1,189 posts
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Post by theatrelover123 on Apr 19, 2018 15:55:52 GMT
Just had to return a great middle row J £28 ticket for tonight’s sold out performance so call the BO and grab it if you want to see it cheaper
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853 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Apr 19, 2018 16:01:10 GMT
All over the world week in week out hundreds of millions of people watch films at the cinema for two hours without discomfort, let alone torture. Theatre is more demanding on the intellect than cinema. With film it’s all done for you: you just slide into a dream world. The best theatre needs the audience to engage in a different way. Besides, every single cinema I have ever attended leaves it for me to decide when I take comfort breaks. Theatres that play without interval don’t allow you to leave the auditorium until the curtain. If you have a weak bladder as I do two hours with no interval can indeed be torture. Perhaps you haven't seen Loveless or Western or A Fantastic Woman, all of which have as much intellectual content as a great play; and you have to read subtitles, which also requires concentration. Very few people leave the cinema to go to the loo; you may be get one or two per performance.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 19, 2018 16:19:48 GMT
The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse and the gallery of the Theatre Royal Haymarket have rock-hard benches. And even theatres that have lovely plush seats just don't quite hold a comfort candle to my local multiplex.
You might get a couple of people per screening leaving partway through the feature to go to the loo (or wherever); as a cinema showing is generally less well sold than a theatrical performance, it's hard to say if you would get a couple of people leaving for an early toilet break during any film or play, or if it's a percentage of the audience, therefore there would be many more leaving during a theatrical performance if similarly confronted with a two hour show with no clear toilet break.
Are you kidding? I CONSTANTLY eat at the cinema, and I'm absolutely not the only one. Concessions are where cinemas make the bulk of their money, so they like it when people buy popcorn/nachos/drinks. They don't like it when people smuggle them in, but given the prices, a lot of people do go for that option, so even people unwilling to purchase snacks at the cinema will often still be eating. I don't eat at the theatre (I occasionally remember a chocolate bar in my bag at the interval, but not during the performance), but you are definitely going to some odd cinemas if there aren't a decent number of your fellow audience members merrily snacking away.
I'm also on 1500+ trips to the theatre (over the last 14 years rather than 30 though) and have only ever once encountered truly offensive body odour, at The Exorcist. It wouldn't have been so bad if the gentleman in question had just kept fairly still, but he was a terrible fidget and I got a proper whiff every time he shifted in his seat. I agree that theatre-goers are no more likely than cinema-goers to smell bad, but I'm usually more likely to be sat nearer people when at the theatre than when at the cinema.
I couldn't say if cinema-goers or theatre-goers are more likely to talk. I've experienced quietly respectful audiences in both venues, and I've encountered people who'd have been better off staying out in the bar so the actors wouldn't have been interrupting their conversation so much in both venues.
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185 posts
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Post by argon on Apr 19, 2018 16:25:55 GMT
This is a ridiculous comparison As people constantly get up and come in and out at the cinema And walk about Also the seats are a lot more comfortable in the cinema Like leather car seats It’s silly to compare cinema to theatre Sitting in the cinema is a lot more comfortable more leg room Have a chat Eat food have drinks Not sitting on rock hard benches Crammed next to BO stinking people I agree that the seats in cinemas are in general more comfortable, but it is not true to say that people are constantly coming and going or that they are eating and chatting (certainly not in the cinemas I go to) - and how old are the people you know who can't go for two hours without eating or talking? I really don't think that theatre-goers have worse BO than cinema-goers. I must have seen 1500-2000 plays in the past 30 years and have never been offended at someone's smell. Where has rock-hard benches?
