Showing posts with label England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

The 2016 London International Mime Festival

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If I weren't in Costa Rica right now I'd be seriously wishing I were in London. Even if you've never been and might never go, it's good to know that the London International Mime Festival is now entering its 40th year. Since its inception in 1977, the festival has gone way beyond mime to encompass circus, clown, physical theatre, mask work, puppetry, and more. In the process, it has not only popularized a lot of deserving movement-oriented work, but has opened eyes outside the already converted. As the NY Times comments this week, "over four decades it has had a significant impact on British theater, disrupting the dominance of scripted plays —something that hasn’t quite happened the same way in the United States."

You can read the Times article here, but meanwhile here are some preview images and videos of five of this month's offerings that highlight physical comedy.

ALL GENIUS ALL IDIOT 
Svalbard (Sweden)

Svalbard bends the edges of contemporary circus and blends it with theatre, physical comedy and live music to create a truly original piece that you will remember for its surreal quality as well as its awe-inspiring skills.






EXPIRY DATE
BabaFish (Belgium)

Dominoes topple… an hourglass is overturned. Time is ever-present in this ephemeral retrospective of one man’s life, his scattered memories conveyed through acrobatics, movement, music and dance… Assisted by her father, an inventor by trade, Swedish-born artist Anna Nilsson has devised a Heath Robinson-esque set, where a ball bearing spins around weird and wonderful machinery and pendulums wave. It provides a poignant backdrop for an abstract tale about time running out, characterised by four performers and their unpredictable mix of acting, juggling, hand-balancing and singing.





MARCEL
Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord, Paris (France)
By and with Jos Houben and Marcello Magni

"An entire performance history lurks behind this ticklish two hander, the opener for the London International Mime Festival, created by Jos Houben and Marcello Magni, two of contemporary theatre’s greatest clowns. This funny, heart-breaking show celebrates the pair’s relationship stretching back to the early 1980s with Complicite and ground-breaking shows such as A Minute Too Late and More Bigger Snacks Now. It also draws on the history of clowning from commedia dell’arte to the slapstick of 19th-century music hall and early 20th-century film... the show continually reaches out to the audience, playing us with a knowing sweetness. It’s a brief hour that gives the kiss of life to the ancient art of the gag." —Lyn Gardner, The Guardian




INFINITA
Familie Floez (Germany)

In Infinita, a cast of irresistible, larger-than-life characters are seen both as warring children, and then in later life as residents of an old people’s home. The wily games of nursery one-upmanship seem hardly to change with the passage of time; survival of the craftiest is still the rule of the day. Infinita plays out in a succession of increasingly hilarious scenes, combining poignancy, astute observation and some superbly skilled slapstick.






NAUTILUS
Trygve Wakenshaw (New Zealand)

NAUTILUS is the final part of rubber-limbed Trygve’s ‘underwater trilogy’, the follow-up to delirious, sell-out physical comedies KRAKEN (LIMF’15) and SQUIDBOY. Oozing with whimsy, dripping with charm and magnificently mad, Trygve is his own animator in a cartoon world. A master of risqué innocence, he trained with Philippe Gaulier, developing a uniquely eccentric style of mime-comedy that has won him legions of fans the world over.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Johnny Hutch 100th Birthday Salute

Johnny Hutch at 15 and receiving his MBE in 1994.
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Johnny Hutch, one of the unsung heroes of physical comedy, would have been 100 years old today. As things turned out, he not only made it past his 93rd birthday, but remained active as an acrobatic performer until age 69, and as a teacher and choreographer late into life, last working as a stunt coordinator for the Royal Shakespeare Company at the age of 87. He was also married to the same woman, Jane Phillips, for 66 years, passing away — probably not coincidentally — months after she did in 2006.

Hutch had a long and illustrious career as a comedy acrobat with such troupes as the Seven Hindustans, the Seven Volants, the Herculeans, and the Half-Wits, appearing more than any other artist ever at the London Palladium, and sharing the stage with such stars as Grock, Louis Armstrong, and Bob Hope. However, he probably gained greatest recognition as Benny Hill's bald, elderly sidekick in the last two seasons of Hill's BBC comedy show.

More significant to today's performers (youse guys) is that Johnny Hutch deserves huge praise for generously sharing his knowledge with others, in the process becoming a key transitional figure between the circus/variety world of the mid-20th century and the alternative theatre world of the past fifty years. He created the Johnny Hutch School of Professional Acrobatics and Stagecraft —"Producers of High Class Specialty Acts. Knockabout and Fight Sequences. Traditional Trap Routines" and coached Robert Downey, Jr. for the title role in the movie Chaplin. He not only worked for established institutions such as the RSC, but also assisted fringier enterprises such as People Show and The Kosh, and helped establish Zippos Circus. So giving and dedicated was he to transmitting his skills  that he was awarded an MBE (Member of the British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth for "service to young people of the theatrical profession."

