367 posts
|
Post by MrBunbury on Nov 10, 2016 13:30:11 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Honoured Guest on Dec 23, 2016 8:06:09 GMT
Refreshing further casting announced by Baz!
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2016 10:52:47 GMT
Ralf Pissin Little! He's the Bobby Davro of the acting community! Is the play any good do we know?
|
|
|
Post by Honoured Guest on Dec 23, 2016 11:13:13 GMT
Is the play any good do we know? You can easily research the premiere production so as to make an informed decision as to whether it will appeal to your personal taste. Merry Christmas.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2016 13:18:09 GMT
Is the play any good do we know? You can easily research the premiere production so as to make an informed decision as to whether it will appeal to your personal taste. Merry Christmas. Meh, what are forums for if not to tell u how to live ur life?
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2016 13:21:34 GMT
Just read a review - doesn't sound good enough to have to be in the presence of RL for two hours so I think il pass and spend the money on rent boys
|
|
1,865 posts
|
Post by Marwood on Dec 23, 2016 14:53:47 GMT
Ralf Pissin Little! He's the Bobby Davro of the acting community! Is the play any good do we know? A bit harsh, I can't stand Two Pints of Lager, and he was just OK in The Royle Family, but I thought he was rather good in Dead Funny (apart from the Benny Hill/Chinaman bit).
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2016 19:13:56 GMT
Oh I HATED that part, but I think it was much more Benny Hill and Terry Johnson's fault than Little's.
|
|
367 posts
|
Post by Ade on Feb 23, 2017 7:34:50 GMT
Anyone see the first preview last night?
|
|
|
Post by Honoured Guest on Feb 23, 2017 7:39:26 GMT
No, I try to avoid first previews.
The bone might not yet lie sufficiently ugly, doncha know.
|
|
1,103 posts
|
Post by mallardo on Feb 23, 2017 9:33:53 GMT
I saw it and, as they say, am still processing it. First of all it is a truly astonishing performance (if one can even use that term - such was the reality of it) from Kate Fleetwood. She plays Jess, a horribly wounded veteran of three tours in Afghanistan who has returned to her home town on Cape Canaveral, Florida, after 14 months in a military hospital. Her face is badly disfigured, her body holds so many wounds and fractures that she gets around only with the greatest difficulty via twists and contortions - she uses a walker. She is in constant pain.
To deal with that pain she is undergoing a sort of experimental Virtual Reality treatment and much of the play is given over to this. She is in a kind of cyclorama being guided by a disembodied voice as CGI images of a fantasy landscape materialize and morph around her. The big Lyttleton stage is ideal for this and used to its full capacity. The idea behind the experiment is that the mind is so involved in this constantly created landscape that it has no time for the pain. It seems to work and, one gathers from the programme, this is all in fact true. Pain IS being treated this way.
The main body of the play though is in the quotidian world of a small Florida community suffering from its own brand of pain - the Space Shuttle programme is closing down and this once booming area is quickly becoming a depressed ghost town. So one is kind of a metaphor for the other. But it's not as blatant as that. Playwright Lindsey Ferrentino is very skilled at her craft and keeps the focus firmly on Jess and the three other people who now share her life.
If the subject is grim the play itself is not. It's full of humour - Jess is a sardonic wise-cracker who never resorts to self-pity, never bemoans her fate. Her sister, Kacie, (Olivia Darnley - wonderful) is a bit scattered and a bit overly solicitous but she rises entertainingly to the occasion when the occasion calls for it. The two men, Kris Marshall (hilarious) as Kacie's super-positive boyfriend and Ralf Little (convincingly confused) as Jess's wary ex are both expertly drawn and enliven things whenever they appear. The town scenes and the VR scenes transition beautifully in Indhu Rubasingham's slick production which went off without a hitch in its first outing.
But in the end it's all about Kate Fleetwood and no words of praise can do her justice. She is so fully invested in Jess that lines of separation just fade away. We care so much for her and about her that - and here's the rub - we desperately want her situation to have a resolution which, of course, is not entirely possible.
