The excellent JB Shorts 3
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JB Short 3 (Manchester) Date Reviewed:
19 March 2010 WOS Rating: Venue: Joshua Brooks Where: Manchester Six new short plays from my new favourite TV-inspired theatre night. The JB Shorts collaborators have developed a species that seems to be half traditional theatre, half comedy sketch and half short story on stage. Thankfully, it all adds up like a charm. Competing with loud St. Patrick's Day drinkers from above, JB Shorts 3 does well to hold the audience's attention for almost two hours. We are in the basement of Joshua Brooks, after all. I find this an odd venue choice especially as it is draughty and there are pillars obstructing the view from many seats. Its a good job we have sex addicts, policemen, monkeys and a recurring comb theme to distract us. The writers shoot simple concepts straight from the hip; delivering them via punch lines, revelations and a twist or two. A boyfriend is chosen for Big Brother after sending in a video of him telling his fame-starved girlfriend that it is utter rubbish (I'm Mad Me ). This is without a doubt part of the fun, though, as is the creative freedom to open the night with an 'election broadcast', Backlash , which draws us in with typical British complaints before ramping it up to disturbing levels. Chris Hannon , Anthony Crank and Victoria Brazier find a superb balance between 'I'm one of the people' smarm and over the top stereotyping. Quixotry is fantastically directed by Chris Bridgman ; two Scrabble champions circle a high table and the small space is used well to accommodate a lover's tiff to the side and a Heimlich manoeuvre to save a player from choking on tiles. However the mid-game soliloquies are a little unconvincing and I find some of the jokes a little too obvious. The performances in Truncheons and Blackberries provide gentle slapstick as two police officers try to hide a gun from their high flying 'Ma'am' and a nosey journalist but this offering still feels slight in comparison to the other plays. Red S.H.A.G.G stickers are handed out by a Russell Brand wannabe during the interval preparing us for the play of the same name. We enter an arena of lude sexual innuendo and half-hearted confessions from sex addicts. There are some inspired lines, delivered with gusto: "My girlfriend had an affair with my boss. No chance of a promotion then" and "The sex was probably a bit rushed." Shakespeare's Monkeys is my favourite piece of the night. A wonderful dramatic conceit from Reallife Theatre co-founder Trevor Suthers : what if an institute were testing whether monkeys really would come up with Shakespeare eventually but was faced with closure? Joanne Haydock , as the inspector, plays straight man to the slightly unhinged Mr. Elder (Liam Tims ) and half-man, half-primate Mr. Monks (Antony Bessick ). It leaves me scratching my head, asking what I had just witnessed, but I love every minute. The energy that bounces off stage, the unabashed pop culture references and the natural performances of JB Shorts 3 prove that theatre doesn't have to be feather dusted and treated with reverence. It can be the start of a debate, a laughing fit or even a night out. - Sophie Charara
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