A name on a burned scrap of letter. An unseen figure watching a window. A fevered knocking at a door. Shunt turns the pages and prowls the streets of noir master Cornell Woolrich. The Shunt collective has been working for the last seven years creating live events in unusual spaces. Amato Saltone Starring Kittens and Wade follows the hit show Tropicana and is performed in their temporary home under London Bridge Station. Box Office: 020 7452 3000
Billed as “a surreal fusion of dark comedy and wild visual performance” Shunt’s latest offering is Amato Saltone, currently unnerving audiences at the Vaults under London Bridge.
The Shunters love to toy with their audience’s mind, and Amato is no exception. On arrival you are given a key and before the ‘party’ even starts you have to walk down 400 metres of creepy, dark, empty vaults to get to the bar. This is just a pit stop before entering the performance area where you are given a card with your alias name on it and directions to use your key to open a locker. Mine contained an instruction to leave the party when I heard a certain word.
Once inside you’re in a penthouse apartment with large windows through which are projections of a city. It’s a swingers’ night and a pregnant singer stares intensely as attendants prepare the space with plastic matting and jumbo sized pots of Vaseline. A loud announcement - seemingly the voice of a narrator only we can hear - tells us that there’s going to be a power cut and that in the few moments of darkness an unspeakable act of violence will occur witnessed by a group of strangers.
The power cut done with the audience are divided and ushered around a maze of rooms watching voyeuristically through windows as odd, funny and downright disturbing things happen. There is no real narrative but we try to form one from the fragments of events we see.
Narrative or no, this homage to pulp writer Cornell Woolrich (the ‘Father of Film Noir’ who was responsible Hitchcock’s Rear Window amongst others) certainly evokes an appropriate mood. An atmosphere of paranoia prevails in the first ‘party’ room as the audience look around wondering who are the performers? We trust no one. The use of some very effective and filmic music adds to the ambience as does the venue, the vaults themselves having a haunted quality.
But when your seventy minutes are up and the party is over the hangover has already set in. What’s the point? Is it theatre or just a modern updating of Robert Wilson’s ‘Happenings’ of the 1960s? Are we being shunted? Whatever the answers I have to confess to feelings of fear and excitement I rarely experience in the theatre – and however pointless, it’s all rather novel. Just don’t go if you are afraid of the dark.
A highly amusing evening. Do not let your pre-conceived theatre ideals get in the way of a highly entertaining show, take it with a pinch of salt and laugh!! - 194.154.22.54)
01 Feb 06
i have seen amato saltone 3 times now and each time it has been a completely different show - i don't want to give away any of the surprises but i can only advise you to see it - probably more than once - i also saw tropicana and one about a plane crash - all brilliant. - 86.132.180.12)
16 Jan 06
I loved Tropicana, but I also loved this. It is spectacular which amazing sets, effects, and their usual perfect comic timing. It may not have the strong linear narrative of previous shows, but is has even stronger thematic links around our own voyeurism towards violence and sex as represented through film noir and thriller writing. In many ways i thought this a tighter - 83.67.34.238)
06 Jan 06
After enjoying Tropicana very much, this was a disappointment. It lacked the cohesiveness of that previous show and was a lot less effective. Commendably, they have adopted a different shape and feel with Amato and utilised the fascinating vaults space in not quite the same way as before but overall it just didn't hang together quite as well. As before there are a number of devices and techniques employed that coax some audience involvement into play, and there are some genuinely amusing moments and I won'r deny that there is a thread of sorts running through it. As I said: if you enjoyed Tropicana, prepare to be a bit disappointed, but if you haven't experienced one of Shunt's productions it's still worth going along. - 194.80.238.40)
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