At the final curtain the audience's response was loud and vociferous but the cast took only a brief bow and trooped off, even though we all kept applauding. If ever an actress deserved a solo bow it's Kate Fleetwood in this. Let's hope they arrange for her to get one.
|
|
1,865 posts
|
Post by Marwood on Feb 23, 2017 9:50:06 GMT
Thanks for that mallardo, I'm going to see this tonight.
|
|
2,302 posts
|
Post by Tibidabo on Feb 23, 2017 10:11:34 GMT
Thanks mallardo . I'm hoping to get tickets when booking re-opens tomorrow. Do you think the CGI stuff would be annoying to those of us who are technophobes? I think from your review it's right up my alley, apart from that! Looking forward to reading your thoughts Marwood .
|
|
1,103 posts
|
Post by mallardo on Feb 23, 2017 10:16:54 GMT
Thanks mallardo . I'm hoping to get tickets when booking re-opens tomorrow. Do you think the CGI stuff would be annoying to those of us who are technophobes? I think from your review it's right up my alley, apart from that! Looking forward to reading your thought Marwood . Re the CGI, not at all. It's impressive but relatively benign. Go for it.
|
|
2,302 posts
|
Post by Tibidabo on Feb 23, 2017 10:30:37 GMT
^Thanks mallardo . Technology bores me rigid and I don't even really understand what CGI is, but somehow everything about this looks intriguing. One of the young Tibidabos has a long-term dream to go into plastics (burns, not boobs) and this is right up her street as she loves her serious drama too! Thanks for the review. I think you may have sold it!
|
|
2,345 posts
|
Post by zahidf on Feb 23, 2017 10:58:24 GMT
I saw it and, as they say, am still processing it. First of all it is a truly astonishing performance (if one can even use that term - such was the reality of it) from Kate Fleetwood. She plays Jess, a horribly wounded veteran of three tours in Afghanistan who has returned to her home town on Cape Canaveral, Florida, after 14 months in a military hospital. Her face is badly disfigured, her body holds so many wounds and fractures that she gets around only with the greatest difficulty via twists and contortions - she uses a walker. She is in constant pain. To deal with that pain she is undergoing a sort of experimental Virtual Reality treatment and much of the play is given over to this. She is in a kind of cyclorama being guided by a disembodied voice as CGI images of a fantasy landscape materialize and morph around her. The big Lyttleton stage is ideal for this and used to its full capacity. The idea behind the experiment is that the mind is so involved in this constantly created landscape that it has no time for the pain. It seems to work and, one gathers from the programme, this is all in fact true. Pain IS being treated this way. The main body of the play though is in the quotidian world of a small Florida community suffering from its own brand of pain - the Space Shuttle programme is closing down and this once booming area is quickly becoming a depressed ghost town. So one is kind of a metaphor for the other. But it's not as blatant as that. Playwright Lindsey Ferrentino is very skilled at her craft and keeps the focus firmly on Jess and the three other people who now share her life. If the subject is grim the play itself is not. It's full of humour - Jess is a sardonic wise-cracker who never resorts to self-pity, never bemoans her fate. Her sister, Kacie, (Olivia Darnley - wonderful) is a bit scattered and a bit overly solicitous but she rises entertainingly to the occasion when the occasion calls for it. The two men, Kris Marshall (hilarious) as Kacie's super-positive boyfriend and Ralf Little (convincingly confused) as Jess's wary ex are both expertly drawn and enliven things whenever they appear. The town scenes and the VR scenes transition beautifully in Indhu Rubasingham's slick production which went off without a hitch in its first outing. But in the end it's all about Kate Fleetwood and no words of praise can do her justice. She is so fully invested in Jess that lines of separation just fade away. We care so much for her and about her that - and here's the rub - we desperately want her situation to have a resolution which, of course, is not entirely possible. At the final curtain the audience's response was loud and vociferous but the cast took only a brief bow and trooped off, even though we all kept applauding. If ever an actress deserved a solo bow it's Kate Fleetwood in this. Let's hope they arrange for her to get one. Sounds good. Whats the running time for it?
|
|
1,103 posts
|
Post by mallardo on Feb 23, 2017 11:00:22 GMT
The programme says 90 minutes but it ran 100 minutes last night - no interval.
|
|
2,345 posts
|
Post by zahidf on Feb 23, 2017 11:21:32 GMT
The programme says 90 minutes but it ran 100 minutes last night - no interval. Thanks. Glad its not another over 3 hour play!
|
|
3,471 posts
|
Post by showgirl on Feb 23, 2017 13:03:04 GMT
Hooray, as the NT website still didn't have the running time when I last checked this morning. I booked for PN as that's 30 minutes earlier, so the combination of a 7 pm start and a running time of 90 - 100 minutes should enable me to stay awake AND reach home before I turn into a pumpkin.
|
|
1,865 posts
|
Post by Marwood on Feb 23, 2017 13:54:05 GMT
Don't know if I'll actually be able to get to the NT yet, train services into London are up the wall at the moment due to Doris Not going for another three and a half hours, hopefully it'll have died down by then without leaving too many trees/leaves/whatever on the tracks for them to use as an excuse for their crappy service.