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185 posts
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Post by argon on Apr 19, 2018 16:29:58 GMT
"I must have seen 1500-2000 plays in the past 30 years and have never been offended at someone's smell"
I wish I had such luck
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562 posts
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Post by jadnoop on Apr 19, 2018 17:22:12 GMT
Theatre is more demanding on the intellect than cinema. With film it’s all done for you: you just slide into a dream world. I know this is a theatre forum, so it's inevitable that there will be a bias, but c'mon this is just a huge generalisation. By its nature theatre 'shows' less than (most) cinema, but that's hardly the same as being intellectually demanding. And while at the extremes film can be very lightweight, that's true of most artforms; I mean, think about the most populist end of theatre (Wicked, Harry Potter, Andrew Lloyd Webber, The Mousetrap, etc.).
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Post by Deleted on Apr 19, 2018 18:02:53 GMT
Theatre is more demanding on the intellect than cinema. With film it’s all done for you: you just slide into a dream world. I know this is a theatre forum, so it's inevitable that there will be a bias, but c'mon this is just a huge generalisation. By its nature theatre 'shows' less than (most) cinema, but that's hardly the same as being intellectually demanding. And while at the extremes film can be very lightweight, that's true of most artforms; I mean, think about the most populist end of theatre (Wicked, Harry Potter, Andrew Lloyd Webber, The Mousetrap, etc.). Oops! I worded that post rather badly, didn’t I? Of course I don’t think Theatre is heavyweight and film lightweight. My perception is that the way I process each art form is different. Theatre by it’s nature and aits most basic (words spoken in a black box) makes demands on my listening and imagination that I think is different to film. A bit like when I read a poem I often have to read in a different way to how I read a novel. Any reception theory experts on here would be welcome but perhaps we should do this on a different thread so that people can discuss The Writer on here
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Post by Deleted on Apr 19, 2018 18:16:44 GMT
"I must have seen 1500-2000 plays in the past 30 years and have never been offended at someone's smell" I wish I had such luck Read the bad behavior thread
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Post by Deleted on Apr 19, 2018 22:11:16 GMT
Well. I think this can be filed under 'hot mess'. I did not have a clue what it was about. I think it might have been being lesbian gets you a nicer house but I'm not altogether sure. There was also a moment I got confused and thought I might have stumbled into 'Tipping The Velvet' but that soon passed.
On the plus side there were a lovely pair of pink velvet chairs on show plus a nice drinks trolley (although I think the gin was Gordon's so clearly the budget had been spent in Ann Summers rather than upgrading to Sipsmith) which rather made one wish there was an interval. Plus there was a cute baby (a real one) to distract you momentarily, an amusing dance break and a couple of rather noisy orgasms which makes you glad you don't live next door to the cast.
Oh and remind me not to accept an invitation to Samuel West's house for dinner. I don't think cassoulet is one of his signature dishes.
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294 posts
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Post by dani on Apr 19, 2018 22:23:26 GMT
Every time Rupert Goold says he's got a really explosive show on his hands, it's a misfire. That's my opinion, anyway. There have been some great shows on his watch, but the ones that have been best seem to be the ones that have excited him least. I haven't seen this yet, and maybe it's a masterpiece, but I've noticed an inverse relationship between how much noise Goold makes about something's excellence and how good it turns out.
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853 posts
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Post by bordeaux on Apr 20, 2018 6:35:34 GMT
Every time Rupert Goold says he's got a really explosive show on his hands, it's a misfire. That's my opinion, anyway. There have been some great shows on his watch, but the ones that have been best seem to be the ones that have excited him least. I haven't seen this yet, and maybe it's a masterpiece, but I've noticed an inverse relationship between how much noise Goold makes about something's excellence and how good it turns out. Yes. The noise Goold makes about something at the Almeida (see that initial tweet) is of course advertising, not criticism.
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393 posts
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Post by altamont on Apr 20, 2018 8:27:50 GMT
The comments on this on Twitter are remarkable - since yesterday evening -
"Entertained, provoked, and generally gobsmacked" "Really is quite something - you need to see it" "Genuinely stunned - brought tears to my eyes. Go and see it if you can" "Possibly the worst thing i have ever seen in the theatre"
And similar further back. Hardly anyone seems to have a neutral opinion on this one
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1,209 posts
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Post by Steve on Apr 20, 2018 8:43:11 GMT
Can’t believe I was in the same room as Parsley 😍 My companion hated this but I was slightly more charmed - I do have some questions though {Spoiler - click to view} The backdrop for the last scene got stuck this evening - assume this wasn’t part of the play but given the nature of the play I wasn’t sure?
