The Librarians
The Space on North Bridge
This was
rather good indeed. Billed as a dark absurdist comedy, I’d describe it as comic
Gormenghasty tale of murder, with a Gilliamesque ravening book monster and a
talented young cast of grotesques. There are some really good lines of dialogue
from writer Lewis Garvey and the physical acting is excellent, with nary a
thrown book prop dropped. Funny, freaky and very watchable.
Nice work from
UEA’s Minotaur company, who coped well with a few spotlighting glitches to earn
an enthusiastic round of applause from the midday audience. Herself suggests
that the make-up (kabuki style, much in the style of the old David Glass Gormenghast
stage run from the 90s) could be a little tidier, a little subtler for a small
venue with an up-close audience, but otherwise excellent.
Special well
dones to Harry Denniston (Mandrake Hardbach) who brought a David Schneidery /
Jason Flemyngy feel to the villainry and Michael Clarke (The Burbages, Percival
Pulp) for his expressive facial range and array of Rich Fulcher-like characters
(mostly murdered in a red-lit musical montage). As is my way, I spotted a
couple of the cast later in the Grassmarket (Denniston and Beej Harris) to
convey my enthusiasm, and to promise a good review online. And here it is.
Guido!
C Too
Somehow,
we’ve never been to this venue before, but C Too, tucked away right by the
castle, is rather nice and cosy, almost secret. Guido! is the musical tale of
Guy Fawkes, brought to us by the Guidophiles. Another young cast (where do they
all come from) of seven, with minimal set, props and costume, they’ve managed a
very well performed show.
Good musical
numbers with some excellent duetting and ensemble singing. Sometimes we clapped
after a number and sometimes we didn’t. We, as the audience, seemed to be
unsure about the applause protocols. I would be happy to take a cue from an
established source, perhaps someone on the lighting board at the back, or else
a sign held up saying ‘APPLAUD’. I’m not fussy.
Coming out
of the show, I realised I’d been sat next to the writer/director chap. Good
thing I’d not said anything horrid! Went up afterward and congratulated him,
and promised a good review (which is this one). He’s doing another show, but
like a sad old muppet the title flew straight out of my head, as did the name
of the show that the young lady with him was doing. I’m they’re both wonderful
though. Anyway, there was much liking of our t-shirts and imprecations to tweet
about them, so it was all good.
Herself has
some observations about the health risks of bare foot performers, as seen in
Guido, which I have promised to pass on (lie), but have encouraged her to do so
on a viable forum such as Facebook.
Knightmare Live
Gilded Balloon
Welcome,
watchers of illusion, to the castle of confusion. Have just come back from Knightmare
Live at the Gilded Balloon. Freakin' awesomely hilarious. Great props, all the
old music from the TV show, and Olgarth of legend!
Two hundred
people in a crowded venue shouting Sidestep Left and Spellcasting S L O W at a
grown man in a horned helmet. Go see if you can. Congrats to producer/Treguard
Paul Flannery, Lord Fear Tom Bell, Mistress Goody Amee Smith and everyone
involved for bringing a well-loved if admittedly slightly creaky children’s
game show back to live on stage, with a reverential but tongue in cheek
approach. Really ought to go on tour, if only so I don’t have to keep boring
you all with my poor recreations of it from now on.
Plus, I had my photo taken wearing the Helmet of Justice.
I'm in a room...
Plus, I had my photo taken wearing the Helmet of Justice.
I'm in a room...
Fast Film Noir
The Space @ Venue 45
Back to that
Space. No, not that Space, the other Space. The one next door. Where we saw the
Arthur thing. Ooh, it’s confusing for a dullard like me. Booked this show as it
contained one of the magic trigger words which will leap out of the Fringe
programme at me. Noir, like Zombie, Movie, and Playing And Subverting
Traditional Gender Stereotypes are guaranteed to draw me in.
Fast Film
Noir began after a short technical delay (I think the strobe light was on the
blink. On the blink! Do you – oh please yourself) and we were welcomed into an
LA night club in 1934. We know this because a helpful scene-sign (there’s
probably a special theatre word for this) says so. Also there are many info
sheets about the show strewn on our seats. Three young nightclub dancer ladies
are keeping up a rhythmic hoochy coochy hip-dip thing in tune to the beat as we
take our seats.