Johnny Hutch as a clown.
As usual, you can learn more about Johnny Hutch on the excellent Circopedia site or by reading his memoir of his early days, Somersaults and Some Aren't, published as a special edition (no. 165) of King Pole, the British circus magazine.

Here are a few video clips, followed by some remembrances by two huge fans, and finally a chronology of Hutch's life taken from his memoir.


Click here to see Johnny and The Seven Volants on the Circopedia site. This is from 1965.





A year later, these are the Herculeans at the Royal Hippodrome. Click here to watch, again at Circopedia.




The Half-Wits
And in 1977, the Half-Wits on the Cliff Richard Seaside Special, filmed at Deauville, France. That's him second from left  in the photo.

This routine, by the way, reminds me of one Victor Gaona taught at Ringling's Clown College back in 1973, and that has been seen in some form in that circus many times.





A skit from the Benny Hill Show. Recognize anyone?





An obituary by acclaimed British actor Anthony Sher, which first appeared in the London Guardian

The acrobat Johnny Hutch, who has died aged 93, passed his skills on to actors as well as circus performers. He also became an actor himself - and was the little old man whose bald head was patted by Benny Hill on his television show.I first met Johnny when he trained me for the rope climbing and other acrobatics required for Terry Hands' 1992 RSC production of Marlowe's Tamburlaine the Great. I shall never forget the surprise of walking into the gym for our first session and discovering that my teacher was a diminutive man of 79. In reply to my "Hello, how are you?" he said in a broad Yorkshire accent, "No alright, ta, just a bit of arthritis in me wrists - it stops me walking on me hands, and I always like to start the day with a little walk on me hands."

I was speechless. My own father was roughly the same age, and could barely walk on his feet. Who was this man? Quite a phenomenon, it turned out.

In the months that followed, as Johnny bullied and encouraged me through some punishing training sessions, I grew to love and respect him. He was a little gentleman entertainer who always wore a suit and bow tie to work, and who, with a twinkle in his eye, a story on his lips ("When I was on the bill with Judy Garland ..."), and with his feet constantly sliding into a soft-shoe shuffle, led me to a world I did not know but found enchanting - the world of circus, music hall and variety.

Born John Hutchinson in Middlesbrough, Johnny was apprenticed to a troupe of acrobats when he was aged 14. They became the Seven Royal Hindustans, specialising in a mixture of European and Arab tumbling, with Johnny as their star performer. At the beginning of the second world war, he was performing in variety acts at the famous Windmill theatre in Soho, but he soon signed up and became a staff sergeant in the 2nd Independent Parachute Brigade, training men to drop behind enemy lines. He himself made 66 jumps, and fought in north Africa and Italy.

In the early 1950s, Johnny formed the Seven Volants, a fast-moving acrobatic act, which appeared regularly at the London Palladium. In 1957 they toured South Africa with Boswell's Circus for a year, living on a train with all the other performers: trapeze artists, clowns and animals. Johnny went on to develop two successful comedy acts, the Herculeans and the Half-Wits. They appeared in Las Vegas, and spent two years touring France with Cirque Jean Richard.

In 1976, aged 64, Johnny achieved a remarkable feat: winning the world circus championships by performing a full-twisting backward somersault. But as he finally grew too old for these physical rigours, he simply reinvented himself again and again.

He became a comedy actor - appearing in the Benny Hill Show for eight years until the star's death in 1993 - and was the stunt-choreographer for the theatre and dance groups, the People's Show and the Kosh. In 1994 he was awarded an MBE for services to fringe theatre. He helped Martin Burton establish Zippo's Circus, Britain's prime touring circus, and was a consultant on Richard Attenborough's 1992 film Chaplin, coaching Robert Downey Jr in the silent movie star's slapstick routines. He also worked on the design of the Teletubbies, creating their particular walk.

But I always think that one of Johnny's most daunting challenges in his later life was to try and turn an out-of-condition actor like me into a superman. As well as making me look good in Tamburlaine, he created some thrilling moments in our 1997 RSC production of Cyrano de Bergerac.

Johnny's name was invariably linked to that of his wife, Jean, the dancer Jean Phillips, whom he married in 1940; they were a perfect double act, one of those matches made in heaven, inseparable. He was heartbroken when she died last March. He is survived by their son Brian, daughter-in-law Deborah, grandchildren Sophie, George and Eleanor, and great-grandchildren Molly and Clara.

