Synopsis Oxford Street: where the streets are paved with gold, if you just know where to look. At Total Sports, security guard Kofi and his workmates are making sure everything runs smoothly, easing the daily grind with plenty of jokes and chat about the future. Young or old, they all want more from life. The only difference is how they'll go about getting it. Oxford Street is supported by Jerwood New Playwrights. Upstairs
All eyes will be on the West End transfer this week of Polly Stenham’s That Face, but the Royal Court’s Young Writers’ Programme has plenty more to be proud of, not least the developing career of Levi David Addai, whose Oxford Street in the Theatre Upstairs is another sharp and funny report from the front line of cosmopolitan everyday aspiration.
David Addai’s first play, 93.2FM, put his characters through the wringer of rivalries and friendships in a local radio station. He has since extended his range into the sustained domestic comedy of House of Agnes for Paines Plough (with a great central role of the displaced Ghanaian mother).
Oxford Street is a behind the scenes look at life in the security office of a sportswear store. As in 93.2FM, Christmas is around the corner, which adds spice to the discussion of comparative rates of pay (variations hover just above the six pounds an hour mark) and the possibility of shoplifting.
Every shade of British nationality is represented, from the Ghanaian “loss prevention” manager and his black and Polish junior officers, to the Essex girl shop manager and her Indian and Brazilian assistants. “Who do you have to represent Christmas, then?” one of them asks; “Jesus Christ” is the incredible reply in the secular hubbub.
So confident is David Addai in the scoring of his conversational back chat that he has omitted any kind of plot development. Instead, the pleasures of the play reside in its idiomatic swing and energy of disappointment, its David Storey-like concentration on the physical tasks involved.
So, Dawn Walton’s fizzing production is designed by Soutra Gilmour as the shop itself, with the audience dotted around the environmental reality of Total Sports on white plastic stools among the racks Arsenal shirts (of the old red and white “O2” variety; this is not the hippest of retail outlets), running vests and bubble-soled trainers.
The pace slows but only so you can relish the detail in the performances of Preeya Kalidas (last seen as the narrator in Joseph) as the Brazilian assistant, Kristian Kiehling as the sulky full-time Pole, Cyril Nri as the delightfully philosophical manager, and Nathaniel Martello-White and Shane Zaza as trapped young dogsbodies. Ashley Walters of So Solid Crew puts another feather in his cap as an older employee straining at the leash.
wanna see this cast again!!!longer please...cant get tickets...!! - josie
27 May 08
wonderful...........loved it....talented cast....strong....ending let them down - gemma
27 May 08
original....wonderful performances.,,,throughly enjoyd....i agree that ending is weak.... - stef
27 May 08
great cast...funny, only thing that doesnt work is ending....lets the whole thing down... - hank
27 May 08
so good.....needs a longer run at royal court....!!
great performances...very different..!! - hank
27 May 08
Fresh & funky, fly on the wall experience captivating the ups and downs of the retail world. Solid performances all round, DO NOT MISS OUT!!! - A.Lewis
23 May 08
One of the best plays I've ever seen at the Royal Court. Well done all involved. - Hailey
18 May 08
A wonderful evening of contemporary theatre, well done writer, cast and crew- more please! - T Moss
17 May 08
good writing and well acted.... - nate
16 May 08
great play thoroughly enjoyed it... well performed by a talented ensemble... - hercules
The first theatre opened as The New Chelsea on 16 Apr 1870. Changed name to Belgravia. Re-opened as Royal Court 25 Jan 1871. Demolished in 1887. New theatre opened (current, slightly different site) 24 Sep 1888. Famous for supporting and commissioning new writing. Probably the first UK Theatre to regularly include their URL in advertising. Member of the Society of London Theatre. In 1996 the theatre closed for redevelopment, funded by the National Lottery. The refurbished theatre at Sloane Square re-opened in February 2000 including two theatres the 389 seat Jerwood Theatre Downstairs and the studio style Jerwood Theatre Upstairs.
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