What was that last scene all about?
It’s definitely not a crowd pleaser thorough - one person left ten minutes in! Saw this last night. Can't believe I was in the same room as RYAN! Obviously, the meaning of the last scene is open to debate, but here goes. Ella Hickson/Romola Garai/The Writer of the title has been trying to reconcile the meaning of art and femininity for the entire play. She seeks profundity in art, and associates the commercial/pragmatic/exploitative aspects of art with masculinity, and suggests that the repressive constraints of femininity on her identity are also an imposition placed on her by patriarchal expectations. However, in the final scene, she is manipulated sexually by a lesbian lover (Laila Rossi), who winds her up like a tonka toy, using an actual toy (a dildo), then dismisses the whole experience as nothing profound. That lesbian lover then doubly confounds her by telling her that Picasso created his most profound art (Guernica) in the most banal, commercially minded, segmented and thus, according to The Writer's previous analysis, masculine, way. This leaves The Writer confounded as to what is masculine, what is feminine, whether humans can actually relate to each other at all, whether art is about setting out to change the world, like she argued, or merely what happens in people's minds after someone creates something. Therefore, the play leaves us to debate and debate and debate these issues. Well. I think this can be filed under 'hot mess'. Wow, were you there last night! I was partially restricted, at the back of the stalls. Wish I could have spotted you. Please don't file this under "Hot Mess." Hickson's previous play, "Hot Mess" is already on file, and it's confusing to file another play under "Hot Mess" for an author who has actually written a play called "Hot Mess" lol.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 9:31:05 GMT
Saw this last night. Can't believe I was in the same room as RYAN! Oh no! I was a vision in mustard in row D towards the side of the stage. Your summary of the final scene is good, I didn't get that at all. In my defence, I think I was perhaps feeling a little bored hungry and distracted by that point wondering whether that indian meal was warm or not and working out whether Lara Rossi was given the job because Pearl Mackie wasn't available or because she could swear like a trooper.
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1,209 posts
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Post by Steve on Apr 20, 2018 9:51:45 GMT
Warning, Experimental Theatre! Warning, Experimental Theatre!
This warning is for those who don't like that sort of thing, as choices are too many, and life is too short to go to this if you don't. You like Tim Crouch? See this. You like latter day Caryl Churchill, with a soupcon of early Churchill, see this. Those names bother you, don't!
Overall, I loved this. On the minus side, this play's internal logic is not rigorous enough for my taste, certainly not as rigorous as Tim Crouch always is, more a reflection of the meandering ideas that spin around all day, in all our heads, than a shaping of that meandering into artistic direction. On the plus side, this exploration of the meaning of art, and the meaning of femininity, is very meta, very involving, very well acted, exciting to watch, and never ever boring.
Spoilers follow. . .
I think Ella Hickson is a very honest person (I remember how she once declared that she felt sorry for boy writers cos they get ignored, while girl writers get all the buzz, a statement so naive, specific and honest, that I felt, I'll always trust this person), and, so too, here, from scene to scene, she takes us through The Writer's struggle for the meaning of what it is to be a woman (and a white woman), and what it is to be an artist, in an utterly honest, open, inquisitive, meta way that the journey here is always stimulating.
From Tim Crouch, she cribs her title and starting point: the first two scenes feel like a direct response to Crouch's "The Author," in which he analysed the morality and audience-stimulating intent of exploitation in theatre. For example, Hickson asks us specifically what the point of Laura Wade's "Posh" was, if the Hooray Henrys depicted were the ones who enjoyed the play the most?
