Friday, 25 May 2012

Toxic Bankers, Lowry Studio 25-5-12


‘A new musical comedy exploring the sordid world of London’s financial heart’ – come on, who could resist that, especially if like me you love theatre, like to support new work, and (whispers) work in a bank!

Having said all that, I really didn’t know what I was letting myself in for with this show, but sometimes that leads to a great experience, and that proved to be the case tonight.
Set in SMS Ethical Investments, the plot centres on the sensitive and put upon analyst Fiona (Helen Gardner) who tries to do the right thing in a corrupt and complicated world. Her boss Tony (Jonathan Dryden Taylor) is your typical bullish investment banker who tells Fiona to ‘grow a backbone’. His loyal Risk Manager Helen (Donnla Hughes) who puts her work above her family and dotes on her boss, and the somewhat camp Investment Manager Joe (Stuart Saint) make up the ‘staff’. Added to the mix are the comedic concierge company Personal Liberty, who Tony employs to ensure his employees can devote maximum time and effort to swelling his bank balance, but are they all they seem?

A tight script, with extremely well observed characters that rang more than a few bells with me,  sharp comedy,  fabulous musical numbers, and a very strong cast, made for a fantastic piece of theatre. Whilst the main slant was comedy, there were some extremely touching moments, especially when centred on the fragile Fiona – with Helen Gardner giving a brilliant performance throughout. But it seems wrong to single out a particular member of the cast in this show as they were all excellent, both in terms of the wonderful singing, and the sharp performances throughout.

The disappointingly small audience at the Lowry studio were vocal in their approval and rightly so, this really was a great night out. I left the theatre with a smile on my face and would gladly see the show again. And my little party of a Risk Manager (gulp – I’m Helen!), an accountant, and a private banker all agreed it had been an absolute treat, if a little close to the bone! Thoroughly recommended

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Happy Birthday Blog


Happy Birthday Blog
Well my little blog is one year old today – hasn’t time flown. I couldn’t let this momentous occasion go by without a little blog entry to reflect on what I have discovered from my first year of blogging;

  •  It’s been a positive experience for me. Since I was first challenged by the Library Theatre to write my first blog, I have discovered I like the process of attempting to document my thoughts, and it has also been incredibly helpful in remembering the detail of shows I have seen.
  • Readerships  are unpredictable, but can be immensely helped by retweets from theatres and theatre companies! Blogger has this ‘audience tracker’ function that I am a little too obsessed with. I seem to average out about 20 regular readers (over 4 continents – hello Russia!), but if I get a retweet from say a theatre my readership can be much higher. When Sheffield Crucible and Daniel Evans (Artistic Director) retweeted my Company blog last year I immediately hit triple figures. And when Happystorm theatre put quote from, and a link to my blog on their website I was so thrilled. However, I haven’t yet worked out what Steerage (part of last year’s 24:7 festival) did, as they top my ‘page views’ chart and have since I first blogged their show.
  • Feedback is hard to come by. Apart from family and friends who have been forced to read my blog, I actually don’t have a clue who reads it on a regular basis and what they think. If you are reading my blog please log a comment sometime letting me know what you think.
  • Blogging as close as possible to the event is much easier. There have been a couple of things in the last year that never got blogged because I left it too long and couldn’t think of what to say.
  •  I should have thought of a snappier name for the blog – even I struggle to recall the web address at times, and it takes up way too many characters.

Anyway, thank you followers, for reading my ramblings, there will be more to come very shortly

Alison x

Oh and if you were to buy the blog a birthday present, new readers and comments would be top of its wish list!

Saturday, 19 May 2012

The Hound of the Baskervilles 19/5/12 Buxton Opera House


A little trip across the border today to Derbyshire and one of the most gorgeous theatres I know, the Buxton Opera House, to see the Oldham Coliseum / Imitating the Dog touring production of The Hound of the Baskervilles. 

This was a very cleverly designed production. A simple set with minimal stage furniture, was transformed into the various settings by the innovative use of digital back projection, meaning the action could move seamlessly between the many locations. This, combined with atmospheric lighting, and excellent sound, together with sharp performances from the cast, ramped up the tension brilliantly, whilst never detracting from the action.

The production stuck to the original story, but the staging gave it a modern, almost filmic slant. There was even a ‘pre-credits’ sequence that quickly established the tone of the piece. I enjoyed the way the projection and use of the simple set allowed different locations to be immediately established. However, the design didn’t limit itself to straight scenery, I loved the sections with the Laura Lyons character, a typist, where the original text was appearing to be typed across the set, and then falling and fading, and the billiards scene used the technology in a fun way. The sound was designed well, and I think there may have been an element of surround sound in there (either that or someone snuck a very large dog into the auditorium for one scene!)

Whilst the technology and staging was great, this never overshadowed the performances. Gwynfor Jones and Leigh Symonds as Holmes and Watson were a good pairing, with just the right mix of seriousness and humour. There were just three other cast members, Amy Ewbank, Steven  O’Neill and Robin Simpson playing all the other characters and this worked really well.

The only disappointing thing in the whole performance was the size of the audience, I have never seen the Opera House so empty. It was a matinee performance and I can only hope that the evening shows were better attended as this production deserved to be packed out. People of Buxton, you missed an absolute treat.

Thursday, 17 May 2012

Little Clay Men


So I was walking to work on Wednesday morning, in my own little world, when something caught my eye at the side of the building. A curious artwork, little clay men commuters, all in a line heading to work.  There were more of them round the bottom of Robert Owen's statue outside my office. The security guard and I had a chat about them, he said he had seen more all over the complex, we both thought they were great, but a complete mystery.

This is where the power of social media comes into play, I tweeted a couple  of pictures and within minutes one lovely lady had solved the mystery for me, it turns out it was an art installation called Human Resources. 8000 little clay men had been placed across the city centre overnight, and the public were encouraged to interact with the artwork.

Although I was one of the people who immediately went to ‘adopt’ some of them, and the public were actively encouraged to, I almost wish I’d seem more of them when they first appeared, they looked great in situ, lots of little worker ants on their daily commute. Although as pointed out by a pal, in that first picture you can see a rebel who has decided to go home!

But having said that, one of the great things about this project, was seeing how people did react to, and interact with, the concept as the day wore on, again mainly via twitter. Some little clay men had started office jobs, one had made it up the Beetham tower, one was in peril in a fountain clinging onto a rock, one travelled down for a day in London, and one had even acquired a Man City scarf! It is amazing how quickly a small piece of clay can acquire a personality and a backstory.

Meet my initial two adoptees- Happy and Grumpy. Happy looks almost excited to be going to work, he's going to nail that new client today, Grumpy looks like he's dreading the day, there's no joy left in his job, he's just going through the motions. I'm worried about Grumps and keeping a close eye on him! I went for a meeting mid morning and spied a third new friend, Colin – he’s quite mysterious and I have yet to discover his personality.

I have experienced something a bit like this in London once, a lot of small figures had appeared in Russell Square, although they were just standard stick people, not little clay commuters. The actual effort in placing them all overnight must have been quite something, and it was a fabulous thing to experience in Manchester. Thanks Lawrence Epps (the artist) and FutureEverything (the festival it was part of).