Megan's Head

A place where Megan gets off her head.

Tag: The Intimate (Page 3 of 4)

Nightmare Dream, Brother

When I started this blog I promised myself that I would be as honest as possible. My position was to send people off to see stuff I thought was good, and also to let people know about the stuff I thought was bad. I wanted people to know that I would say bad things about shows if I thought they weren’t good, but it has become harder and harder to do that. It is especially hard when you really like some of the people involved and you hope that the work is going to be something you love.

After seeing Dream, Brother (written by Duncan Buwalda, directed by Tara Louise Notcutt and performed by Carel Nel, Wilhelm van der Walt and Cintaine Schutte) at The Intimate last night, I had a hot, sweaty, sleepless six hours thinking of all the excuses I could use to not write this post. Because I really didn’t like this production, pretty much from start to finish. (And, do I jump in and say why, or do I just shut up? Well, I’ve decided to jump in. So, for all of you who liked it, or aren’t going to manage particularly hard criticism, stop reading now.)

First of all there is the story; which starts off simply enough. On the one hand, boy meets girl. In separate monologues other guy (psychiatrist) tells how he met, wooed, fell in love with, and married his woman. We follow both the stories, from scene to scene, with confusing dress changes for the girl, and much reciting of The Owl and The Pussycat, before things smash together, converge and degenerate into complete chaos, with a fight, a snakebite, madness and a most “unconventional” psychiatric treatment. Too much story. Too much to have to make sense of.

So that’s the story. But I have issues with the subject matter too. It feels like every play being made is “boy meets girl”, and what happens after, with no effort to portray actual people. It’s not enough to just give your characters jobs; writer, painter, vet, psychiatrist. The characters just aren’t fleshed out enough, so what happens is that the actors are forced to rely on themselves too much, and they end up making terribly obvious choices. This is especially horrible when things get emotional (or mad), and it’s all a bit cringe making. I love Carel Nel as a performer, but not in this piece. It feels like he has little to work with and he spends a lot of time in anxious preparation; lots of panicking and checking that he is ready, tucking in his shirt, straightening his (and other guy’s) tie. Cintaine Schutte is in the same boat (pea green or other), only she comes off slightly worse because the script and the direction is ungenerous to the female character. Unfortunately, her performance verges on trite generalisation. Other guy, Wilhelm van der Walt, is ok in the monologues but when his story converges with the other one nothing can save him from the ridiculous stuff he has to say and do.

Tara is excellent at making things look really good while using very little (again she thanks her parents for the use of their furniture!) and it did look good. But this time it wasn’t nearly enough.

Yes, it was the hottest night ever, in the sauna that is The Intimate, and this doesn’t make for great concentration. Yes, it was opening night, with all that kind of energy. Yes, I am still grumpy about how hard it is to make good theatre and then get people to come. Yes, it is possible that I am no longer part of these theatre makers’ target audience. Still, Dream, Brother entirely doesn’t do it for me.

The Things You Left Behind

It was a full and who’s who opening night at The Intimate last night for Jason Potgieter‘s . (It’s only on until Saturday, so get there quick Slaapstad). I say Jason’s because he wrote it and stars in it, alongside Alicia McCormick and directed by Kim Kerfoot.

The Things You Left Behind are five monologues by five characters who all tell their perception of the same incident. In fact, there is a TheatreSports game called Point of View that is very similar. Jason plays three characters and Alicia two. The thing they see, or are marginally involved in is an accident, and the monologues deal with their responses, however cursory or detailed.

I have loved seeing Jason on stage ever since I first saw him being the demented shop assistant type somebody in Tamarin McGinley’s Off the Rails. Since then I’ve seen quite a bit of his stuff and I think he is fabulous. In this he really showcases his skill, charm and versatility. His white car guard is classic, original and very funny and his drag queen is delicious.

Alicia is not as successful for me, partly because it feels like she is miscast. She is gorgeous and cute and funny, but seemed far too young to be a mom with an 23 year old son (although I was charmed by her gentle conservatism) and too gorgeous and cute to pull of the heavy, butch, smoking, drinking medic. I’d like to see her doing other stuff that she would be better suited to and someone a whack older taking on these two monologues.

Kim Kerfoot has made nice, simple, clear choices with the direction of the piece. I am sure that as he gets into his groove of directing he will be more ruthless! I sometimes felt he was letting the actors indulge in ‘cute moments’!

The Things You Left Behind is a great introduction to Jason’s writing (there are some writing moment gems, especially in the car guard monologue) which I am sure will develop from here. I love this kind of theatre; accessible, well told stories. The Things I Left Behind is also a confirmation of Jason on stage. Love that actor.

Inside Interiors

I felt very special, I must say. I was invited to a special preview performance of Amy Jephta’s new play Interiors at The Intimate Theatre last night. This kind of theatre is what I want to write about. It is a tiny, independent, original little piece, that is obviously only at the beginning stage of being. It also only has six performances, Tuesday to Sunday this week, so people of Slaap Stad, if you want to check it out you better get your act together.