Don Stacey writes: Looking back on his 80-year career in show business, Hutch said, "You had to be versatile to survive in music hall. I became Britain's finest tumbler. It sounds big-headed but there was nobody to beat me." He had started work with the Seven Royal Hindustans aged 13 as top mounter in their pyramid - at only 5ft, he was too small to get a job in the local mills. In 1928 he made his first appearance at the London Palladium on a bill topped by Gracie Fields, making her London debut.

Later, as well as the Seven Volants, he trained groups, such as the Herculeans, who wore old fashioned bloomers, tights and false moustaches. These acts were always in top demand for pantomines - at the Palladium, for instance, they Volants appeared in, among others, Robinson Crusoe, with Englebert Humperdinck, and Aladdin with Cliff Richard, while the Herculeans appeared in Babes in the Wood with Frank Ifield and Sid James.

Hutch continued to arrange knockabout comedy and trapdoor routines in Palladium pantomimes, although he retired from performing them in his 70s.

The Herculeans


And a fond remembrance by our own guest blogger, eccentric dancer and eccentric dance historian Betsy Baytos:

I had the immense pleasure of not only spending time, but filming an extraordinary interview with the great Johnny Hutch back in 1994, for my ‘Funny Feet’ Documentary. Minute and adorable, enthusiastic and funny, energetic, passionate and knowledgeable, it was Johnny, as one of my early interviews and my first in England, who cracked open the door of the Eccentric Dancer’s reach throughout Europe and its strong visual comedic roots. 

The two hours on camera were pure delight and he clearly was one of my favorite interviews and greatest inspirations, and we remained in touch for years after. His demonstrations of ‘moonwalking’ and his spontaneous eccentric dance moves to deliver a point he was making, were nothing short of amazing. 

He was generous of time and spirit, driving home the importance of having a certain ‘kind of body’ as a necessity in becoming an eccentric dancer. He was also the first to make me aware of how eccentric dance evolved from early pantomine and commedia, and how the French Music Hall had incorporated dance, which led to eccentric. We talked of so many great physical comics and dancers, but a favorite to us both was Grock, which he felt as one of the supreme visual comedians, led to the Eccentric’s character. 

He spoke of working with Robert Downey Jr. and how much he enjoyed the experience of passing along Chaplin’s routines. He spoke of when Richard Attenborough called him to first request his assistance and how deflated Attenborough sounded when saying it was a shame no one remembered Chaplin’s routines. But Johnny piped in, “ I know ALL his routines! I used to watch him as a kid!” And he shared with me the incredible outtakes of his working with Downey on the set.  I recall asking who might have inspired Chaplin, when he mentioned  ‘Fred Kitchen’, whom I must research when back in the UK. 

There is so much more, and I cannot wait to transfer his interview when archived, so it will be accessible to all of you! Happy Birthday Johnny! Love, Betsy

__________________________

___________________________

Thank you all! It is never too late to celebrate a life well lived.


Friday, January 4, 2013

The 2013 London International Mime Festival

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It's that time of the year again when I wish I were in London instead of New York. The reason of course is the 37th edition of the London International Mime Festival, which runs January 10–27. Calling it a mime festival is less accurate than its subtitle of "contemporary visual theatre." Maybe it was more mime-y back in 1977, but these days it's a rousing mixture of puppetry, nouveau cirque, clowning, dance, mime, juggling and everything in-between. Especially in-between.

Here are seven shows that look to score high marks in the physical comedy department. Descriptions are from the festival program.


Circle of Eleven (Germany)
Leo 

I saw this show in New York, loved it, and wrote about it in this earlier post.

Leo throws you upside down, tilts you sideways and messes with your head in the most glorious, brain-tickling way. Reminiscent of a wordless Samuel Beckett scenario in which a man seeks meaning in his isolation, inventing games to while away the time, Leo combines world-class acrobatics, visual artistry and clever film manipulation in a journey of joyful discovery and invention. This is physical theatre taken to creative and imaginative heights. With gravity distorted, you’ll be wondering which way is up and which way down in one man’s fantastical playground. Based on an original idea by German acrobat, Tobias Wegner, Leo has been an off-Broadway hit, a winner of multiple awards, including Best of Edinburgh, and is now touring the world. You will be astonished!



Click here for their web site.




Compagnie 111 
Aurélien Bory (France)
Plan B 

I also saw this in New York, as well as two other Compagnie 111 productions, and recommend them highly.