So too from Crouch does Hickson crib techniques, such as blurring the boundaries of who is the audience and who is an actor, like showing us the construction of stages (complete with the presence of stagehands), like showing us actors acting, contrasted with the characters they are supposed to be acting, and again from Crouch, she doubles down on his disconcerting audience-awakening naturalism-distorting technique of throwing in a random unselfconscious child, by not only giving us a genuine baby, but by pointing out the baby's real mother at the side of the stage.
In all this, she seeks to throw us out of fiction, and make US part of the questioning that her own avatar, Romola Garai's Writer struggles with throughout the play.
All four actors channeling this questioning are fabulous: with Garai impassioned, disconsolate and lost, Lara Rossi sometimes hot, sometimes cold, always deliberate, Michael Gould patriarchal and smarmily knowing, and Samuel West also patriarchal but lost as hell.
After the first two scenes, Hickson veers from Crouch's meticulous play construction to a more open desperate, meandering questioning of artistic existence. The spirit of Caryl Churchill, and her relentless deconstruction of femininity, possesses Hickson's Writer when a flight of fantasy depicts her search for a core identity, apart from her female body, apart from breasts and bum. I was reminded of the work RashDash have done in coming to terms with the meaning of their physical bodies. As in the TV Show, "The Voice," the sense of sight is withdrawn from players and audience to imagine such an identity, apart from body. This central flight of fantasy is a pivot, only illuminated by a design that fascinatingly flashes female curves of light absolutely everywhere.
This play is ever fascinating, ever open, ever honest, ever vulnerable, always compelling, but ultimately it lacks the searing insights of Tim Crouch into the questions it is asking. For some, that may be a plus. Not for me.
I'm feeling 3 and a half stars, but I'm saying 4 stars anyway, because I know from experience that works of this (inquisitive and experimental) kind grow in stature in the memory, for me!*
*(I rated Tim Crouch's "Adler and Gibb" 4 and a half stars at the Royal Court, BUT now feel it was a solid gold 5 stars, and one of the best things I've ever seen. Recalling how the fake news of the film-within-the-film felt more true than the reality of the actors apparently recording it, how Denise Gough's entertainment-driven power-obsessed amoral Trumpesque psychopath was slowly constructed from stillness, to slow movements and faltering language, to her full reptilian monstrous malignity, I feel that Crouch effectively foretold everything pertinent about Trump, fake news, and the role of distraction and entertainment in fuelling and bolstering him. Effectively, Crouch was a seer, where Hickson is ordinary, like the rest of us lol).
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 9:54:31 GMT
Oh good, I love Tim Crouch and experimental Caryl Churchill!
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2,706 posts
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Post by Cardinal Pirelli on Apr 20, 2018 11:29:51 GMT
Brilliantly perceptive review Steve and Crouch/Churchill/Rashdash is ticking a lot of boxes here. Adler & Gibb, by the way, played at the Unicorn in a revised version and Crouch is writing quite a lot of new work for younger audiences, his play 'Beginners' having just finished there as well. I'm sure he finds it refreshing to have an audience that doesn't arrive with so much baggage.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 12:55:57 GMT
I love Tim Crouch Also Caryl Churchill And Anthony Neilson
I have to say I found The Writer
Nothing like those works And far inferior to anything from them
Ella Hickson has been unable to emulate them If they are her inspiration
Like a fake LV bag I can see it from miles off But some are deceived
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 13:25:21 GMT
Like a fake LV bag I can see it from miles off But some are deceived Oh P, Vuitton? I expected more from you.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 13:31:13 GMT
I just don't know how seriously I can take someone's opinion on writing when they themselves write like a sixth former's idea of avant garde poetry...
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562 posts
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Post by jadnoop on Apr 20, 2018 14:06:56 GMT
I just don't know how seriously I can take someone's opinion on writing when they themselves write like a sixth former's idea of avant garde poetry... Is it not just a parody account? I mean stuff like... "Like a fake LV bag I can see it from miles off But some are deceived" and "Some people Probably inspired by me in the past Left before the end" ...who really talks about themselves and others in these terms? I assumed it's just a jokey account like the kind of thing you get on www.reddit.com/r/iamverysmart (?)