The blurb about Interiors goes “It all starts when He gives Her a table for their first wedding anniversary.” And that is really what this play is all about. That is where it starts, and that is where it ends, with a lot of relationship stuff in between. Amy has written a delicious little script. It’s cute, wacky and it has an original take on a well worn theme; the path from boy meets girl to ‘WTF is he/she on about?’ It has a kind of Juno quality about it (especially with the choice of music) and I have no doubt it is the kind of play that will have huge appeal for a young, fresh theatre audience. This is good. Very good.

Amy also directs Nadia Caldeira and Bren Belknap, who are the Woman and Man respectively. They are both recent graduates of UCT’s drama department, and here lies my first problem. Neither of them have shaken off drama school yet. Nadia is by far more successful; it’s just in those little moments of tippie toeing between scenes, or ‘physical theatre’ acting that it comes through. On the whole I found her mostly engaging, although I wished that she had made slightly stronger character choices, especially when she was standing still with her hands held girlishly in front of her. Beren, for me, didn’t manage Man very well. His performance isn’t real yet. He falls into big, meaningless facial gestures and drama school (and sometimes even American?) pronunciation too often, and he didn’t really connect to the Man, or Woman genuinely enough. I know this sounds like harsh stuff; I just think that if you are going to try and pull off a two hander then you need two very, very strong performers, since they are it really. That is who you watch and who you have to put the story across.

Amy’s direction has moments of genius inspiration, but there are funny little bumps too, which make it inconsistent. Still, it is a treat to watch and listen to a fresh new voice in theatre. I do believe that this little piece has tons of potential and will grow and grow the more it is put on.

Yawazzi are responsible for the multimedia (which I completely loved) and lights are by Jon Keevy (and they are also really cool; being The Intimate an’ all). One tiny thing though, stage management and designers; I think I recognised that table. It was used in my favourite play of 2009, …miskien? wasn’t it?

TheatreSports birthday Movember

I have just properly woken up to the fact that we will be celebrating TheatreSports‘s 16th anniversary of performances in Cape Town next week. How is that for totally amazing, terrifying, brilliant, scary and plain fantastic?

We are celebrating with a week of performances; the usual Monday 16 Nov at The Intimate and then Tuesday 17 to Saturday 21 we have shows at The Kalk Bay Theatre. Then, the following week we perform the normal Monday and Tuesday here in CT and then we dash off for four shows in Knysna, as part of a fundraiser for an overseas tour by Oakhill School grade 11s.

I also love that our birthday month coincides with Movember, the month of growing moustaches, for fun and charity. I don’t know why, but we have often given discounts to ‘tache wearers to TheatreSports, be they real or fake.

Please come and play with. I think these shows are going to cook. marksgetset_smaller

Decadence sparks

DEC_1 I finally got to see Berkoff’s Decadence last night. It has come back to The Intimate after its sold out run, and is now part of The Mechanicals British Lines rep season. It’s directed by Chris Weare and stars Scott Sparrow and Emily Child.

I understand exactly why it was sold out the first time, and if you are a Slaapstad slacker you are lucky to get the chance to see it this time around. Make sure to check a schedule of when it’s on because it shares the space with The Dumbwaiter (and TheatreSports on a Monday night). Actually, just check The Intimate website for exact dates, like I just did.

This production is tight, slick and wonderful to watch. In fact, the biggest joy is seeing how the actors manage it. The script is 80% less shocking than it was when I first saw it, which means that you really see how the performers manage the text, pace, poetry and style, and they are fantastic. Emily Child is fantastic. She is intense, sexy, strange and totally magnetic. Scott, who is one of my favourites, looks like a bigger version of Daniel Craig and he is great as usual. Chris Weare’s direction is inspired and inspiring. He has not missed a hair of detail and pace.

It’s a special opportunity to get to see some classic theatre, exceptionally well done. Don’t wake up when it’s over and bitch that you missed it.

TheatreSports is beautiful

tsmegcanice There is no doubt I have been feeling weird about stuff the last while. That’s why it is so fabulous to have TheatreSports in my life. We are a small group at the moment. Tandi has just had a baby, Brett got married and went on honeymoon, Candice is leaving on holiday for three weeks and others have been and gone. The urgency to train up a new lot of players has definitely got greater, but it’s a difficult thing to organise; people don’t have the money, and it’s that awkward mid year time.

Which is why last night was extra special. We had a small but sweet audience at The Intimate (half had seen us before and half were newbies) who were treated to a delightful, wacky, hilarious and totally creative show. It had that thing, that spark, that magic. We all played together and created the weirdest, most interesting scenes and stories, and had an absolute blast.

And tonight we do a different one at The Kalk Bay Theatre. I can’t wait.

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