We are then
treated to a condensed variation on The
Big Sleep, with renamed characters (Munroe/Marlow) and a rewritten, darker
ending. The only downside to adapting a Raymond Chandler story (or Dashiell
Hammett for that matter) is that the plots tend to be bloody involved, double
and triple cross heavy and exposition laden. I have enough trouble following
the books, when I can stop and go back a few pages, let alone when delivered in
real-time. But that’s just my problem.
But there
are some great performances, especially from the statuesque Skye Hallam-Hankin
in the Lauren Bacall role of Evelyn. Curiously, the role of Munroe/Marlow has
been split over two actors, Nick Brown for the ‘on-screen’ sequences, and the
Stefan Fletcher for the narration and bit parts. This can look a bit odd at times,
with a double-vision Munroe in matching pin stripe suits and gats in hand, but
they pull it off pretty well.
Some rather
fine dance and song sequences, including a bit of crazy murderer lady tap,
rounded out a pretty fine hour of film noir from the young Braindead theatre company.
Funeral Replacement Service
Necrobus, by Waverley train station
So our final
show of the day. Couldn’t resist a play set on a double decker bus going round
Edinburgh late at night. The bus itself is black and trimmed in red. Inside and
upstairs, there are velvety red curtains and cute little lamps set in the
walls. Downstairs there is a coffin.
We are
guests at the funeral of bus driver Roger Cocksweets (pronounced co-sweets),
hosted by an increasingly fretful chap who addresses us via web cam and TV
screen from the bottom of the stairs as we jolt along the cobbled streets. It’s
a kind of National Theatre of Brent type thing, with a few planted actors among
the passengers upstairs.
At first
Herself and I twigged a few more of our fellow passengers as plants, because
they seemed to be a bit over the top as they yakked on about the magic shows
and whisky tastings they’d been to. But they turned out to be just a bunch of
appallingly real people. Worst of the bunch was the American woman with an
expression like a slapped arse, who didn’t engage with the performance until
absolutely forced to (she was bequeathed a spatula in Roger’s will), and
instead sat staring at her digital camera screen.
I honestly
don’t get that – you’ve paid money to see something and then sit there totally
ignoring it, even when the actors are about three feet from you, tottering up
and down the top deck aisle as we lurch around the back of Princes Street. I
can only assume she’d been dragged on board by someone else, possibly the guy
sat next to her who looked like he’d just realised – too late – that this show
would not be his lady friend’s thing.
Anyway, the
performance itself was pretty good, though the material was a bit light on the
comedy in places. The two younger performers, playing the deceased relatives
Sharon and Trevor, were very good, especially Sharon’s interpretive dance in
memory of Roger. It probably was a shade too long at an hour, and perhaps
needed a slightly rethought host character (perhaps less hapless and obviously
overwhelmed, and instead outwardly cool and hilariously losing it whenever he
stepped off the bus to take a call, in the style of Fawlty).
The main
problem though is the format of course. We’re on a double decker bus, so much
of the action is taking place downstairs, leaving us with an upstairs TV screen
to watch. This kind of forces you into a more passive watching telly at home
mode, whether you like it or not. Plus, we’re sat upstairs on a lurching bus
circumnavigating Edinburgh for an hour, cobbled streets and all. There was more
than one green face by the end of the show I can tell you. But it was still
quite an experience.
Have only
just worked something out. The bus is part of Ghost Bus Tours. Ghostbustours.
Who you gonna call? Only just got that. Tch.
Stuff which is not show reviews
Managed
finally to rendezvous with Dr Foot and Mitchell in between The Librarians and Guido!,
thanks to some detective work on my part, working out where his texted ‘Jack
Ruby’ show was being held. The Space @ Surgeons Hall is a rather nice place to
sit, eat and wait for chums to emerge from a show there. Plus we scored some
free promotional halloumi.
Catching up
with the boys, who are here until Monday, they tell us that The Birdhouse is the mentallest thing
they’ve ever seen, Richard Herring is still on top form (which is good to hear,
as we’ll be seeing him too), and that K**t and the Gang (which I’ve always
wanted to see) is incredibly funny but exceedingly near the knuckle (or
possibly halfway up the finger). I should’ve guessed as much from the photo of
Jimmy Saville in the Fringe programme. Alumni of the Derek and Clive school of
comedy, the boys are fans of the more hardcore turns like Gerry Sadowitz or Jim
Jeffries. I may have to sneak along to see K**t myself some time. Probably on
my own.
