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Post by BurlyBeaR on Nov 17, 2019 20:20:08 GMT
That’s a shame but not unexpected.
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Post by marob on Nov 17, 2019 21:31:17 GMT
God forbid a London audience might be asked to empathise with northerners...
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Post by londonpostie on Nov 17, 2019 21:46:46 GMT
Interesting question, can't think of any atm; young actors doing authentic regional accents*?
*consistently, over the course of hours, while also remembering lines and stage directions, in front of 900 punters
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2019 22:04:21 GMT
Interesting question, can't think of any atm; young actors doing authentic regional accents*? *consistently, over the course of hours, while also remembering lines and stage directions, in front of 900 punters Your use of the word authentic excludes Jamie.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2019 22:08:28 GMT
Had a somewhat different experience to David this afternoon. I was so excited to see this and perhaps my expectations were too high. I've been such a fan of Cookson's previous work - in fact A Monster Calls remains one of my absolute theatre highlights, but this just missed the mark on so many levels.
I can't quite put my finger on it, perhaps it was the devised script, or the clunky scene changes, or some seriously questionable costume designs, but I left feeling a bit underwhelmed.
The cast were solid and I always enjoy the madeleines at the Bridge though. 3 stars from me!
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Post by cherokee on Nov 20, 2019 13:07:31 GMT
Sorry to say I found this to be one of the most intensely irritating evenings at the theatre I've experienced in a long time.
It couldn't make up its mind whether it wanted to be a genuine period piece - invoking the images of the evacuation in the 40s, or a 'woke' updated version of C.S. Lewis' regressive and problematic source.
It was colourful, beautifully designed and some great puppetry, but the acting across the board was mediocre at best.
Laura Elphinstone was horribly miscast as the White Witch, with none of the status or power that character needs. She shouted a lot, but there was no substance behind the performance: the very definition of going through the motions. She wasn't remotely scary - and her weak 'R's don't help.
Wil Johnson was OK as Aslan, but really dreadful as the Professor, and the four children ranged from not bad (Keziah Joseph's Lucy) to truly appalling (Femi Akinfolarin's Peter). Indeed, with his stilted delivery of every line, Akinfolarin was rivalling the wardrobe in the wooden stakes. And their accents wavered from RP to Northern to London throughout.
There was no real sense of adventure, and I found it a smug production rather too in love with its own cleverness. I couldn't wait to get out - and handing out hundreds of green slips for the audience to wave just made me think of its poor environmental credentials. (There was nowhere obvious to recycle these at the end of the show.)
2 stars would be generous.
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Post by mrbarnaby on Nov 20, 2019 18:36:27 GMT
Sorry to say I found this to be one of the most intensely irritating evenings at the theatre I've experienced in a long time. It couldn't make up its mind whether it wanted to be a genuine period piece - invoking the images of the evacuation in the 40s, or a 'woke' updated version of C.S. Lewis' regressive and problematic source. It was colourful, beautifully designed and some great puppetry, but the acting across the board was mediocre at best. Laura Elphinstone was horribly miscast as the White Witch, with none of the status or power that character needs. She shouted a lot, but there was no substance behind the performance: the very definition of going through the motions. She wasn't remotely scary - and her weak 'R's don't help. Wil Johnson was OK as Aslan, but really dreadful as the Professor, and the four children ranged from not bad (Keziah Joseph's Lucy) to truly appalling (Femi Akinfolarin's Peter). Indeed, with his stilted delivery of every line, Akinfolarin was rivalling the wardrobe in the wooden stakes. And their accents wavered from RP to Northern to London throughout. There was no real sense of adventure, and I found it a smug production rather too in love with its own cleverness. I couldn't wait to get out - and handing out hundreds of green slips for the audience to wave just made me think of its poor environmental credentials. (There was nowhere obvious to recycle these at the end of the show.) 2 stars would be generous. Everything you say is what I feared with this production. May skip it now
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Post by Someone in a tree on Nov 20, 2019 20:36:48 GMT
Interesting to read the negativity on here. I love the book and the RSC production (seen it twice). Also love Cookson's work but when I saw the pics I thought Meh! I was thinking about cheapo days seats but maybe not now
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Post by lynette on Nov 20, 2019 22:59:38 GMT
I think we’ve killed that one then. Anyone brave enough to be going in spite of the above?
