|
Post by Deleted on Dec 15, 2017 20:41:03 GMT
These are bound to start coming in, so here's a couple to get the ball rolling - Billington and Gardner in a compare and contrast of top tens. Only The Ferryman appears in both and, somewhat surprisingly, neither includes Angels in America. Lyn Gardner www.theguardian.com/stage/2017/dec/15/top-10-theatre-of-2017-lyn-gardner1. Our Town (Royal Exchange, Manchester) 2. The Ferryman (Gielgud, London) 3. Palmyra (Summerhall, Edinburgh) 4. Killology (Sherman, Cardiff) 5. This Beautiful Future (The Yard, London) 6. The Cherry Orchard (Sherman, Cardiff) 7. Barber Shop Chronicles (Dorfman, London) 8. Hamlet (Harold Pinter theatre, London) 9. Everybody’s Talking About Jamie (Apollo, London) 10. Real Magic (Inbetween Time festival, Bristol) Forced Entertainment Michael Billington www.theguardian.com/stage/2017/dec/15/top-10-theatre-of-2017-michael-billington1. The Ferryman (Royal Court and Gielgud, London) 2. Albion (Almeida, London) 3. Girl from the North Country (Old Vic, London) 4. Network (Lyttelton, London) 5. Imperium (The Swan, Stratford-upon-Avon) 6. Follies (Olivier, London) 7. Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Harold Pinter theatre, London) 8. The Gabriels (Attenborough Centre, Brighton) 9. An Octoroon (Orange Tree, Richmond) 10. Consent (Dorfman, London)
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 15, 2017 20:45:40 GMT
"somewhat surprisingly, neither includes Angels in America."
I will have truly fallen through the looking glass the day the Graun publishes an end of year list that looks remotely like my own.
|
|
4,995 posts
|
Post by Someone in a tree on Dec 19, 2017 19:41:21 GMT
Here’s mine
Let’s start with the bad
I had an extreme disliking of Follies, Working, She loves me, Carousel, Magic Flute (Soho Theatre), Aida (ENO) & Young Marx
Please no Lonny Price & Alfie Boe in any form.
The Exterminating Angel bored me senseless. I really don’t get the hype it got.
And now the good.
Musicals
Night Music, 42 nd St and On the Town, Yank were just wonderful.
The Frogs. Such an odd piece and in a very uneven production. The first act was tedious but the second was wonderful, can someone please cut out the low comedy and turn it into one swift act? - really glad I’ve seen it though
Despite the Brexit nonsense at the start I really enjoyed Committee. Also Pinocchio and Wind in the Willows as shows which the board gave the thumbs down to but I enjoyed.
Dance
Northern Ballet Casanova wins hands down for the few dance pieces I’ve seen.
Plays Hamlet (Almeida) 12 th Night (NT - can’t believe I liked something at the NT!). Both brilliant.
La strada and These trees are made of blood really moved me.
Adored Venus in fur. Like an opera but without singing!
LOVED SRB & Hayden Gwyne @ the RSC but not so sure about the productions. Audrey Brisson, Phoebe Fildes, Michael Matus, Dilly Keane, Natalie Dormer & Wallis Giunta all acted brilliantly.
Opera
ENO’s The day after was great, if not a little long. Performing outside the Coli suits the company.
ETO’s Patience was really rather good and so was meeting board member, Mr Snow in the interval
Opera Up Close, Onegin. Wow. I liked the updating, the butchered libretto and the band. This production really worked.
Opera North’s fairy tale season was really excellent and then The little greats season was astounding. Well worth travel and hotel costs -*Trouble in Tahiti* is on the telly over Crimbo and it’s sublime. The ending had me in tears.
* Winner
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2017 20:52:56 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2017 21:30:09 GMT
"As you chose to be ... inventive ... with the presentation we've been inventive with the payment. We will settle our account with these banknotes artistically rolled into a spindle and generously enrobed in a thick layer of candle wax." "Oh, you want a tip? Be careful melting the wax or you'll damage the banknotes. Good luck."
|
|
382 posts
|
Post by stevemar on Dec 29, 2017 11:01:57 GMT
This seems like the right place to post - I was surprised there wasn't a longer thread, as usually we get quite a good list of posters' best and/or worst shows of the year. Anyhow, my lists are below. I think 2017 was an excellent year for theatre, and look forward to a lot more in 2018. I'll also do my best to post more - promise!
