|
Post by westendsylvie on Nov 7, 2022 12:01:27 GMT
Aybody know anything about this?
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Nov 7, 2022 12:08:55 GMT
Well, on my screen the OP is empty and so there's nothing to see but count me in for this already .. even if it's bad it's going to be hilarious.
|
|
4,156 posts
|
Post by kathryn on Nov 7, 2022 15:38:16 GMT
I found this absolutely hilarious at the time, but now it’s done I am not sure I need to see a play about it as well as a TV drama and a podcast ….
It was a fine distraction from politics and disaster but its beauty was in its triviality.
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Nov 7, 2022 16:32:00 GMT
Only 3 shows, atm. Wyndham's / Delfont Mac.
|
|
5,707 posts
|
Post by lynette on Nov 7, 2022 16:36:52 GMT
Who is making money out of this? Is Vardy trying to recoup?
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Nov 7, 2022 16:39:20 GMT
Who is making money out of this? Is Vardy trying to recoup?
Same people responsible for Witness For The Prosecution at the old LCC building.
|
|
|
Post by imstillhere on Nov 7, 2022 18:56:41 GMT
Pathetic.
They're really scraping the bottom of the barrel here.
|
|
|
Post by profquatermass on Nov 8, 2022 12:15:55 GMT
How is it pathetic? Any different from Quiz or any other fiction based on recent events? It's a genuinely fascinating case that says a lot about our relationships with celebrities and celebrities' relationship with the media (Vardy is presumably bankrupted by this while the Sun got of scot free). I can really recommend the BBC podcast It's Wagatha Christie for an excellent unbiased look at the case.
It's selling pretty well and I'm guessing a lot of the audience won't be regular theatregoers. Surely anything that gets new people into the theatre is a good thing?
(Full disclosure - I won't be going but I'm looking forward to the TV version)
|
|
1,127 posts
|
Post by samuelwhiskers on Nov 8, 2022 12:43:39 GMT
How does a first time playwright (okay she’s written one play before but it doesn’t appear to have ever been staged) get a major gig like this?
I’m all for opportunities for new writers, but putting someone completely inexperienced straight into the West End with a play not of her own creation feels like a fail all round.
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Nov 26, 2022 10:44:54 GMT
|
|
1,497 posts
|
Post by Steve on Nov 26, 2022 13:06:31 GMT
Saw this on Tuesday, and Lucy May Barker's Rebekah Vardy had me laughing like a drain! A classic comedy performance! Some spoilers follow. . . The key is directly intercutting her cool yet transparently lying testimony with her more frank WhatsApp messages, in which she excitedly and evilly destroys everybody she talks about. Noone else has depicted the story this way and it's pure comedy, and gives this production a distinctiveness from any mundane news report. This is comedy. Outwardly, Barker's Vardy resembles one of those meticulously coiffured, inscrutable supermodels, that back up Robert Palmer in his classic "Addicted to Love" music video. Attitudinally, she is in massively miserable, exaggerated trout-pout, withholding mode. But then in the WhatsApps, she explodes in gossipy gleeful malevolence, and then quickly becomes coy again. It is so so SO funny! It is a classic comedy performance, and it skewers Rebekah Vardy as effectively and efficiently as any Spitting Image puppet skewered anybody ever! Once Barker's comedy masterclass is over, the second half can't match it. Yet Laura Dos Santos's Coleen Rooney, in her own way, gives us classic Columbo, a wolf in sheep's clothing: coming on with her moonboot disadvantage, her legal disadvantage (in British law, the advantage is with the "defamed" litigant), her Scouse-outsider-in-the-bewigged-fancy-London-court disadvantage, her plain-speaking-in-a-world-of-dissemblers disadvantage, and then she hilariously takes them all apart! It's very funny, just not as funny as Vardy. Nothing else in the show compares to the two principals, not the football commentary type legal reporting, not the other witnesses, not the lawyers, though all those things are functional. But the two main witness testimonies are fantastic, though the show peaks in the first half, with the unforgettable comic portrayal of Vardy by Lucy May Barker! 5 stars for Barker, 4 stars for Dos Santos, 3 stars for everything else: overall, 4 stars from me.