Performed on a cunning, tilting set, a source of tricks and transformations, this astonishing spectacle unfolds like a dream. A thrilling mix of circus, dance, video, 'sonic' object manipulation and optical illusion, Plan B juggles with gravity and perspective. Ten years since its creation, Aurélien Bory and Phil Soltanoff have remounted their visual theatre classic which comes to the Southbank Centre direct from a month-long season in Paris. Aurélien's work has been a regular highlight of the Mime Festival since its first appearance in 2002 with IJK ('Think of it as Stomp with balls or Mondrian on acid' —Sunday Times) and most recently in 2011 with Sans Objet, his acclaimed piece for two juggler/acrobats and industrial robot. Seeing is believing, or more likely not!



Click here for their web site.



My!Laika (France)
Popcorn Machine 

My!Laika’s world is apocalyptic, an electric landscape where a surprising present coexists with an unknown past. There’s humour, bold acrobatics, a well-played Chopin waltz – even a popcorn volcano amongst other delights in this hour of surprising circus theatre, in which three charismatic women and one man live out a series of implausible scenes. Frank Zappa, Jacky Chan, Kurt Schwitters and The Ramones were inspirational in creating this fast-moving collage of bizarre and entertaining events which fuse circus discipline and rich imagination, a winner at the prestigious Jeunes Talents Cirque Awards in 2010.





Click here for their web site.



Ockham's Razor (UK)

Not Until We Are Lost 
An immersive promenade performance which brings the audience right into the heart of the action, while narrative and images unfold around them. With world class aerial work, and powerful acrobatics performed on specially designed structures, the new show creates an environment which is both physically and emotionally affecting. It questions how fixed is the world around us. Sometimes you need a shift in perspective to find your way.


Click here for their web site.



Zimmermann & de Perrot (Switzerland)
Hans Was Heiri 

I haven't seen this one, but I did catch their Gaff Aff in New York and it was amazing.

Following their success with Öper Öpis in 2010, Swiss choreographer Martin Zimmermann and composer Dimitri de Perrot return to the Barbican with a company of outstanding physical performers, and their latest production fusing circus, theatre, music and visual arts. Catch your breath as seven performers tumble through an astonishing spinning house whose inhabitants miraculously live life through 360 degrees, jumping, climbing or dancing. Mixing circus, theatre, music and dance, this funny, touching and almost physically-impossible performance will make you think about the cycle of life in an entirely new way.



Click here for their web site.




Wolfe Bowart (Australia)
Letter's End 

Mops sneeze, storks swoop in bearing gifts, trees grow out of shoes and long-lost letters tell their stories. The magic starts when an old toy falls out of a torn parcel and one man’s life is changed forever. Acclaimed theatre clown Wolfe Bowart, who made his UK debut at LIMF’07 with the enchanting LaLaLuna, returns with the Helpmann Award-nominated Letter’s End. Weaving together his signature mix of physical comedy, illusion, shadow puppetry and interactive film, Bowart leads audiences of all ages on a dream-like journey down a most magical memory lane. Cut the string, tear open the brown paper, and enter the realm of the fantastic.  The adventure begins here!

Click here for his web site.




Gandini Juggling (UK)
Smashed 

Smashed is a sensational mix of skill and theatricality inspired by the work of seminal German dance-theatre maker, Pina Bausch. Nine extraordinary performers, eighty apples and crockery galore combine in a series of nostalgic filmic scenes, hinting at conflict and tense relationships, lost love and the quaintness of afternoon tea.

Click here for their web site.

Friday, November 16, 2012

Benny Hill, Acrobat

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British television comedian Benny Hill made a long career out of sight gags, British musical hall routines, and leering sexual humor. Other than his trademark Yakety Sax sped-up chase scenes, however, you wouldn't necessarily think of him as a very physical comedian... and this skit probably won't change your mind. "Scuttle's Keep Fit Brigade" has some fun with acrobatics, but that's about it. Like most of Hill's work, very uneven, some good bits, nothing great, but at least there's a lot crammed into a short amount of time. In other words, modern television.


Friday, April 20, 2012

And the Reviews are In!

One Man, Two Guvnors Takes New York by Storm


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One aspect of the whole One Man, Two Guvnors phenomenon that several of us physical comedy mavens have commented on is that today's theatre-going audience, no matter how sophisticated, has seen little if any really well-done physical comedy, and certainly not the heavy dose they get served by this production. So far I've seen the show once on film (National Theatre Live series), once in previews here in New York, and then again on opening night. The response of the live audience was great, with both performances earning hearty, non-stop laughter and a standing ovation at the end.