10 An American in Paris (Dominion) 9. Mary Stuart (Almeida) 8. Follies (Olivier) 7. Albion (Almeida) 6. Hamlet (Almeida) 5. She Loves Me (Menier) 4. Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf (Pinter) 3. Beginning (Dorfman) 2. Angels in America - Part One (Lyttelton) 1. The Ferryman (Royal Court) - BEST
There were actually a LOT of good shows vying for the top 10, but the depth of writing and performance of the Ferryman came out top. I think it could be a classic. Beginning was a big surprise, and a wonderful one too.
And for the worst shows of the year:
10 Art (Old Vic) or Young Marx (Bridge) 9. Coming Clean (Kings Head) 8. Sex with Strangers (Hampstead) 7. The Treatment (Almeida) 6. St Joan (Donmar) 5. Oslo (Lyttelton) 4. Committee (Donmar) 3. Against (Almeida) 2. The Philanthropist (Trafalgar) 1. Wings (Young Vic) - WORST
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 11:27:58 GMT
As I’ve got 3 days of London theatre right under the wire I’m going to be late with my round ups...I hate to bias it in advance but there’s a chance Follies or Jamie could bump Something else out of the list so....
I don’t include “worst” in my blog posts because I don’t think that’s fair to the creatives. However I will say here that The Ferryman and Tiger Bay were the lost “over hyped” and therefore longest feeling evenings of theatre this year...
|
|
|
Post by Mr Snow on Dec 29, 2017 12:08:54 GMT
ETO’s Patience was really rather good and so was meeting board member, Mr Snow in the interval Being picked as one of the Highlights of the Year is my....Highlight of the Year! Lovely to meet you too.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 12:31:02 GMT
The Stage's alternative highlights of the year - www.thestage.co.uk/features/2017/2017-alternative-awards-year/Publicly Funded Play Most Likely to Send the Daily Mail’s Critic Over the Edge - Common Most Pretentious Play That Somehow Managed to Have an Even More Pretentious Trailer - Salome (NT) Worst Theatrical Barnet of the Year award - John Heffernan (St George & the Dragon) Best Bling - Follies Smoothest Ticket Buying Experience - Hamilton Musical Moment of the Year - Bat Out of Hell at the Coliseum “It’s so brilliantly awful it teeters on awfully brilliant.” Award for Bringing in a New Audience - Bat Out of Hell "It is unlikely that so many middle-aged men and women in leather jackets with patches on the back will ever be seen in an opera house ever again." Best Interval Grub - The Bridge Theatre (Madeleines) Best Baby - A tie between The Ferryman and Consent Best Beast - Goats in 'Goats' Best Theatre Cat - Marley at the Bush Theatre (he stuck it out whilst the other cat, Pirate, legged it during the building works) Award for Extraordinarily Missing the Point - The guy who punched an audience member who complained about using a phone at a Christmas Carol (Goodwill to all men?) Theatre Marathon - Angels in America Award for Consistency - Almeida "in the long-distance category, programming only one play under 150 minutes this year." Bare-Faced Cheek Award in Marketing - Craft Theatre, "who removed the words “lack of” from the line in The Stage’s review that criticised a “spectacular lack of intellectual rigour”" Most Unnecessary Theatre Moment of 2017 - Hair (clothing optional performance) Best Celebrity Casting - Other Palace (Kelsey Grammer for Big Fish) Worst Celebrity Casting - Park Theatre (Gyles Brandreth’s family Hamlet) Sweetest Use of Chocolate - Romantics Anonymous Also - The Stage's 'The Year in Reviews' www.thestage.co.uk/features/2017/2017-the-year-in-reviews-what-the-critics-said/
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 12:39:34 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 12:48:20 GMT