|
|
3,577 posts
|
Post by showgirl on Nov 26, 2022 15:42:42 GMT
Reviews have made me very keen to see this (not a subject in which I'd previously had any interest but if well done, a play can be about anything and entertain) but it's impossible with performances on Tuesday evenings only. If it proves popular, maybe some other days will be added.
|
|
|
Post by londonpostie on Nov 26, 2022 16:49:16 GMT
If I was organising an office Christmas party this year ...
|
|
3,576 posts
|
Post by Rory on Dec 6, 2022 9:56:53 GMT
Doing a season at the Ambassadors. 6th April - 20th May.
|
|
1,827 posts
|
Post by stevej678 on Feb 2, 2023 10:34:37 GMT
Looks like this is going on tour. It's heading to The Lowry in June.
|
|
547 posts
|
Post by drmaplewood on Apr 6, 2023 7:55:39 GMT
Currently some £18 front row tickets for this tonight and Monday 10th on TodayTix.
|
|
|
Post by ArbitraryGibberish on Apr 12, 2023 16:49:26 GMT
I think they went about this the wrong way. The experience was basically what I had expected out of Best of Enemies: a somewhat interesting story of this big public dispute but not all that interesting as a play. Like I enjoyed hearing about the case and such (I had no prior knowledge) but I think I would’ve been ok with a 20 minute YouTube video rather than a full 2 act play (with an unnecessary interval imo). I think the “in their own words” concept held it back the most, keeping them from being able to use more license to make it actually theatrical. Instead they were limited to a using a football match framing device which is the weakest aspect of the show. All of those segments with the announcers either were just exposition or seemed awkward and unnecessary (to no fault of the actors, they both played their other roles well.) If nothing else I would’ve preferred they lean much more into the football match idea so it comes off as a larger than life goofy portrayal consistently rather than shoved in at different times. The whole cast does well with it, Lucy May Barker especially, again it just doesn’t feel that theatrical. It was a very enjoyable watch for me since I didn’t know any of the details of the case or the outcome, but I don’t imagine there being much value if that’s not the case.
|
|
5,183 posts
|
Post by Being Alive on Apr 12, 2023 17:20:37 GMT
Is the second half of this any better than it was at Wyndhams? I liked the first half a lot but almost had a nap in Act 2 - the Rooney stuff is a snooze whereas the Vardy stuff was laugh a minute
|
|
PJ
Auditioning
|
Post by PJ on Apr 13, 2023 7:14:20 GMT
Is the second half of this any better than it was at Wyndhams? I liked the first half a lot but almost had a nap in Act 2 - the Rooney stuff is a snooze whereas the Vardy stuff was laugh a minute I only saw it for the first time this week but did agree that the first half was way better than the second. So much so, it felt like it could’ve done away with the interval and just shortened the whole thing.
|
|
314 posts
|
Post by jm25 on May 16, 2023 21:26:29 GMT
Curiosity got the better of me so I picked up a cheap seat before this closes. I suppose it’s a harmless bit of fun isn’t it. I’d seen the TV adaptation at Christmas and, in fairness, I’d say this was an improvement. Didn’t take itself too seriously but it was certainly wearing a bit thin towards the end. Agree with all comments about the first half being far stronger than the second. I suppose it’s a game of two halves!
|
|
3,316 posts
|
Post by david on May 29, 2023 15:32:36 GMT
With a rare Sunday evening show at the Liverpool Empire last night, I took the opportunity to have a watch. It was a lot of fun to watch and a pleasant evening's entertainment. I would agree with the other board members posts that Act 1 was certainly the stronger of the two with the brilliant comedy performance from Lucy May Barker as RV. She really was a laugh a minute and worth the watch just for her. Steve, I'd agree with you on your thoughts about the show. The comedy really was all in Act 1, whilst there were fewer laughs in Act 2 when Coleen takes to the stand. Being in Liverpool, the lively audience was just as much fun as the cast. Any mention of the Sun newspaper got plenty of pantomime boos from the audience as did the first appearance of Vardy on stage. Whilst, Laura Dos Santos as Coleen got plenty of cheers during the evening. As for the other cast, local lad Nathan Mcmullen was the standout, mainly for his Wayne and Jamie roles in Act 2.
|
|