse

#1 User is offline   Laughingmonsta 

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Posted 23 September 2009 - 11:42 AM

Hi All

Here is my review for Kes at the Liverpool Playhouse.

Set in the bleak hills of Yorkshire, upon a backdrop of poverty and localised Isolation you are never going to expect a light hearted romp through the highs and lows of family life, based on the book A Kestrel for a Knave by Barry Hines which was first published in 1968 and later immortalised in film by legendary director Ken Loach just a year later.

Billy Casper is a local boy with nothing special going for him, he’s been in trouble with the police, not very popular at school and his family life if rife with trouble, but one thing really sets him free and that is his passion and love for the Hawk he has trained every day.

Director Nikolai Foster along with set designer Matthew Wright have created a very cold and stark atmosphere with the industrialised set pieces and bleak brown and dark green hilled backdrop, lit with brilliance by Guy Hoare and underscored by original music by David Shrubsole makes the creative sides one of the strongest elements of this co-production between the Liverpool Playhouse and the Touring Consortium.


Stefan Butler is stunning as the downtrodden and emotionally charged central character of Billy, and never at any stage of the production do we feel we are watching anyone older than a 14 year old (something that in the wrong hands could go disastrously wrong) which is testament to his dexterity and maturity as a performer. Daniel Casey who is fast becoming a North West favourite gives a charming and sympathetic portrayal of Mr Farthing the teacher that see’s hope in young Billy’s dreams. Mike Burnside and David Crellin also provide excellent performances throughout.


Foster’s direction is a little unbalanced throughout the production, at times I got increasingly annoyed at the amount of back to the audience and profile acting on show in some vital scenes of the production, and at others left in awe at the simplicity in detail. One can’t help feel that although immensely beautiful the choreographic dance moments which were performed with flair and passion by Oliver Watton, were slightly superfluous given that there were intrinsic moments of the play not to the standard one would hope.


There are certain areas one would hope would be pitch perfect, the first is Accents, across the board these are strong and believable, but Oliver Farnworth’s (Billy’s older brother Jud) is unforgivable wondering from Welsh to Jamaican via several other stops on the way. Kes is a vital ingredient to the production, as an audience we need to believe that Kes is real and flying around the auditorium and you never quite feel that this is the case in this production, which means the climax of the better and more pacey second act is left slightly wilted and underwhelming.


Apart from the obvious downsides to this production, it still has lots of elements that charm, and the use of local school children in the production and not stage school children should be applauded, an enjoyable evening but one that needs another couple of days in rehearsals/dialect lessons to tighten the weaker areas could make all the difference.
This is my street, I smile at the faces I've known all my life, They regard me with pride.
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#2 User is offline   Muppet 

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Posted 23 September 2009 - 07:37 PM

Thanks for that very well written review Laughingmonsta.

From our comments in another thread, it seems you went the night after I did.

I agree with most of what you have said.

I also left feeling that some of the accents were pretty poor at times and it was Judd's that particularly irritated me too!

I wasn't overly enthusiastic about some of the direction and although most of the casting was fine, the only thing I disagree with you on was the casting of 'Billy'! Maybe this had something to do with the fact I knew someone who was in the final few being considered for the role and in my opinion I feel he would have been far more convincing in every way. Oh well! I suppose if I was directing it, people wouldn't like aspects of my approach and style, so each to his/her own! ;-)
West End / UK Tour:
Les Miserables (x13), Billy Elliot (x18), Time, Starlight Express (x4), Miss Saigon (x3), Oliver (x13), Hairspray (x8), Footloose (x4), Our Day Out (x10), We Will Rock You (x3), Blood Brothers (x6), Saturday Night Fever, Phantom (x4), Sunset Boulevard, The Producers, Lord of the Rings (x3), Spamalot (x2), Crazy for You, Into The Hoods (x2), Her Benny, Love Never Dies (x5), Sister Act (x2), Joseph (x4), Sound of Music (x2), Wicked (x4), Jekyll & Hyde, Lionking (x2), Mary Poppins, Shrek, Betty Blue Eyes, Grease (x2), Beauty & the Beast, Bad Girls, Jersey Boys, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Avenue Q (x2), West Side Story, Chicago, Mamma Mia (x2), Dreamboats & Petticoats, Singin in the Rain, Our House, High School Musical, South Pacific, Cats, Flashdance, Priscilla, Fame (x2), Carousel, Spring Awakening, Marguerite, Anything Goes, Drowsy Chaperone, Little Shop of Horrors, Sweet Charity, Return to the Forbidden Planet, Evita, Romeo & Juliet the Musical, Rent Remixed

Broadway:
Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark, Billy Elliot, Wicked, The Addams Family, American Idiot, Rock of Ages
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#3 User is offline   *Laura* 

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Posted 23 September 2009 - 11:19 PM

I'm tempted to go and see this at some point, even more so now after your review. Do you know dates off the top of your head please?
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#4 User is offline   Laughingmonsta 

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Posted 24 September 2009 - 10:11 AM

Kes will open at The Liverpool Playhouse (18 September - 10 October)

and then tour to Nottingham Theatre Royal (13 - 17 October),
Darlington Civic Theatre (20 - 24 October),
Edinburgh King's Theatre (27 - 31 October),
Oxford Playhouse (2 - 7 November),
Bradford Alhambra Theatre (10 - 14 November),
Wolverhampton Grand Theatre (17 - 21 November)
and Cardiff New Theatre (24 - 28 November).
This is my street, I smile at the faces I've known all my life, They regard me with pride.
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#5 User is offline   *Laura* 

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Posted 24 September 2009 - 04:05 PM

Thanks, still have a while to see it then. Tickets are usually only £5 for me as well, why not? wink.gif
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