Exeunt 'Most Memorable Regional Theatre of 2017" exeuntmagazine.com/features/exeunts-most-memorable-regional-theatre-2017/The Darkest Corners at Transform Festival, Leeds by Rashdash Persuasion at Royal Exchange, Manchester Returning to Reims at HOME, Manchester by Schaubuhne, Berlin A House in Asia at Manipulate 2017, Glasgow by Agrupación Señor Serrano AquaSonic at SONICA 2017, Glasgow by Between Music Tommy at the Nottingham Playhouse, Nottingham The Seven Acts of Mercy at RSC, Stratford-upon-Avon The Gabriels at Brighton Festival, Brighton My Big Sister Taught Me This Lapdance at IBT17, Bristol Team Viking at Tobacco Factory Theatres, Bristol The Earthworks and Myth at RSC, Stratford upon Avon Conquest of the South Pole at the Liverpool Everyman Theatre Julius Caesar at Sheffield Crucible Desire Under The Elms at Sheffield Crucible Prayer for the Abstract at ICE/C-DaRE Coventry University The Natural Order at Arboretum Park/Summer Lodge All The Little Lights by Jane Upton at The Drum, Theatre Royal Plymouth What If The Plane Falls Out Of The Sky? at The Bike Shed Theatre, Exeter by Idiot Child With Force and Noise by Hannah Sullivan at The Wickham Theatre, Bristol O No! by Jamie Wood at Warwick Arts Centre Wrecking Ball at Birmingham Rep by Action Hero The Welcome Party at Manchester Museum of Science and Industry by Theatre Rites Hamnet at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin by Dead Centre What Good is Looking Well When You’re Rotten on the Inside? at Galway Arts Festival Killology and The Cherry Orchard at the Sherman Theatre, Cardiff Death and the Maiden at The Other Room, Cardiff Medea and The Caretaker at the Bristol Old Vic
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 12:52:57 GMT
Exeunt 'Favourite London Shows of 2017' exeuntmagazine.com/features/exeunts-favourite-london-shows-2017/Honourable mention – Hamilton (for those who've had the chance to see it already) 10 – Life of Galileo - Young Vic 9 – Angels in America - NT 8 – Mosquitoes - NT 7 – In Event of Moone Disaster - Theatre 503 6 – The Ferryman - Royal Court & West End 5 – This Beautiful Future - The Yard 4 – Barber Shop Chronicles - NT 3 – An Octoroon - Orange Tree 2 – An Anatomy of a Suicide - Royal Court 1 – Hamlet - Almeida & West End
|
|
1,127 posts
|
Post by samuelwhiskers on Dec 29, 2017 13:03:29 GMT
I sat on Pirate once (by accident!) but I don't think his shyness is entirely my fault. Thanks for posting, I love these kinds of articles.
|
|
2,062 posts
|
Post by Marwood on Dec 29, 2017 13:05:35 GMT
My top 10 (best first):
The Ferryman Hamlet (Tom Hiddleston RADA version) The Dresser (I know it started in 2016 but I saw it for a second time in January) Glengarry Glen Ross Venus In Fur Disco Pigs Mosquitoes The Kid Stays In The Picture The Miser Dublin Oldschool
The worst, by a country mile: The Philanthropist
|
|
4,810 posts
|
Post by Mark on Dec 29, 2017 14:00:09 GMT
A great year for me, with 79 theatre trips, and a few great concerts. Only including "New for 2017" shows in the actual top 10 but will provide some notable mentions.
Top 10 PLAYS: 1. The Ferryman 2. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf 3. Angels in America 4. Labour of Love 5. Beginning 6. The Play that Goes Wrong 7. Oslo 8. The Goat, or Who is Sylvia? 9. Limehouse 10. Apologia
Notable Mention: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, which I saw for the second time. Really liked the new cast. Worst: Don Juan in Soho
Top 10 MUSICALS: 1. Hello Dolly! 2. The Girls 3. Come From Away 4. Everybody's Talking about Jamie 5. Yank! 6. Nativity! 7. War Paint 8. The Life 9. The Grinning Man 10. Big Fish
Notable Mentions: Repeat visits to Dear Evan Hansen, Hamilton, Groundhog Day, Dreamgirls, Half a Sixpence, and the new production of 42nd Street have been some of my theatrical highlights. I've seen many other of my favourites this year too, and others I haven't seen in many years so very grateful.
Worst: The Wild Party at The Other Palace. Some other disappointments include Anastasia, Great Comet and Follies, which I wanted to love but just didn't click with
|
|
1,134 posts
|
Post by Stephen on Dec 29, 2017 15:02:44 GMT
My top ten (plays and musicals) Best first.
The Ferryman Sunset Boulevard (Broadway) Come From Away (Broadway) Labour of Love 42nd Street Apologia The Girls Angels in America Groundhog Day (Broadway) Ink
Also...The Lion King (honourable mention as I hadn’t seen it for many years and was really moved by it.
Finally, my least favourite production this year was An American in Paris. Found it pretty uninspired and missed the point.
