Everybody Loves a Winner (Manchester Royal Exchange, 15th July 2009)

Yes of course, it would be possible to go to a Bingo Hall and have similar experience to watching the Manchester Royal Exchange’s production of Everybody Loves a Winner. The audience enters the stalls through an entrance lined with fruit machines, and once in the auditorium they are confronted with a replica Bingo Hall with the rectangular tables awaiting the players. Other entrances to the stalls are now fire exits. In my view, it’s not the point that we could go to a Bingo Hall to play bingo and not bother with this theatre visit, because even though the production gives the audience chance to play bingo, we also get a snippet into the lives of the people who visit and work at this particular Bingo Hall. Amongst the customers who queue for the morning, afternoon and evening sessions is Elsie (Joan Kempson) who causes problems for the hygiene team (toilet cleaners) and wants the world to stop at the moment before the last number is called. There’s Maureen (Sally Bankes) who wants to win so she can go and have a holiday in Sharm el-Sheikh. Maureen becomes competitive with audience members and she is so ambitious that if she wins, she will be going home drunk in a taxi while the rest of us are still on the bus. There’s Janice, the nurse, (Patti Clare) who brings her mother to the bingo, but also nurses her at home. There’s the staff, Debbie (Emily Alexander) and Joy (Amanda Henderson), with dreams of being models and pop stars, but have their future, according to the manager Linda (Sally Lindsay) ,starring them in the eyes in the shape of Elsie. Ian Puleston Davies’s bingo caller, Frank looks confident as he calls the numbers, but underneath he is uncertain and fragile.

There’s a reflection of the kind of work that comes out of the Hull Truck Company here. This production is funny, touching and definitely gets the audience involved.

Reviews and Previews

Everybody Loves a Winner (Independent on Sunday)
Everybody Loves a Winner (Times Review)
Everybody Loves a Winner (Independent review)
The Stage Review of Everybody Loves a Winner (The Stage)
Everybody Loves a Winner (Observer)
Everybody Loves a Winner, Manchester Royal Exchange (Financial Times)

JW Waterhouse (11th July, Royal Academy)


Mirrors, water, tapestries reflect the dreams and reveries of doomed women who are often wearily suffering from loss or are washed out with the pain of unrequited love. Some have suffered death and others are just about to. In contrast, the temptress uses the ice cool water to tease and lure men to sexual deviation and almost certain death.

The Waterhouse exhibition tells stories from Greek mythology, the Bible, Shakespeare and Tennyson on an epic scale using vivid and vibrant colours and producing large scale canvasses. The works often focuses on minute detail and are of transience and death alongside comments on art as a narrative tool.

I wrote lots of notes in response to each work, but I don’t want to describe each image here. The catalogue accompanying the exhibition does that well enough. I felt that visiting the exhibition was about experiencing the paintings as if gorging oneself on eating a whole boy of milk chocolates. The paintings, which at times were deeply unfashionable, make vivid a Victorian world excited by the spectacle and promoting itself through an aesthetic that gloried in being British. I walk round the paintings and I marvel at the technical skill, the bravery of the detail, the passion for the subjects, and also the eye for a commercial venture. All the things that make this exhibition fascinating and beguiling.

Review and Previews

Waterhouse

Waterhouse at the RA in the Telegraph

John Waterhouse

Catalogue

Prettijohn Elizabeth (et al). (2009) J.W. Waterhouse. The Modern Pre-Raphaelite Gronigen: Gronigen Museum

Torchwood and Coronation Street (w/c 6th July 2009)

I have managed to watch all the Torchwood episodes this week thanks to the magic of Sky +. I must admit I was gripped and had to catch up because of watching open air Shakespeare for a couple of evenings (see other blog entries). It was enormously difficult to avoid spoilers (especially now I twitter, have a Reader and Google alerts ping culture news at me). I’ve also been catching up on Coronation Street and it just made me think that even though I am a great Corrie fan, the format of the soap is so limiting and after 45 years there is so little that can be done with it that would shock. In comparison, Torchwood can move across genre boundaries and do some really exciting interesting things.

