Synopsis Following hot on the heels of their acclaimed Moby Dick, Spymonkey's gloriously anarchic physical comedy combines with the playful storytelling verve of Kneehigh's Emma Rice and Carl Grose to create an outrageous no-holds-barred subversion of the quintessential Greek tragedy.
A very clever collaboration, Spymonkey and Kneehigh Theatre, this is of course extremely complex… and very silly, boldly going all over the place, complete with singing (badly); music; dance; acrobatics. Along with Ancient Greece, Space Age fantasy and James Bond, incorporating a couple of pantomime dames and David Bowie on a bad hair day.
But if witty dialogue doesn’t always do the trick, bring on the empty horses, or in this case, sheep. Costume overall was deliciously funny, whether as simple as winding sheets (literally) or elaborately contrived and staging brilliantly basic: a white fitted wardrobe, concealing ladders plus all sorts of things: people, costume and props.
Admittedly, there is something intrinsically funny having a fifty year old, Stephan Kreiss, play a teenager. Both he and Aitor Basauri (Laius, amongst many, many others) do most of the heavily accented clowning, while Toby Park, veering between clown and stooge, in his serious moments sometimes manages to be the funniest of the lot. And full credit to Petra Massey as Jocasta, but also magnificently skittish as a very modern day Eartha Kitt, aka the Sphinx.
You get the impression that the company relishes mistakes because they always manage to go with the flow. On the other hand, it can be tricky interrupting with personal monologues on the lines of ‘regrets, I’ve had rather a lot’, although the stand up comedy routine worked – largely because it didn’t.
A show which is difficult to describe without giving the game away about their more spectacular efforts and effects – you do have to be there. Not exactly something to which you’d be bringing your Mum and Dad, far less your offspring, it’s nonetheless classically crazy, mixed up, and refreshingly original.
Built in 1866 as The New Star Music Hall and renamed in 1911 this is the oldest established repertory company in the country. The building was extended in the 60's to provide bar, restaurant and foyer facilities. ·Under the weight of historical debts the Playhouse went into liquidation and closed, 3rd January 1998. In 1999, The Liverpool and Merseyside Theatres Trust was set up to take over the joint operation of the Everyman Theatre and the Playhouse. The company took over the running of the Everyman, 1st April 2000. ·The Playhouse re-opened to the public, Thursday 14th December 2000 with a production of Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol.
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