Here’s to a great year of theatre ahead!
|
|
111 posts
|
Post by andromedadench on Dec 29, 2017 17:18:13 GMT
At the beginning of the year, it looked like I wouldn't get to see any UK theatre productions, so I'm just happy I eventually did see a dozen or so shows in and around London. The ones I loved have been: 42nd Street Young Frankestein A Little Night Music (at the Watermill) Hamlet The ones I also loved but not as passionately as the previous: Follies Loot Jesus Christ Superstar Venus in Fur The one I'm not so sure about: The Ferryman The one I could have lived without/the one upstaged by the venue's ladies' toilets: Young Marx I'd just like to add a 'Special Thanks' section to this post, as my 2017 UK theatre adventures wouldn't have been possible or at least wouldn't have been half as fun without the help and kindness of our own @theatremonkey , mallardo and Stasia . And other board members' tips and head ups. So, thank you all.
|
|
617 posts
|
Post by loureviews on Dec 30, 2017 20:20:55 GMT
My take on the year's outings:
Jan 2017
A Christmas Carol (Arts). A hit, nicely performed by Simon Callow.
Hedda Gabler (National). A top ten smash, an engrossing version of a favourite play.
She Loves Me (Menier). A hit, with a bouncy score and obligatory Strallen.
Feb 2017
Round the Horne (Richmond). A muddle, with some laughs and a fab Kenneth W but a lot of it felt forced.
Mar 2017
Lost With Words (National). Improv with aged thesps, which I loved. It seems to have been overlooked by many.
Honeymoon in Vegas (Palladium). Concert version, which suffered from unsure leads but had moments which did justice to the original film.
Amadeus (National). A play I love, but I disliked this production's Mozart too much to class this as a highlight.
Shirley Valentine (Richmond). A hit, in a role Jodie Prenger was surely born to play.
An American in Paris (Dominion). I loved it with its dancing and its sweetness. It should have had a longer life.
Apr 2017
The Goat, or Who is Sylvia (Theatre Royal Haymarket). An inventive hit and a black as pitch play.
Carousel (Coliseum). Dreadful leads couldn't mar the superior material, but when the supporting cast is what you remember, there's something wrong.
May 2017
42nd Street (Theatre Royal Drury Lane). Opulent hit, nicely done songs and red hot tap.
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf (Harold Pinter). Sensational and brilliant but Conleth Hill beat Imelda to the acting gold.
Lettice and Lovage (Menier). Quaintly dotty but quietly fun.
Jun 2017
We saw Rainbow with Sweet at the Stone Free Festival, O2 Arena. The former were great, the latter were better than expected.
Penn and Teller (Eventim Apollo Hammersmith). A new show with old favourites and quirks. Always a pleasure.
Jul 2017
Half a Sixpence (Noel Coward). Joyous fun with great songs, even on Charlie Stemp's week off.
The Tempest (RSC at the Barbican). Video projections and holograms were gimmicky but worth it for SRB.
Aug 2017
IAAF World Championship Athletics with my Sport Personality of the Year, Hero the Hedgehog.
The Mentor (Vaudeville). A strange play, but one I enjoyed.
Sep 2017
Follies (National). Musical of the Year, beautifully done and almost perfectly cast.
Oct 2017
Girl from the North Country (Old Vic). A stunning Dylan score made up for any story deficiencies.
Wings (Young Vic). Loved it, and Juliet Stevenson was terrific in that flying harness, remembering a tricky script.
Heisenberg (Wyndham's). Two actors at the top of their powers in an engrossing and curious romance of uncertainty.
Nov 2017
Beginning (Dorfman). Another strange romance in real-time, nicely played and well-written.
Big Fish (The Other Palace). Superlative in every way.
And we saw Bananarama, who were far better than expected.
Dec 2017
Glengarry Glen Ross (Playhouse). A mini-hit, but not spectacular.
Moscow State Circus (Ealing Common). It's got a big top and suspension stunts. What's not to like?
Mother Goose (Questors Theatre). Fun and boos and don't look behind you!
We also saw Paul Heaton and Jacqui Abbott - formerly in The Beautiful South - and they were excellent.
Shows missed due to illness this year - Art, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, Grand Mort, Salome, Julius Caesar and Ant & Cleo.
|
|
2,763 posts
|
Post by n1david on Dec 30, 2017 20:34:28 GMT
Some of us were doing this in the “By the Numbers” thread where I gave my top ten (in order of seeing, rather than top to bottom):
I’m not going to do a Bottom 10 but suffice to say Glengarry Glen Ross is my last ever Mamet.
|
|
74 posts
|
Post by ruperto on Dec 31, 2017 15:38:34 GMT
It's been a vintage year for theatre IMHO. My top 10 for 2017, in no particular order, is:
The Ferryman (Royal Court + West End) - probably the best play of the year for me. When I caught it again a couple of weeks ago, I enjoyed it even more than I did the first time.
Consent (Dorfman) - classy stuff, and what a cast!