It turns out the critics liked it just as much. There's this great web site, stagegrade.com, which reproduces all of the reviews to commercial productions here in New York and gives them an approximate grade. In other words, they read the review, estimate the critic's response as being, say, a B+, and then average all of these into a composite grade. As you can see above, One Man, Two Guvnors got an "A". No surprise there.

Click here for access to all of the reviews. A lot of them make interesting reading, as they try to grapple with a form they're less used to and have to figure out who to give the credit to!

Thursday, April 19, 2012

One Play, Two Directors

An Interview with Cal McCrystal, Physical Comedy Director for One Man, Two Guvnors

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Just two hours before yesterday's Broadway premiere of the London smash hit, One Man, Two Guvnors, Cal McCrystal sat down with Jim Moore (vaudevisuals.com) and myself for this interview about his work on the show. Significantly, Cal is listed not as an assistant or as a choreographer, but as its "Physical Comedy Director," his name immediately following that of overall director Nicholas Hytner in the program. Jim and I had already caught the show in previews and absolutely loved it, so when Hilary Chaplain offered to set up this interview, we jumped at the chance to talk shop.

First here's his short but impressive bio from the Playbill program:

Cal McCrystal is from Belfast. He trained at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and at École Philippe Gaulier. He is comedy director for the acclaimed clown routines in Cirque de Soleil’s Varekai and Zumanity. He has directed countless comedy shows  around the world, including the original Mighty Boosh shows, winning a Perrier Award. Cal has served as a physical comedy consultant to Sacha Baron Cohen on both Borat (presenting the MTV Awards) and the upcoming The Dictator. Cal is director for Giffords Circus and soon begins a new show at the Folies Bergère, Paris. His feature film, The Bubonic Plague, is in post-production.


And here's the interview, shot by Jim and also featured on this blog post on VaudeVisuals.com:




Click here for Cal's web site.

I'll have a lot more to say about the actual physical comedy in the show in a near-future post, but click here and here for my two previous posts about this production.

And some of this morning's reviews, hot off the press.
NY Times
NY Daily News
NY Post
Wall Street Journal

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Monty Python: Upperclass Twit of the Year

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One of Monty Python's more physical comic sketches. Thanks to Justin Bowen for the link.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

"One Man, Two Guvnors" Coming to Broadway

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I wasn't in London at the right time to see the smash hit, One Man, Two Guvnors, but that didn't stop me from writing about it in this post, and I did subsequently catch a broadcast of it here in NYC as part of the National Theatre Live program. The title of that post was "Commedia Conquers London —  Is Broadway Next?" and the answer is yes! — it begins its Broadway run on April 6th. Finally I'll get to see it live on stage, and I'm hoping many of you will too. Highly recommended!!

You can read the whole NY Times article here.

Click here for a London Guardian article on the show's chances of becoming a Broadway hit.

Friday, November 25, 2011

The London International Mime Festival

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I live in New York and have this thing called a job, otherwise the London International Mime Festival would be a good excuse to visit The Big Smoke for nineteen days this January (as if I needed an excuse). If you're closer to London and less tied down, you'd be crazy to miss it.

The first thing you need to know about this festival, which has been held annually since 1977, is that it's no longer strictly a mime festival, but rather a heady mix of nouveau cirque, clowning, physical comedy, dance, puppetry, movement theatre and, yes, mime. In fact, they subtitle it "contemporary visual theatre." The second thing you need to know is that they bring in some very good work indeed.

Here are a few shots from their new brochure for 2012; click on the images for larger versions.





The festival runs from January 11th to January 29th, and tickets are only £15. You can view and download the brochure here and visit the full web site here.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Murdoch Pie-Thrower Gets 3 to 6 Weeks in Jail

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A short follow-up to post 168, the pieing of Rupert Murdoch at a Parliamentary hearing. Jonathan May-Bowles, aka Jonnie Marbles, has pleaded guilty and been sentenced to three to six weeks and fined £250 costs — plus a £15 victim surcharge.


Read the whole article here.

Marbles has also written a short article for the Guardian (London) explaining his actions.

You can read the article and the reader comments here. Even though the Guardian is a left-of-center newspaper hardly sympathetic to Murdoch, the vast majority of reader comments were negative, calling the pie throwing counter-productive. They have a point: it was a rare occasion when Murdoch was being held accountable in public and all Marbles did was make him more sympathetic. It would have been different, and more effective, had Murdoch been caught at a more arrogant moment.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Library Clearout Discovers Priceless Silent Movie Music

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From the BBC wire, 12 August 2011. Richard Westcott reports:
Staff at Birmingham's Central Library have discovered a priceless collection of more than 500 silent movie music scores. They made the find during a clearout before a move to a new building and unearthed more than just a bit of old junk.