|
|
3,471 posts
|
Post by showgirl on Feb 23, 2017 15:36:40 GMT
Hope you make it, Marwood - as if some TOCs aren't bad enough without bad weather adding to the disruption. I'd probably set out earlier in case the journey took longer, but not everyone has that option and there's something to be said for your hope that if you wait, things will have calmed down.
|
|
2,302 posts
|
Post by Tibidabo on Feb 23, 2017 16:57:57 GMT
@theatremonkey Just looking at your Lyttleton plan for Ugly - is there any problem with the rail at the front of the circle if one is under 5ft 5ins......well, ok.....5ft 2ish ins?
|
|
2,302 posts
|
Post by Tibidabo on Feb 23, 2017 18:48:39 GMT
Thanks Monkey. I'll pack my blow-up cushion in my handbag just in case! Booked for April 1st. Really looking forward to it.
ETA - just kidding about the cushion - I take a big coat and fold it up to gain extra inches.
|
|
2,389 posts
|
Post by peggs on Feb 23, 2017 19:53:12 GMT
Oh Mallardo don't tell me it's good and Kate Fleetwood is great when I haven't booked! Theatremonkey have you got membership, had done a £15 hunt but could find none at the front. Is this booking tomorrow, or is it all booked out already?
|
|
2,389 posts
|
Post by peggs on Feb 23, 2017 20:15:20 GMT
Have answer on question, yes more dates available from tomorrow and yes £15 at front currently available for quite a few of those.
|
|
1,103 posts
|
Post by mallardo on Feb 23, 2017 20:21:27 GMT
There isn't a rail? The wall is fairly high, but I think you will be OK. BTW, mallardo, on the strength of your review, I've booked for this - can't get there until June, but still... I've shelled out £15 on a front row seat, so...
I'm pretty sure it's for you, TM, but in case it's not I think I might be out of the country in June.
|
|
1,865 posts
|
Post by Marwood on Feb 23, 2017 23:57:34 GMT
Doris be damned, I left work early and got into Waterloo with plenty of time to spare - I was rather impressed with this, I was sat in the centre of the front row and had an excellent view of proceedings (when Little and Fleetwood go 'up on the roof' to watch the space shuttle take off, they were only a couple of feet away directly in front of me, a bit of splashing going on when Little opened his Pabst but nothing landed on me)
I thought the whole cast were good, and enjoyed the scenes between Little and Fleetwood the most, but Kate Fleetwood is indeed excellent in this, if you do try and book to see this, I recommend you get as close to the stage as possible to see the excellent make-up used for her to play the part. Not a masterpiece, but it's the best thing I've seen at the NT in a long while.
|
|
367 posts
|
Post by Ade on Feb 25, 2017 12:27:12 GMT
Saw this last night. Have to say it didn't quite hit the spot for me. It was good, but not great. All the cast were very good and I thought the characters were nicely realised. But it was just too fragmented for my liking and seemed like it was jumping around too much. I agree with the above that it's at its best in the scenes between Fleetwood and Little, but even those scenes just felt like they ended before they really got going. Loved Devlin's designs for it and there are some nice transitions near the start - this is a really nice example of set design and projection coming together as one. If anyone is interested, I've popped full thoughts up on the blog: westendwanderer.com/2017/02/25/review-ugly-lies-the-bone-national-theatre-london/
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2017 13:21:05 GMT
Saw this last night. Have to say it didn't quite hit the spot for me. It was good, but not great. All the cast were very good and I thought the characters were nicely realised. But it was just too fragmented for my liking and seemed like it was jumping around too much. I agree with the above that it's at its best in the scenes between Fleetwood and Little, but even those scenes just felt like they ended before they really got going. Loved Devlin's designs for it and there are some nice transitions near the start - this is a really nice example of set design and projection coming together as one. If anyone is interested, I've popped full thoughts up on the blog: westendwanderer.com/2017/02/25/review-ugly-lies-the-bone-national-theatre-london/Oh I LOVE your blog Nicely done and I like your style of writing 🤗🤗
|
|
367 posts
|
Post by Ade on Feb 25, 2017 13:41:52 GMT
Saw this last night. Have to say it didn't quite hit the spot for me. It was good, but not great. All the cast were very good and I thought the characters were nicely realised. But it was just too fragmented for my liking and seemed like it was jumping around too much. I agree with the above that it's at its best in the scenes between Fleetwood and Little, but even those scenes just felt like they ended before they really got going. Loved Devlin's designs for it and there are some nice transitions near the start - this is a really nice example of set design and projection coming together as one. If anyone is interested, I've popped full thoughts up on the blog: westendwanderer.com/2017/02/25/review-ugly-lies-the-bone-national-theatre-london/Oh I LOVE your blog Nicely done and I like your style of writing 🤗🤗 Cheers
|
|