Twelfth Night (Olivier) - I think this might be the first time I've ever watched a Shakespeare and was enjoying it so much, I didn't want it to end.
Angels in America (Lyttelton) - For me, Nathan Lane was the stand-out - there was a bit near the end where a tear trickled down his face, and it's something I'll always remember. Actually, there are lots of bits I'll always remember...
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (West End) - a masterclass of acting, though for me, Conleth Hill's was the performance of the night.
Big Fish (The Other Palace) - I LOVED this - my most moving show of the year. I do hope this isn't the last we've heard of it.
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (West End) - managed to bag a front row seat for this, which really made it quite an intense experience...
The Life of Galileo (Young Vic) - I loved the energy and sheer verve of this - a really memorable show.
Albion (Almeida) - like The Ferryman, a big, long, meaty play to really get your teeth into, with some cracking dialogue and a great lead part that Victoria Hamilton totally owned.
After the Blast (the little theatre at the top of the Lincoln Center - I think it's called the Claire Tow Theater?) - this was a play I saw during a visit to New York in October, which I really hope someone brings over to the UK soon. It's by the actress/playwright Zoe Kazan, and it's a post-apocalyptic sci-fi tale meets domestic drama, featuring a very cute R2D2-like robot. The scene where Cristina Milioti (I've probably spelt that wrong!) and the robot sing a duet of Islands in the Stream (as in the Dolly and Kenny classic) might be my theatrical high point of the year!
|
|
2,389 posts
|
Post by peggs on Dec 31, 2017 15:59:54 GMT
I was thinking the other day that I probably couldn't do a top ten as there weren't ten plays i'd loved and then rechecked my list and found I couldn't even keep it to ten, so in no particular order.
The Ferryman - something of a got to the end with my jaw on the floor and it worked just as well a second time around
Hamlet Almeida - the best Hamlet I've seen, Andrew Scott very good but just a great ensemble and loved the whole thing when this was a production I assumed i'd hate
Much Ado Globe - just lots of fun, good balance of light and dark, great music and setting, a real crowd pleaser
Boudica Globe - not a brilliant script by any means but it was one of those theatrical experiences that have your hair standing on end, in the day, standing in the yard this was electric.
Oslo - one of those plays that I think from the start sounds interesting and one for me and turns out to be that odd instance when you're right and not disappointed. Held me throughout and left me wanting to know more, no bad thing.
Ink - ticked all the boxes, cracking script, great set, unfamiliar period for me so extra interest, great cast. Love this playwright.
Albion - didn't quite hold all together but I loved the ideas, the who'd have thought silent planting scenes would be interesting and soaring performance from Victoria Hamilton
Harry Potter - think my eyes were probably out on stalks, just a great day for a fervent potter head
Love in Idleness - divine Eve Best, need I say more
Travesties - chasing every last line in an attempt to keep up with this and at sea at times till my brain caught up but just wonderful, quick and funny and just wonderful cast
Labour of Love - James Graham doing it again, another unknown period so immediately interesting, beguiling set, cast on fire, funny, provoking
The Tempest Barbican - wasn't wowed by the much shouted about visuals but loved SRB and the shell of the ship set, haunting
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf - Spoilt by having Conleth Hill and Imelda Staunton on same stage, painful and funny
Hedda Gabler NT - surprised my this one as wasn't that taken with the direction and yet it pulled me in and by the end I was emotionally on the floor
Surprisingly some of the really big hits like Angels in America and Follies don't seem to have left that much of a mark on me but I was very ill for both and sadly that is what I remember, my notes written at the time are very positive for both.
There were a couple of real stinkers, pride of place going to Don Juan in Soho.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 16:02:34 GMT
I'll be splitting mine into a number of sections, they take up a lot of space! Coming up will be - Musical, Immersive Theatre, Performance in a Play, Performance in a Musical, Supporting Performance, Disappointments and a Special Mention.
These are not in order of preference, just my top five from each category.
ORIGINAL PLAYS
The Ferryman – Jez Butterworth – Royal Court and West End
Compelling and atmospheric treatment of an all too present past. Mendes expertly shepherding a large cast through a liminal land to a shocking, yet inevitable, conclusion. A brilliant ensemble of performers, from the oldest dementia addled elder right down to the smallest child.
Albion – Mike Bartlett – Almeida
Laying bare the state of a hopelessly divided nation, symbols abound in Bartlett’s tale of our green and pleasant land - who owns it, who tends it and who may or may not inherit it. Hamilton stands out but this is another excellent ensemble of performers who live and breathe their roles as well as the country air that the physical production of trees and flowers and plants and rain so beautifully evokes.