Here's the video:

More informative is this longer article from the Birmingham Post. It notes that...
•  The treasure trove included Marche Groteque (1916),"a unique theme from a Charlie Chaplin film."
• "There’s a lot of European material here that didn’t make it to the States, because they had so much material they didn’t need to buy from European stuff."
• "Experts say the discovery disproves the myth that film-goers were routinely subjected to a single pianist to accompany the likes of Chaplin and Buster Keaton and shows musical directors used a wide range of themes to cover action, comedy and tragedy."

Monday, August 8, 2011

Commedia Conquers London — Is Broadway Next?


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Whether or not you've been following all my posts on commedia dell'arte and the various Carlos (Goldoni, Gozzi, Mazzone-Clementi), whether or not you think commedia is the holy grail of ultimate theatricality or merely a corny, hoary, outdated performance style, you will probably be surprised to learn that a modern adaptation of Goldoni's Servant of Two Masters is the hottest ticket in London.

What we're talking about is One Man, Two Guvnors, an adaptation of the Goldoni play by Carlo Bean — oops, I mean Richard Bean — currently in rep at the National Theatre but scheduled to open a commercial run in the West End's Adelphi Theatre on November 8th. According to Variety, producer Bob Boyett already has plans to bring it to Broadway.

Playwright Bean, who must be a spiritual brother to Rowan Atkinson's Mr. Bean, has moved the play's action to 1963 Brighton and our two masters/guvnors are now gangsters. The reviewers all say that the intricate plot is hard to describe but that it works magnificently well. The BBC critic, for example, called it ‘the single funniest production I've ever seen."

What excited me was the equally unanimous verdict that the production, directed by the always impressive Nicholas Hytner, is a masterpiece of physical comedy, with James Corden in the lead and Tom Edden as the waiter receiving particular praise. This rave from the reviewer for the Daily Telegraph is typical:

Corden, with a face like an enormous potato and a physical dexterity that is astonishing in one so corpulent, brings a winningly warm and harassed humanity to the role. He constantly button-holes the audience with asides and ad-libs, and turns the play’s great set piece in which he simultaneously serves dinner to his two masters into one of the most uproarious scenes of farcical comedy I have ever witnessed. He is brilliantly abetted by Tom Edden as a doddery ancient waiter who suffers no end of humiliation and keeps falling down the stairs. During this set-piece I found myself physically helpless with laughter.

[Full review here.]

This is the official National Theatre preview video:



The National Theatre web site features the following series of six behind-the-scenes "video diaries." Aimed at the general public, they're not as informative as you or I might like, but at only a minute or two each, they're worth a look-see; the intros to each video are from the NT web site

Video Diary #1 — Meet Daniel
Take a peek into rehearsal room one and meet Daniel Rigby, an actor in One Man, Two Guvnors. See him rehearsing, hot seating and improvising as well as meeting some other cast members.




Video Diary #2 — Stage Fighting
Jemima Rooper takes us for a sneaky peek into Daniel Rigby's fight rehearsal. Watch Combat Kate teach the cast how to stage fight. Meet more of the cast. WARNING: Do not try this at home!




Video Diary #3 — Singing and Dancing
Watch the cast singing and dancing their way through rehearsals. Meet more of the cast. See the girls strut their stuff, get a sneak listen to one of the tunes in the show and see the skiffle band in action.




Video Diary #4 — The Dinner Scene
The Dinner Scene is one of the highlights of the show One Man, Two Guvnors. It is beautifully choregraphed slapstick comedy requiring split-second timing and many many props.




Video Diary #5 — Tech Rehearsal
'Tech rehearsal' stands for 'technical rehearsal'. In a tech rehearsal all the technical elements of a show - lights, sound, set, props, costume - are put together on stage for the first time. Tech rehearsals take several days and can mean lots of sitting around for the actors. In this video diary we get a glimpse backstage at the One Man, Two Guvnors tech rehearsal.




Video Diary #6 — Press Night
Press night is the first formal night of the show's run after previews. All the theatre critics are invited to see the show and many of them will write reviews. Everyone gets excited and nervous before press night. Good reviews can mean a sell out show. See the cast of One Man, Two Guvnors getting ready for press night.





Here are a few excerpts from reviews, with links to the full articles:

Guardian
"But what makes the show a triumph is its combination of visual and verbal comedy. Bean and his director, Nicholas Hytner, have managed to make the dinner scene funnier than ever by adding a character: an octogenarian waiter, magnificently played by Tom Edden, whose hand alarmingly quivers as he serves a tureen of soup and who has an amazing capacity to fall backwards down stairs and return like a rubber ball."
Full review is here.

