Technically it’s impressive. Heather Eddington and Anna May Selby have choreographed and scripted Forgetting Natasha, a piece about a woman who’s losing her memory to the onset of early dementia. Words and dance are cut across with animated projections and other digital wizardry as Natasha’s past fragments into a nightmarish future and neither her mother nor her lover can do anything but add to her pain and despair. Multi-media come of age.
There was a medical feel to the whole programme with Tim Blowfield’s Left exploring bereavement and Little Instruments of Apprehension by Darren Ellis confronting doctor and plastic-shrouded patient (Nicolas Sameha] and Ellis with echoes of Frankenstein’s created “monster”and a bewildering array of found instrumentation. …And Then, You Were Gone is a violent encounter for Lisa Welham and Tom Jackson Greaves by Cameron McMillan with a percussive score underlining the ferocity of their encounter. Physical theatre indeed.