Labour of Love – James Graham – West End
The master of the political play dissects the travails and schisms of the Labour movement with precision. As someone from the type of constituency he writes about Graham gets it absolutely right for me, the fragile coalition of voters that stand between victory and defeat, the egos that forget that in the battle for power, both national and local. Freeman and Greig are a formidable team and deliver laughs, messages and more.
Anyone’s Guess How We Got Here – Jack Perkins for Barrel Organ – Monkey House, Zoo, Edinburgh
No longer a one writer company (Lulu Raczka previously) this is a wonderfully slippery narrative that wears its theme of debt (both of the wallet and the heart) lightly. Like David Lynch, if he was a millennial, moving from a road you think you know into a nightmarish cul de sac and back. Will be out on a tour of studio theatres in 2018.
Anatomy of a Suicide – Alice Birch – Royal Court
Katie Mitchell at the peak of her powers with maybe the best direction of any piece this year. Birch writes as the child of Kane and Churchill (pace Billington), arranging her words and sounds like a beautiful, yet challenging musical score. Another play about how past and present interact, along with the above, Follies and others. Like watching a waking dream.
PLAY ADAPTATIONS
Persuasion – adapted from Jane Austen by Jeff James and James Yeatman – Royal Exchange, Manchester
I doubt many saw this, given its lack of a transfer or tour but I hope it does travel. Austen’s words, a modern social setting and the friction between the two made for hilarious and thoughtful messages about the way we live and love today. James and Yeatman have worked alongside Van Hove and Complicite, this is what you get when you grow up with the best. Who would have thought that you'd get a set piece in an Austen adaptation that takes place at a foam party?
Paul Auster’s City of Glass – adapted by Duncan McMillan – Home, Manchester and UK Tour
Maybe the most astonishing lighting and projection design of the year, backed up by its part Chandler part David Lynch narrative (more on the latter later). Almost unadaptable, McMillan does a brilliant job and you have to really work to keep at times with the invention. The effort really pays off though and I left stimulated and sensorily challenged.
Network – adapted from Paddy Chayefsky by Lee Hall – National Theatre
Talking of Van Hove, here’s the real thing working with all the stops out. A salutary tale for our media obsessed yet media acquiescent society. The overload of sound, image, screen and live (see ‘plethora’, as codified in Lehmann’s incredibly influential book on Postdramatic Theatre) replicates how we see everything but take in virtually nothing. Cranston is superb, if I didn’t know I’d believe he was actually a Dan Rather/Walter Cronkite figure who’d moved into acting.
The Suppliant Women – new version by David Greig from Aeschylus – Royal Exchange, Manchester and UK tour
One of the other important themes of the year, the treatment and subjugation of women, found a production already made to reflect its concerns from millennia ago. Greig highlights the relevance and the chorus are a marvel (and mostly amateur, changing at each venue) and their movement and sound brings the ancient into the contemporary arena.
Jubilee – adapted by Chris Goode from Derek Jarman and James Whaley – Royal Exchange, Manchester
A very short run in preparation for its London debut in 2018 and I think Goode will make it even better, more anarchic, more musical. What exists at the moment is a screw you to pretty much anything. As the MC Travis Albanza is brilliant, plus you get Toyah as Queen Elizabeth thrown in. It’s not there yet but it could be and should be (the one production that I saw this year that had me dying to get my hands on it to make it so).
PLAY REVIVAL
The Rover – Aphra Behn – Swan, Stratford
A hilarious romp that kept threatening to spill off the stage, perfectly showing how high energy performance in a small space can work. Behn’s text doesn’t half help, of course, and we should see more of her other plays. Millson bestrides the show like the lothario that he aspires to be but the women are the ones who win the day.
Hamlet – William Shakespeare – Almeida and West End
Almost the opposite, Icke makes the play so natural that you start believing that it is the Scandi Noir that the design suggests. Not just the incredible humanity of Scott's portrayal either, which mints every word and phrase as if thinking them for the first time (as Adrian Lester did before him in Brook’s other modern classic production). For me, Jessica Brown Findlay was his equal and made an often thankless part vibrate with longing, grief and beyond into breakdown.
The Life of Galileo – Bertolt Brecht, translated by John Willett – Young Vic
Wright’s production makes the play communal and the salutary fable that Brecht wanted it to be. In an age where science is questioned by those who don’t just have little knowledge but who seek to destroy the actual concept of truth, this is as important a play as it ever was. From the moments when we can stare up at the stars (with the wonderful projection work), to the sickening way that truth is denied, this was as big a political play as it maybe even was when written.