Variety
"Aided by physical theater expert and associate director Cal McCrystal, director Nicholas Hytner expertly harnesses that comedy energy to build a tight, towering succession of character shtick, sight gags, slapstick and chase sequences unseen since "Noises Off." All of which prepares everyone for the play's most famous scene. Desperate to keep his masters apart, Henshall is forced to serve dinner to them separately but simultaneously. But Bean and Hytner go one better, adding in a new-to-the-job, 87-year-old deaf waiter with the shakes, played by Tom Fedden as a magnificently doddering disaster-zone replete with jaw-dropping comedy pratfalls."
Full review is here.

Sketches on Theatre
"Hytner strikes the perfect balance between slick comedy and potential chaos and nails the infamous central banquet scene. Corden screeches across the stage, skidding on food and nearly sending the decrepit butler to his (late) grave. It's a bit like watching Faulty Towers on fast forward with the sound at full blast."
Full review is here.

New York Times
"If you’re allergic to British farce as practiced by the likes of Benny Hill and depicted in the “Carry On” movies, Two Guvnors may well have you sneezing convulsively. And yet I – who have always switched channels whenever anything remotely Benny Hill-ish crossed my television screen – found myself succumbing to the glazed rapture that spread throughout the audience on Friday night. That audience, by the way, included the actors Jonathan Pryce, Imelda Staunton and Patricia Hodge, and the Booker Prize-winning novelist Howard Jacobson. Crude, rude and socially unattractive, One Man, Two Guvnors is, my dear, the chicest ticket in town."
Full review is here.

The Independent
"Driven by the dictates of his empty stomach and bewilderment over his duties, Corden displays great natural gifts for physical clowning – whether picking a fight with himself that is a mad paroxysm of auto-pugilism or, in a sequence that could be called a tour de farce, dishing lunch to his two masters in separate rooms of The Cricketers' Arms, a challenge not helped by a doddery, cadaverous, 87-year-old fellow-waiter with a pacemaker, balance problems and an ongoing relationship with the staircase that its roughly that of rubbish to chute. One Man, Two Guvnors, one massive hit."
Full review is here.

_________________________________


Seeing the Play in London:
The National Theatre run is sold out, but if you're there between now and September 19th, you can see the show for only £10, or £5 standing room. A limited number of day tickets (check schedule since it doesn't play every day) go on sale at 9:30 a.m. I've been doing this since 1970, when I got off the plane early in the morning, headed to the National, and nabbed a £10 ticket to see Laurence Olivier play Shylock in A Merchant of Venice. I'm still doing that four decades later! I usually get there 45–60 minutes early, but for a big hit like this, at least 90 minutes would be safer; bring a book! These cheap day tickets are only at the National Theatre and will not be available for the West End run.

Seeing the Play in a Movie Theatre Near You!?
On September 15th you can see a live telecast of this production in select movie theatres in cities acros the globe. Maybe there's a venue near you. The web site's a bit confusing, but apparently in NYC it will be screened on September 21 at Skirball NYU... but maybe elsewhere on the 15th?!? I know I'll be there, hopefully on the right night.

More Links:
• The National Theatre web page for this production
• You can download the script for Goldoni's Servant of Two Masters on this recent blog post and learn more about Giorgio Strehler's famous production here.
• You can buy the script for One Man, Two Guvnors here.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Splat! — A Pie in the Face for Rupert Murdoch

[post 168]

"It is a far better thing that I do now than I have ever done before #splat" — Tweet earlier today by pie-thrower Jonnie Marbles



Another emergency interruption of our series of complete books on the commedia dell' arte... but definitely in the commedia spirit!

Just a few posts ago, in writing about Improv Everywhere, I also got to talking about the history of guerrilla theatre, and the practice of "pieing" prominent political figures. So this just in: a British comedian/activist who goes by the name of Jonnie Marbles somehow got himself and a shaving cream pie into the Parliamentary interrogation of media baron Rupert Murdoch and managed to plaster the old guy right in the kisser. (If you don't know who Murdoch is or why he's suddenly in trouble, click here... and read the newspaper once in a while, why dontcha?!) Marble had tweeted about his planned attack beforehand, paraphrasing the famous last sentence from Charles Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities.

DickensIt is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to, than I have ever known.
Marbles:  It is a far better thing that I do now than I have ever done before #splat

Here's a video that caught some of the action, as reported by Murdoch's own Fox News:




The event is getting a lot of media attention. For example, from the NY Daily News:


You can read the whole article here.  If you check out the media coverage of the event, you'll see that some news outlets try to frame it as an act of violence meant to harm Murdoch physically rather than as a stunt meant to embarrass him and send a message. Hmm....

