"Witness a truly revolutionary event" by Colin Appleby for remotegoat on 20/10/11 |
Presented by the suitably named Gunpowder Theatre Company, at the little gem of an oddity that is the White Bear Theatre Pub, is the absolute delight that is this production of Bertolt Brecht's The Days of the Commune.
The play, set in 1871, tracks the rise and fall of the Paris Commune in a semi-documentary style where the main character is the Commune and the streets of Paris themselves rather than any of the 60 or so characters who spend time on the tiny stage exploring the pressures of material hardship, class antagonisms, and the struggle of leading a city of 2 million people when you have no experience of rule and when the ruling classes, and the media, decide that your revolution is nothing other than mob rule.
The stage, as I mentioned, is tiny. And yet the sense of space achieved is phenomenal. As are the cast. Fifteen actors portray 60 odd characters and the play even features a full size cannon.
Having sat with my thoughts for a while about the play I am still unable to find anything more to say other than it's a remarkably strong ensemble brought together under the bold, and obviously talented, directorial wing of Genevieve Girling to make a piece of theatre which well deserves the critical acclaim it's getting in the press and well deserves being seen.
Struggling as I am to pull out a single performance as the truly stand out one of the evening, because the ensemble gathered here is so uniformly strong, I do feel that the vastly experienced Gary Heron brings a touch of vulnerability to his rough stock proletarian Papa Goule that adds a gentle side to what could otherwise be a tough character to warm to.
Worth highlighting amongst the remaining cast are Steve Wickenden who demonstrates a mastery of comic timing and delivers both his lines, and his non-verbal interjections, precisely and perfectly placed never ceasing to hit the mark without veering over into pantomime. And Rupert Ratcliffe, playing Pierre Langevin a member of the elected committee of the Paris Commune, continues to display the stage presence and talent that marked him out as someone to watch in the recent production of A Midsummer Night's Dream at the New Diorama and I am looking forward to watching him in Don Carlos at the Blue Elephant.
I am at pains to state that all of the cast rise the the difficult challenges that this play, and this production, set them. And they rise to them triumphantly.
The play, set in 1871, tracks the rise and fall of the Paris Commune in a semi-documentary style where the main character is the Commune and the streets of Paris themselves rather than any of the 60 or so characters who spend time on the tiny stage exploring the pressures of material hardship, class antagonisms, and the struggle of leading a city of 2 million people when you have no experience of rule and when the ruling classes, and the media, decide that your revolution is nothing other than mob rule.
The stage, as I mentioned, is tiny. And yet the sense of space achieved is phenomenal. As are the cast. Fifteen actors portray 60 odd characters and the play even features a full size cannon.
Having sat with my thoughts for a while about the play I am still unable to find anything more to say other than it's a remarkably strong ensemble brought together under the bold, and obviously talented, directorial wing of Genevieve Girling to make a piece of theatre which well deserves the critical acclaim it's getting in the press and well deserves being seen.
Struggling as I am to pull out a single performance as the truly stand out one of the evening, because the ensemble gathered here is so uniformly strong, I do feel that the vastly experienced Gary Heron brings a touch of vulnerability to his rough stock proletarian Papa Goule that adds a gentle side to what could otherwise be a tough character to warm to.
Worth highlighting amongst the remaining cast are Steve Wickenden who demonstrates a mastery of comic timing and delivers both his lines, and his non-verbal interjections, precisely and perfectly placed never ceasing to hit the mark without veering over into pantomime. And Rupert Ratcliffe, playing Pierre Langevin a member of the elected committee of the Paris Commune, continues to display the stage presence and talent that marked him out as someone to watch in the recent production of A Midsummer Night's Dream at the New Diorama and I am looking forward to watching him in Don Carlos at the Blue Elephant.
I am at pains to state that all of the cast rise the the difficult challenges that this play, and this production, set them. And they rise to them triumphantly.
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