Angels in America – Tony Kushner – National Theatre
Perfection in cast and pretty much the same in direction and design. At the time I wrote at length about what it meant to me and it remains as the most memorable production of this and many years. Put simply, the play, as Walt Whitman wrote in ‘Song of Myself’, contains multitudes; the comparisons, the contradictions, the rough, the smooth, the laughter, the tears, the real, the dream, the sadness, the joy but above all, the hope. The hope that we might survive, somehow, against all the odds. ‘More Life’. Please…..
The Seagull – Anton Chekhov, new version by Simon Stephens from a literal translation by Helen Rappaport – Lyric, Hammersmith
Lucid and moving, a seasonal journey through the year that, as has recently been the case, puts Chekhov into a contemporary design. Lesley Sharp was excellent, as were the other older actors and the generational schisms just made this feel so much of now. Nice design too, especially the spectral, chilly, wintry final act.
Overall I'm not pleased with the gender balance for writers (only three with one ‘adapted from’ whilst over half of performers cited are women) and ethnic balance overall (only one writer and three perfomers alongside the majority cast of two immersive productions). Partly that’s my fault but also partly the lack of opportunities given.
|
|
4,033 posts
|
Post by Dawnstar on Dec 31, 2017 18:16:02 GMT
Cheating here & copying the round-up I've just tweeted (with all the @s replaced). Total number of shows seen in 2017: 109, 8 up on last year.
Most Seen Show is a tie between Showstopper & The Comedy About A Bank Robbery at 21 times each. And Mischief Theatre are by far my most seen theatre company with 42 shows altogether (The Play That Goes Wrong x 8, Peter Pan Goes Wrong x 2 & Mischief Movie Night x 12 in addition to the 21 TCAABRs). So let’s take it as read that I adore Mischief Theatre & Showstopper unreasonable amounts & all the following theatre highlights are only counted out of the non-Mischief-and-Showstopper shows I’ve seen.
Favourite Musical of the Year: Murder For Two at The Other Palace. Jeremy Legat & Ed MacArthur’s performances in this are also 2 of the best performances I’ve seen this year. Runners Up: She Loves Me at the Menier & Annie Get Your Gun at the Sheffield Crucible.
Favourite Play of the Year: The RSC’s Love’s Labour’s Lost. First time I’ve seen the piece & I was really surprised how much I enjoyed it. Runner Up: Love In Idleness at the Menier.
Favourite Opera of the Year: English Touring Opera’s Giulio Cesare. Runners Up: Don Giovanni at Opera Holland Park & Turandot The Royal Opera House (which, embarrassingly, was actually my only ROH visit this year)
Favourite Operetta of the Year: I only saw 2 this year & thoroughy enjoyed both of them so a tie between English Touring Opera’s Patience & The CBSO’s Yeomen of the Guard in concert.
I don’t have a Worst Show of the Year this year. I didn’t see any ghastly opera productions & the only 2 musicals I didn’t enjoy much were ones that I only saw to see particular cast members, knowing they probably wouldn’t be to my taste, so it’s not fair to cite them.
|
|
617 posts
|
Post by loureviews on Dec 31, 2017 18:50:27 GMT
For some reason Twelfth Night was missed off my post above. Brilliant version, fresh and original.
|
|
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 3, 2018 2:02:58 GMT
PART TWO!
MUSICAL
The Girl From the North Country – Book by Conor McPherson, Songs by Bob Dylan – Old Vic
Like a lost Eugene O’Neill play but with Bob Dylan songs seasoning the pot. In the end I’ve stuck this in musicals and it seems more like one in retrospect, not because the songs carry the plot but because they nail down the setting and flesh out the mood - and what songs they are. One of those shows that has grown in my memory from enjoyable to something deeper, about community and place.
Romantics Anonymous – Book by Emma Rice, Songs by Michael Kooman and Christopher Dimond – Sam Wanamaker Playhouse
As I said when I saw it - ‘resistance is futile’. A fragile heart on sleeve tale of love and chocolate smothered with a sweet score by an unknown songwriting team that is better and more organic than anyone had any right to expect. Every performance landed from the small but perfectly formed ensemble and overall the production was a lesson in how staging with less can often result in more – more emotion, more imagination, just more fun. ‘Choose love’ a poet said in one of our darker times this year and Emma Rice chooses wisely.