Monday, June 27, 2011

Craig Reid — What the Hoopla's All About

[post 156]

Did you ever enjoy a great act in person and then later see it on video and find it flat and nowhere near as exciting? Yes, it's incredible to be able to watch performances from around the world on our laptop computer or even on a telephone, but still there's nothing like live performance.

A case in point is Craig Reid, whose Elvis Presley hula-hoop act blew me away both for its technical virtuosity and its sharp humor.  Sheer delight.  This video clip — just an excerpt — doesn't quite capture it for me, but here he is. Enjoy, but do try to catch his show if you can.





And here's one I haven't seen live, his take on The Wizard of Oz.




Which reminds me of another one of my favorite pieces, Bobby McFerrin's version of The Wizard of Oz.




Love it! We should get these two guys together.

For more on Craig Reid, check out his web site.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Pink Tights & Plenty of Props

[post 135]

Comedians and clowns have been parodying Shakespeare for centuries now, and “reduced Shakespeare” companies have become somewhat of a comedy franchise since the 80s.  Here’s a nice physical Rowan Atkinson piece, a fake lecture on Shakespearean acting from 1991. Despite the title, his tights are not pink and there aren't all that many props — but a great title nonetheless. Atkinson is best known for his Mr. Bean character, but his range is much broader.  The following piece, which co-stars Angus Deayton, is just one example.




So the moral is:  don’t fall on your knees.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Live from London: Circus Festival at the Roundhouse

[post 096]

I blazed through London for three jet-lagged days on my way to Paris, and managed to catch part of a circus festival (ongoing through May 16th) at the Roundhouse Theatre in fashionable Camden Town.

The Roundhouse is a great space. Originally a steam engine repair shed, it was first used as a performance venue in the 60s by political playwright Arnold Wesker, and soon was hosting such attractions as Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd, Peter Brook, the Living Theatre, and the Doors. When funding dried up in 1983, the space went dark until 1996. In 2004 it closed again, but this time for some big-time (and handsome) renovations, reopening in 2006. It is indeed round and quite impressive — its main space can house 1,800 people seated or 3,300 standing — and reminds you of such permanent circus buildings as the Cirque d'Hiver in Paris. The similarities don't end there: circus and variety arts constitute a major portion of their programming.


The show that impressed me most was a nouveau cirque production from France, Compagnie XY. One trademark of nouveau cirque is its choice to not use animal acts. Compagnie XY went much further: they chose to perform without circus hoopla: no applause cues, no "Ta-Da's!" no glitzy costumes, hardly any props (three, to be exact), and no dramatic music — not even a drum roll — just some charming Parisian melodies, full of accordions, and more reminiscent of the world of Edith Piaf than of the world of the circus.

It begins in the semi-dark. Very slowly the performers wander into the ring, eventually gathering themselves into a shadowy pyramid, after which they casually disperse. It of course picks up steam from there, but throughout retains a matter-of-fact manner; intense focus, of course, but calm nonetheless.

What we get instead of over-the-top pizazz is an ensemble of performers — all of them in the ring 90% of the time — working together to explore the countless possibilities of group acrobatics; more specifically, throwing each other every which way and constructing a dazzling array of pyramids. That's it. No jugglers, no wirewalkers, no clowns, no daredevils on motorcycles. Just group acrobatics. The only human cannonballs are launched by human hands and human feet.

The technical level is high, with many a 4-high in the mix, but what impresses is the inventiveness and the contagious joy of all these group creations. . As always, you had to be there, but this two-minute video shows the kind of work they do, though not the effect of the whole evening.



And some more photos:




Partner work this strong and inventive is at least a second cousin to physical comedy partner work, but I think it's more difficult to do actual comedy as part of a show like this. What do you play off of? There's less suspense, not much in the way of defined roles. There are no stars and no star turns. The (warm) message is one of mutual trust and cooperation. The few comic bits they tried work quite well, however, especially the attempts of the one rather heavy member of the troupe to perform feats usually associated with a light and lithe acrobat. Of course he ultimately succeeds as a topmounter, much to everyone's astonishment and delight. I also liked the flying "trust" leaps into the hands of about 10 catchers, all of whom collapse upon impact while the flyer walks nonchalantly away.

All in all, a sweet and terrific show. We were there opening night, and they got lots of applause without signaling for it, and a final ovation that was foot-stompingly loud and enthusiastically sustained.