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Post by ls86 on Apr 20, 2018 14:16:39 GMT
I'm in Tuesday for press night and I am so so excited
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 14:30:52 GMT
Is it not just a parody account? I mean stuff like... "Like a fake LV bag I can see it from miles off But some are deceived" and "Some people Probably inspired by me in the past Left before the end" To be fair though, nowadays if any of us sees someone leaving a show during the interval don't we all always consider that they are "doing a Parsley"? P has wormed his way into our theatre psyche like no other. Make of that what you will.
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Post by Snciole on Apr 20, 2018 14:33:21 GMT
Brilliantly perceptive review Steve and Crouch/Churchill/Rashdash is ticking a lot of boxes here. Adler & Gibb, by the way, played at the Unicorn in a revised version and Crouch is writing quite a lot of new work for younger audiences, his play 'Beginners' having just finished there as well. I'm sure he finds it refreshing to have an audience that doesn't arrive with so much baggage. Beginners was full of nice performances but the children were bored and baffled in equal measure. I gave it a damning review, as did the Evening Standard's Fiona Moubtford. For me Crouch is going to young audiences for the reasons you say but they bring adults, some of whom might be able to tell whether they are watching a Royal Court reject. The press night cupcakes were nice though!
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Post by Cardinal Pirelli on Apr 20, 2018 14:54:38 GMT
Brilliantly perceptive review Steve and Crouch/Churchill/Rashdash is ticking a lot of boxes here. Adler & Gibb, by the way, played at the Unicorn in a revised version and Crouch is writing quite a lot of new work for younger audiences, his play 'Beginners' having just finished there as well. I'm sure he finds it refreshing to have an audience that doesn't arrive with so much baggage. Beginners was full of nice performances but the children were bored and baffled in equal measure. I gave it a damning review, as did the Evening Standard's Fiona Moubtford. For me Crouch is going to young audiences for the reasons you say but they bring adults, some of whom might be able to tell whether they are watching a Royal Court reject. The press night cupcakes were nice though! Mountford's was easily its worst press review, The Times was average but generally four stars with Miriam Gillinson five stars in Time Out. All these are adults of course but his other children's plays seem to have been well received by their audiences. He's very divisive though, I can well remember the uproar around The Author (in Edinburgh) or the broad incomprehension on here for Adler & Gibb. He's been commissioned for a TV series now, which should put the cat among the televisual pigeons!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 16:38:49 GMT
Like a fake LV bag I can see it from miles off But some are deceived Oh P, Vuitton? I expected more from you. It’s not MINE Others I see What THEY carry I just have a small carrier bag from LIDL
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 17:02:19 GMT
I love Tim Crouch Also Caryl Churchill And Anthony Neilson I have to say I found The Writer Nothing like those works And far inferior to anything from them Ella Hickson has been unable to emulate them If they are her inspiration Like a fake LV bag I can see it from miles off But some are deceived Collectively those writers have almost 100 years of age and experience over Hickson. In my opinion love or hate the play (I am reserving judgement) we have to acknowledge that she is an incredibly promising young writer. I am excited to see her next piece.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2018 17:13:09 GMT
Steve I wonder why Hickson said “girls” get all the buzz when “boys” get most of the production slots on offer. Perhaps she meant young, photogenic girls like her, in which case she should also feel sorry for less photogenic older women who, according to Timberlake Wertenbaker, don’t get a look in. By the way, before you all take me to task yes Wertenbaker is very photogenic, but that’s not the point.
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Post by foxa on Apr 21, 2018 14:24:16 GMT
I have tickets for this, but for all your insight and enthusiasm, Steve, you lost me at Tim Crouch. If it is Adler and Gibb-ish or Adler and Gibb-lite, I'm in trouble. I've forgotten which of my long-suffering family members/friends I'm dragging to this one...