Follies – Book by James Goldman, Songs by Stephen Sondheim – National Theatre
In my time I’ve seen just how poorly this musical can be done in inexpert hands but at last here was a production to stand alongside the glory of Sondheim’s score. The great songsmiths of the early twentieth century are wittily pastiched in standalone numbers and placed alongside the yearning, angularity of the more bitter contemporary book songs. The older I get, the more regrets and missed opportunities that I look back on and the shorter my future is the better the book works. Cooke’s first musical, maybe it needed a person steeped in plays to make it all work.
Hamilton – Book and Songs by Lin Manuel Miranda – West End
The last time I paid much attention to rap Public Enemy were warning people ‘Don’t Believe the Hype’, well you can believe this hype because this was as thrilling an evening as I spent in theatre this year and maybe for a number of years. This is America as I know it, not the shabby, shameful farrago of a government that it is currently degrading it day by day. The score bounces, it thrills, it sings, it has moments of sheer, explosive energy that are like a wave engulfing the audience. As well as that, it is a lucid and compelling portrait of a man who knew all too well the dangers of populism, it is the necessary prompt to urge us of the ‘fierce urgency of now’.
All We Ever Wanted Was Everything – Book by Luke Barnes, Songs by James Frewer for Middle Child – Roundabout @ Summerhall, Edinburgh
Hardly anyone will have seen this (I know of one other person on the board), so I hope it goes out on tour. Staged in the round it’s a great example of ‘gig theatre’ (actors switching between instrument and character, even between different instruments). Defiantly working class it started off its journey with performances in a club in Hull (as part of its year as City of Culture). its tale of limited horizons, lost love, economic pain, and an asteroid hurtling towards earth was a high energy burst of joy and anger that came from its youthful cast’s and writer’s gut.
IMMERSIVE PERFORMANCE
One Day, Maybe – dreamthinkspeak – King William House, Hull
Korea (the nice one, not the naughty one, but with its own dark, yet quite recent, past of military rule). Set over a number of floors in an office building, its collision of tradition and modernity and glimpses of a country trying to overcome it past whilst honouring those who made the present possible was, for me, the best multi-room immersive performance of the year. At the end, walking into a massive, seemingly never ending space with rows of white chairs and candles (representing the dead from the democracy protests of that time) was one of the year’s most memorable, and moving, sights.
The Soulless Ones – Oscar Blustin and Anna Soderblom for Hammer Films – Hoxton Town Hall
Yes, an immersive Hammer film and everything that you might expect from that; dialogue that was just the right side of ripe, performances that wrung out every flicker and twinge of fear, panic and dread and a design that felt like being transported back to some crumbling gothic pile with crypts and attics and dark, dark secrets. You had to go with the flow and, being a veteran of these sort of things, I knew to pick a character and follow, but this was just ridiculous, great fun with vampires and the undead aplenty. Best seen at Halloween.
The Jungle – Joe Murphy and Joe Robertson for Good Chance – Young Vic
Plunging you into the Afghan café in the Calais Jungle, a show that is as vibrant and polemical as you might want it to be. Overcame the possibility of ‘poverty porn’ with its authenticity, via those who were there and its own admissions of British volunteers’ ridiculousness and incomprehension. Yes, of course it’s biased but, given that you have the Daily Mail and others spreading their bigotry far and wide, what’s wrong with that? Seriously, if you have to question why the migrants in the camp might have something that needs to be heard then what have you become? Committed performances in a story that is still without an end.
Frogman – Jack Lowe and Russell Woodhead for Curious Directive – Traverse at Codebase, Summerhall
Part live monologue but (and this is where the immersivity comes in) part performance via virtual reality headsets. A tale of the oceans of growing up and an unexplained disappearance which showed the present live and the past via those headsets. The story became more mystical as it reached its conclusion, revealing mankind’s oneness with nature. Was it a a tale of a possible murder or of something we have yet to understand? Maybe not something that will take the place of live performance but a nice addition to the theatre toolkit.
£¥€$ (Lies) – Ontroerend Goed – Summerhall, Edinburgh
Do you know how the stock market works? I mean, really know from the inside not just through having a few shares? This show puts you right in the middle and has you take part in a game come performance piece of profits, of mergers, of all sorts of seemingly legal yet unethical dealings and eventually of catastrophe. This Belgian company lure you in, their confident, smooth talking facilitators leading your ‘company’ and stroking your egos, giving you just one more opportunity to make a bigger profit. Subtle lighting and sound are almost unnoticed as you get caught up in the excitement. So this is how it happens, is it? Scary…..
Acting performances, disappointments and special mentions to come in the last and final part!
|
|