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Post by david on Nov 20, 2019 23:07:45 GMT
I think we’ve killed that one then. Anyone brave enough to be going in spite of the above? When I saw it on Sunday afternoon, I enjoyed it and speaking to a couple of families during the interval and post show enjoyed it as well. The kids around me where I was sat and those I could see in the stalls seemed to be entertained by the show.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Nov 21, 2019 8:12:59 GMT
Blimey, doesn’t take much to put the London contingent off something does it?
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Post by zahidf on Nov 21, 2019 8:20:39 GMT
This had great reviews in its previous life.
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Post by frosty on Nov 21, 2019 8:59:56 GMT
I saw this last week, and I found it rather magical. I've not seen a production of this before, so had nothing to compare it to. I thought the staging, puppetry and lighting were very clever and the kids sat around me seemed mesmerised by the whole thing, I've never seen such quiet, focused children in the theatre. Loved the beavers and the squirrel, and adorable Mr Tumnus, agree the weakest performance was from the actor playing the professor, he was great as Aslan though. The Pevensie children's accents did vary a bit, but on the whole, I thought they were a believable set of siblings. It was also my first visit to the Bridge Theatre, which I thought was great, really spacious, light public areas, comfy seats, nice staff. Not sure about the £1 deposit for plastic cups though, I can see the need to reduce single use plastic, but who is going to queue at the end to get a £1 refund on their cups? From the comments above, it's clear not everyone enjoyed it, but thats what's great about this board, we can share opinions and get other peoples perspectives on things!
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Post by Deleted on Nov 21, 2019 20:03:21 GMT
I saw this last week, and I found it rather magical. I've not seen a production of this before, so had nothing to compare it to. I thought the staging, puppetry and lighting were very clever and the kids sat around me seemed mesmerised by the whole thing, I've never seen such quiet, focused children in the theatre. Loved the beavers and the squirrel, and adorable Mr Tumnus, agree the weakest performance was from the actor playing the professor, he was great as Aslan though. The Pevensie children's accents did vary a bit, but on the whole, I thought they were a believable set of siblings. It was also my first visit to the Bridge Theatre, which I thought was great, really spacious, light public areas, comfy seats, nice staff. Not sure about the £1 deposit for plastic cups though, I can see the need to reduce single use plastic, but who is going to queue at the end to get a £1 refund on their cups? From the comments above, it's clear not everyone enjoyed it, but thats what's great about this board, we can share opinions and get other peoples perspectives on things! They've probably started a £1 deposit because people were taking them home. The idea is to reduce plastic and not take them home with you, so they dont have to buy more from the manufacturer.
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Post by Jon on Nov 24, 2019 0:10:35 GMT
I quite enjoyed this and I have a feeling this will do quite well with families this Christmas.
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Post by stevej678 on Dec 5, 2019 12:25:18 GMT
This is heading to The Lowry for seven weeks next Christmas. 9 December 2020 - 24 January 2021.
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Post by peggs on Dec 5, 2019 13:20:01 GMT
Sister and kids going next week, will report back. Turns out they've been secretly going off to theatre with randoms to fill spare tickets for some time and not mentioning it to me as I'm the required baby sitter. Darn it.
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Post by kathryn on Dec 6, 2019 10:43:27 GMT
I'm seeing this tonight. Have not not yet read reviews so startled to see negativity here! Bracing myself....
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Dec 6, 2019 23:41:42 GMT
Well, I quite enjoyed it in the end, but it took me a while to warm to it.
Staging well-done, puppetry and animal characters all good, and I really enjoyed the audience interactive bits.
My problem with the whole thing is the casting. The Pevensie ‘children’ are simply too old - or are not playing ‘young’ convincingly enough. It means you lose the older-younger sibling dynamics because they all seem to be the same age, you lose a big chunk of Lucy’s innocence and naïveté, and you lose the power dynamic between Jadis/Aslan and the children.
And childhood is so crucial to Narnia’s themes - the whole thing relies on them being children, that’s the point of the magic.