Though, oddly, Ryan's review rather made me want to see it - drink trolleys, orgasms, pink chairs - what's not to like?
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1,209 posts
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Post by Steve on Apr 21, 2018 23:05:37 GMT
I have tickets for this, but for all your insight and enthusiasm, Steve, you lost me at Tim Crouch. If it is Adler and Gibb-ish or Adler and Gibb-lite, I'm in trouble. I've forgotten which of my long-suffering family members/friends I'm dragging to this one... Though, oddly, Ryan's review rather made me want to see it - drink trolleys, orgasms, pink chairs - what's not to like? Foxa, you need to BE Ryan to see through Ryan's eyes. If he had reviewed Adler and Gibb, I'm betting he'd have written about tighty whities. This is why Ryan is so necessary to Theatreboard, to let us see truths we'd otherwise miss. I mean, thanks to Ryan, I now realise Cambridge Analytica is a Bond girl lol! Of course, it was my intention to lose you at Tim Crouch, if that would save you pain lol. Still, I think you may be ok. Here are more thoughts: Tim Crouch is like the comedian, Andy Kaufman, in that he likes his audiences to cringe and squirm. Ella Hickson, while she uses the same techniques as Crouch, isn't like that. So while Crouch will deliberately stage longeurs, Hickson in fact will write the opposite: a sense of urgency. In fact, the single continuous thread I've felt in Hickson's work, that I've seen, is her sense that time is running out, and that makes her plays more conventionally exciting than Crouch's plays. In Eight, at the Trafalgar, time was up for four actors who never got to give their monologues (by audience vote), while the other 4 gave monologues about time running out lol. In Precious Little Talent, also at the Trafalgar, time was running out for poor Ian Gelder, suffering from dementia, while his daughter, Olivia Hallinan felt her own pleasurable time with him running out. In Boys, at Soho Theatre, time was running out for four Boys, as their halcyon uni days came to a close, and Tom Mothersdale's overgrown child took a last sniff of cocaine off his teenage girlfriend's stomach, while Danny Kirrane sat on top of a fridge, with death on his mind, as political unrest roared outside their flat. In all these plays, that sense of time running out gave an urgency to the subject matter that made you leave the theatre gasping for air. I missed Hickson's plays, Hot Mess and Peter and Wendy, but came back in with Oil, at the Almeida, to find Hickson growing into an experimental phase. Hickson borrowed Caryl Churchill's Cloud Nine presentation of characters who live centuries through historical events, as well as her strategy of presenting scenes in different styles, and her deconstruction of feminism, to show us a world where both the depletion and use of oil meant time was running out for the Western World, for feminism, and maybe for all of humanity. So despite branching out into experimental terrain, there was still terrific urgency to the work. And now, in this play, while she uses Crouch's meta alienation techniques to wake the audience up, she doesn't set out to piss her audience off, as Crouch might. In fact, instead, you get that Hicksonian sense of urgency and confused malaise, that time is running out for artists to make a difference in the world, that while patriarchy reaches it's tipping point, nonetheless most artists may merely be masturbating their audiences with titillation, sexual, violent, narcotic, musical, commercial: as someone who has booked a return trip to Tina the Musical, I know I am the kind of pleasure seeking fool, who is the target of some of The Writer's heaviest criticisms. And yet, Hickson presents her material not as a critique, but as an exciting urgent ride of ideas, that she is on with us, equally confused. Simply put, she may have gone meta, but her sense of urgency continues to energise and entertain. Cleo, regarding Hickson's years-ago observation that girls get the hype over poor hard-working boys, I'd suppose the following: 1: She overestimated the quality of her male peers' work; 2: She underestimated the quality of her own work; 3: She mistook the media's sexist amazement that females like herself, Lucy Prebble, Anya Reiss, etc could actually write, for some kind of preferment or advantage, instead of the patronising nonsense it really was.
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