In Coronation Street, boy looses girl who goes off with his rival and a married man embarks on an affair with friend’s wife. Torchwood can do all that if it wanted but can do lots more, because in Torchwood all humanity is in danger. In Torchwood, it may feel that when the main character cannot die so there can’t be any sense of danger when assassins get close. We now know that even when Captain Jack (John Barrowman) is blown apart and or even cased in concrete we’ll hear that short anguished gasp as the pain of resurrection kicks in and he returns to life (always followed by a humerous quip). So like Corrie, Torchwood has to work with character development because to make the repetitive interesting, but it has the advantage of being able to introduce aliens, time travel and move out of Cardiff to the rest of the Universe.

The episodes of Torchwood this week were clearly political and the time was ‘out of joint’. Like Doctor Who the programme works with debates and issues in society to develop narrative. Taking a simple concept and creating a threat to the world out of it. In this week’s episodes, our attitudes to School league tables, the care system, political spin and public reputation were questioned. Alongside the global issues, there were the personal stories such as the loan civil servant (played brilliantly by Peter Capaldi) can be indispensable with echoes of the David Kelly affair.

In the five episodes, there was a reflection of the early Torchwood episode ‘Countrycide’ in the five episodes that the real threat was human and not alien. It felt that the danger came from the establishment as it tried to track down Torchwood and destroy all those involved in it. It just didn’t seem that there was a threat from an alien known as the 456. We never really saw the 456, and our view of it was built up through the anguished squeals, the large scaled body that banged against the casement filled with poisonous gas that it lived off. The horror came from the fact that the prime minister (Nicholas Farrell) was willing to give up 10% of the world’s children, that a decision was made to take away the children from the lowest performing schools – ‘because what are the league tables for?’ Gwen (Eve Myles) has glimpsed the end of the world and that’s because of the way the human race behaves as the army tracks down children in hiding, rather that the threat from the alien. The horror was also that Captain Jack had sold out in 1965 and given the twelve orphans to the 456 and that he was willing to sacrifice his own grandson. Would Captain Jack ever be able to live with himself and go back to Torchwood. Had Torchwood been destroyed from within in the end?

I wouldn’t want Coronation Street to go Dynasty and write a storyline where a character is kidnapped and taken up in a space ship. Narratives will always centre around the street. What makes Coronation Street so good is that combination of humour and drama. In some ways it is fine to be predictable, characters like Julie, Becky, and Sean are a joy to watch. This is what I love about Coronation Street. Torchwood can bring the drama the twists the critical look at humanity and they way we live.

After all this, Torchwood is not perfect, and in trying to deal with the questions we are all asking – where is Martha, and where is the Doctor? Was the 456 a minor monster so the Doctor could get on saving the universe somewhere else, but the biggest question was surely Martha Jones didn’t say. ‘I’m on hols and it doesn’t matter who invades the earth, even if it means the end of the world just don’t disturb me!!’ The point is we’re talking about it and that will make the programme last.

Yes, I am ready for my next dose of Torchwood. Please return soon.

All's Well That Ends Well (National Theatre, 11th July 2009)

Once upon a time……. in a castle on the mountain where the ravens croaked, the young girl mourned the death of her physician father brought up by the Countess Rossillion. Rossillion was a dark place. Then Helena fell in love with the Countess’ son, Bertram, and it should have ended happily ever after. For her wedding Helena wore a beautiful jewel encrusted white dress. But all was not well. Bertram did not love his bride and after a journey across Europe…..all’s well that ends well.

The National Theatre’s All’s Well that Ends Well is a beautiful production taking all the elements of a fairy story and adding the sense of being in an animated world. Using shadows and silhouettes to great effect, as an audience we are not sure what is real and what isn’t. Starting with a darkened stage the productions becomes lit as the action moves towards resolution. With its stunning set and wonderful performances, Marianne Elliot’s production of All’s Well That Ends Well is well worth a visit. This is one of the best things I have seen this season. It will be great to see it on NTlive, but I’m not sure that the cinema experience will be a substitute for being in the Olivier while all is revealed before you.

Reviews and Previews

Alls Well Review
Theatre review: All’s well when fish fall out o…
Evening Standard All’s Well
All’s Well That End’s Well
Marianne Elliott: explorer of the heart – Times…
Billington Review of All’s Well
Official London Guide review of All’s Well
The Stage’s review of Alls Well
FT.com / Arts / Theatre & Dance – All’s Well Th…