I’m sure it won’t have bothered any of the actual children in the audience, but it bugged me.
Also thought the flying was a bit wimpy, compared to what we’ve seen from the Bridge before.
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Post by Mark on Dec 7, 2019 21:21:43 GMT
Anyone able to advise how the front row would be for this. It's £25 which is much cheaper than the rows behind. "Height of stage will cause restricted view"
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Post by peggs on Dec 17, 2019 18:14:44 GMT
Belated feedback, sister and kids loved this, sadly more than anything I've taken them to see. Younger one said 'and there's many ladies toilets', was almost as if I'd briefed her 😉
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Post by andrew on Dec 22, 2019 23:16:56 GMT
I had forgotten this was Sally Cookson until I was mid-Act 1 and it just all felt very Peter Pan with the music and staging. And I liked bits of Peter Pan and didn't like other bits. And it turns out I liked bits of this and I didn't like other bits. I'm OK with adults playing the kids, and I'm OK with sightly home-made feel of the design, makeup and costumes. I'm guessing part of the way Cookson and co approach these plays is that there's a sense of it being a fancier version of kids dressing up, telling stories themselves, playing make-believe. That aesthetic means you can get away with a lot of things, particularly in stories with a huge amount of magic and fantasy thrown in. And actual children (not the pretend ones on stage) are obviously incredibly forgivable about such things, and so if some of us adults are a bit alienated at times by these choices it's probably not going to cause the production team to lose much sleep.
The things I really didn't like were The Professor (just pantomime, no gravitas, no mystery), the Witch (not even pantomime, too underpowered, not at all seductive or menacing) and Aslan. Aslan the puppet was great, the kids were oohing and aahing, he cuts quite a figure in his odd multicoloured way. Aslan the man was just... disappointing. I would rather they had downscaled the puppet a bit and just used that, rather than a man in a faux-fur coat. My other complaint is the same as with Peter Pan (although this made better use of it) - the music. I am a massive musical fan, I am less a fan of plays that have 3 or 4 songs shoehorned in, such that they neither feel like a musical, nor a play with music. And if you're going to have 4 songs being sung on stage, then they have to be absolute corkers, not the wishy washy pieces we got in this. Peter Pans music was even worse so we're at least improving on that front.
The scope and ingenuity of how some of this was put on was impressive, and actually the storytelling overall ends up being quite effective. There are just so many bits and pieces in the mix which aren't good enough for me to have walked out of this feeling enthused and bewitched and all the things a play set in Narnia should achieve. I imagine if I was a kid I would have liked this more, but I'm a sucker for a family show, so it's really disappointing I didn't find more to love in it.
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Post by joem on Jan 5, 2020 20:13:00 GMT
It was ok for kids, quite slick as a production and there was plenty to look at and listen to but it was a few notches away from magical. Aslan (actor and puppet) should have been one unit. The White Witch only once, end of first half, acquired the menace needed - you can't have a fearsome witch towered over by the "kids".
Mind you, if even one kid went away from this starry-eyed and bitten by the theatre bug it will have been worthwhile.
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Post by rockinrobin on Jan 5, 2020 22:46:04 GMT
I liked it but not loved it. It's a very enjoyable, beautifully staged and heartwarming show but the magic was just not there for me. Of course, Sally Cookson is a fantastic director and I'm a big fan of her concoctions of drama, physical theatre, circus and puppetry, and I bawled my eyes out watching "A Monster Calls" but... I don't know. Something was missing. Maybe I'm too old.
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Post by MrBraithwaite on Jan 6, 2020 11:58:23 GMT
Liked it, but not totally loved it. Totally disliked the Professor but liked the Witch and everything covered it ice, that was well executed. Sometimes it felt as if the money had run out in a particular scene. The songs as always were awful and unnecessary. And actual children (not the pretend ones on stage) are obviously incredibly forgivable about such things, and so if some of us adults are a bit alienated at times by these choices it's probably not going to cause the production team to lose much sleep. Funnily enough during intermission two boys behind me were arguing with their grandma that the model-train at the beginning of Act 1 was so small, the kids would not have fitted into it. So sometimes we adults can accept theatre magic more easily than children.
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