We bid them
farewell with fingers crossed that they will enjoy Colin Hoult’s Real Horror Show, which was our
recommendation to them. Oh, the crushing pressure of endorsed comedy. ‘Oh,
you’ll love this, it’s really funny…’
For the
second day running, two fighter jets have streaked over the city at low
altitude around 7:30pm. It was feckin’ terrifying. I’m not sure if they’re
patrolling at Mach 2 for Al Qaeda outrages at the Fringe, but frankly I and
doubtless every pet in the city would appreciate a quieter approach to
Midlothian air superiority please, the RAF. Hang-gliding snipers perhaps.
I must say,
our timetable t-shirts are proving an enormous success. It’s only been two
days, but I’ve not once had to dig around in my rucksack for an increasingly
tattered printed spreadsheet. Instead I just squint blearily at Herself’s
chest, occasionally jabbing an inadvertent boob whilst searching for our next
event. If only I’d had a map of Edinburgh with the numbered venues printed on
my trousers, we’d be all set.
But an
equally splendid benefit to the t-shirt timetables has been the unexpected
amount of social interaction they generate. Only two days in, and we’ve already
had conversations struck up with the moderately confused frontman of the
Barioja tapas on Jeffreys Street, various young ladies in headsets directing
punters around venues, a nice guy working behind the counter at Forbidden Planet
(like I wasn’t going to duck in there at the first opportunity), appreciative
older Fringers with their own timetables and most recently the chap who runs
all the Space venues, Charles Pamment. He seemed to value our passion and
support, especially in this first week when shows are really keen for decent
reviews early on. A nice chap.
Note of
warning to any potential Fringe-goers: the chances of the seemingly random
person you end up chatting to in a queue or a venue bar being an actor, writer
or director are quite high. So unless you really don’t care about crushing
their hopes and dreams with your unvarnished opinions of anything you may have
seen at the Fringe, it is best to be fulsome or at least civil in your praise
of the event you’ve just come out of. Chances are they wrote it, this is only
the second preview day, and they’re in need of positive punter feedback. Play
it right and they’ll be all beams and requests for you to tweet your review
asap. In fact, it seems to be a good idea to generally slip the word ‘review’
into any conversation with a show-person, as they tend to get the idea you’re a
roving blogger with a massive career-making readership, so it’s win-win all
round.
A quick note
about tickets to the EdFringe organisers for next year: Your tickets contain a
lot of information about each event – time, price, production company – but not
the venue number. So If I’m sat on a busy street full of venues, say the Royal
Mile, with only the event ticket and a tatty venue map that I may or may not
have torn out of the back of a Fringe programme in the foyer of the Space on
North bridge while nobody was looking, I may have some trouble matching venue
to event. Good thing we put the venue numbers on our t-shirts! Hurrah for us!
Seen in a
pub window: Haggis Balls In Batter. Poor haggises, harvested for their tender
love plums. They cut them off young, you know.
Things you
will see a lot of at the Fringe: young ladies in vintage clothing and retro red
lipstick. Probably with their thick young hair wound up into pretty rolled-up
styles. They all do it just to mock my own ageing lank mop. They’re not even in
a show, I’ll bet! Tomorrow there will be lots of upside-down hair spraying
afore I venture out. Oh yes.
Observation:
The Pie Maker on South Bridge (or possibly Nicolson Street) is, Herself
contends, either full or empty. This may indeed be down to some cosmic
Either-Or quality of the establishment, or more likely due to it being the size
of a cupboard so that three customers feels like Full and one customer feels
like Empty.
Seen on the
Street near Surgeons Hall, middle aged women clogging to electro music.
Clogging is good. It speaks to me in some sort of hillbilly race memory
fashion. Herself calls it ‘rubbish stuff’. Much like Jon Snow, she knows
nothing.
The
traditional pilgrimage to Greyfriars Bobby has now taken place. An unattractive
photo of the Ocelot hugging the statue may or may not be available at some
point. Nice to see so many other followers (adherents? Bobbers?) of Wee Bobby’s
teachings too. I really feel like part of something.
Another idea
for a musical, based on the life of the father of psychoanalysis. It’s called
Sang Freud.
Tomorrow I
am taking Herself to see Avenue Q so
we can sing along to The Internet Is For Porn, one of the finest songs to
emerge from the musical scene.
1 comment:
You may want to check out Way Back - good plot but same background as Guido!
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