Venue:
Polka Theatre for Children Where: Outer London
Date Reviewed:
17 November 2004 WOS Rating: Average Reader Rating: Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews This little powerhouse of children’s theatre is celebrating its 25th anniversary with a Roald Dahl favourite ably adapted by David Wood , one of the country’s best-known playwrights for young audiences. It is no mean feat for an establishment without West End resources : “no enormous flying cars here” says director Roman Stefanski in a programme note, but he and his designer Keith Baker have managed to conjure a flying (sometimes bobbing, sometimes rolling) giant peach. Like traditional fairytales, Dahl’s story contains a degree of cruelty and plenty of testing tasks for the young hero. James Henry Trotter’s parents are squashed by a runaway rhinoceros in Oxford Street (whoops) so he is sent to live with a pair of horrid Ugly Sister-style aunts, plump Aunt Sponge and scrawny Aunt Spiker.
One day a strange old man gives James a bag of magic crystals of crocodile tongues which cause an enormous peach to grow on the tree in the aunts’ garden. When James crawls inside he meets a set of over-sized insects living in the stone. Together Centipede, Ladybird, Grasshopper, Earthworm and Spider embark on an adventurous journey with James, during which he solves problems - proposing that seagulls tied to the stem with spider silk will lift the peach above the ocean, for instance - and becomes a hero, saving the life of silly drowning Centipede (a pleasantly raucous Timothy Speyer ). Eventually they all arrive to a rapturous reception in New York.
On my visit, the school parties of over-fives, well acquainted with Dahl, didn’t turn a hair at the parental loss, were delighted to see two-dimensional squashed aunts sticking to the tumbling peach, but gasped when Spiker ripped the head off James’ teddy.
Stefanski reads his audience well, eliciting their help in passing the inflated peach over their heads or manipulating sharks’ tails (some of which seemed to be swimming upside down) to indicate a threat to the sailing peach, while still keeping their rapt attention. If adults marvel at the complexity or simplicity of the design solutions - the peach appears in various guises, but the rhinoceros is two people, a coat and an umbrella - the children are fully engaged with the story. They may be a little disappointed that the vicious Cloud-Men and their armoury of hailstones are absent, but there are plenty of compensations: atmospheric music (by Olly Fox ), a personable and believably young hero in Saikat Ahamed and strong support from his squabbling creature-friends.
- Heather Neill
Related Content
Free Newsletter
Subscribe to our free newsletter
Featured Editor's Picks
Donmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...Matilda on Broadway wins five Drama Desk Awards The Broadway transfer of Matilda The Musical has won five gongs at the 58th Annual Drama Desk Awards...Pulitzer winner Ayad Akhtar : Islam is 'ripe territory' for drama Ayad Akhtar's play Disgraced, which won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, receives its UK premiere ...Michael Coveney: New York honours Matilda with five big awards First blood in the New York awards contest went to Matilda last night, as the show walked off with...Opening: Relatively Speaking , Southwark Playhouse's Tanzi Libre & NT Shed's Bullet Catch Among this week's major London theatre openings, in the West End and further afield, are Relatively ...Young 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 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...West End gets Lucky with Tom Hanks? Oscar-winning actor Tom Hanks is reportedly in talks to reprise his role in hit Broadway play Lucky ...Guest Blog : Benedict Nightingale on judging the Bruntwood Prize Former Times theatre critic Benedict Nightingale is among the judges of this year's Bruntwood Priz...Ten 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...