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Post by zahidf on Sept 29, 2021 9:44:07 GMT
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Post by Jan on Sept 29, 2021 9:50:55 GMT
I heard Folk when it was on the radio earlier in the year, Simon Russell-Beale was in it. It was OK.
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Post by cavocado on Oct 6, 2021 8:29:34 GMT
If anyone's waiting for the public booking at 10.30am today, it's already open - I've just booked.
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Post by Dave B on Oct 6, 2021 8:33:41 GMT
If anyone's waiting for the public booking at 10.30am today, it's already open - I've just booked. Hampstead seem to have a habit of doing this now. What is the point in announcing on-sale times and then ignoring them?
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Post by zahidf on Oct 6, 2021 8:52:10 GMT
If anyone's waiting for the public booking at 10.30am today, it's already open - I've just booked. Thanks! bargain preview tickets sorted for this and Folk
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Post by drmaplewood on Nov 9, 2021 11:45:15 GMT
Just tested positive for Covid so can't make Little Scratch tonight if anyone wants to go for free
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Post by zahidf on Nov 9, 2021 21:39:09 GMT
This was very good tonight! Intense but also strangely funny
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Post by showgirl on Nov 10, 2021 4:59:24 GMT
Interested to read this, zahidf, as from the description the subject and treatment sounded both confusing and unappealing, so I didn't book. But still time if it sounds worth seeing.
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Post by tmesis on Nov 10, 2021 6:54:57 GMT
I've hated way too many Katie Mitchell efforts (including opera productions) to risk this one.
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Post by Dave B on Nov 10, 2021 8:48:11 GMT
We also saw it last night (waves to zahidf ) and would agree that it was intense and quite funny. I really liked how the four cast were the inner and outer thoughts of the young woman, conflicting and loud and quiet and random at points throughout the day. I would question the need for the microphones, I thought that detracted a bit in such a small space. Sure the slight sound effects would have been harder to do but they could have been played in (as the bikes were for example). Impressed by all four of the cast, essentially standing without moving and delivering an interior monologue at times in sync and at times in contradiction to the other three also doing an interior monologue. Runtime now 1.40 - down from the advertised two hours, oh and even if you have seat numbers all seats are actually unreserved and there was a queue from at least 10 min before doors opened. Finally, on the theme. I would suggest checking the content warnings. The website is pretty light on detail, there is a bit more on a laminated sheet by the door but then in the free programme, there is an extra leaflet with a full page and a half - I feel all that information could have been done with being listed by Hampstead in advance.
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Post by zahidf on Nov 10, 2021 10:22:19 GMT
Interested to read this, zahidf, as from the description the subject and treatment sounded both confusing and unappealing, so I didn't book. But still time if it sounds worth seeing. I was surprised about how funny it was. But for sure, needs a trigger warning. It wasn't confusing I thought
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Post by Forrest on Nov 20, 2021 9:18:50 GMT
I loved this! The text itself is both funny and really sad, but the concept is the bit that I found brilliant: you can always rely on Mitchell to explore and push the boundaries of theatre, dropping it on an unsuspecting audience at Hampstead Downstairs. {Spoiler - click to view} Or in this case, let them cosy up in their seats and then, in essence, make them watch a radio-drama performed in front of them. I just... *insert various expressions of awe* The audience last night was so immersed in it, you could have heard a fly buzzing if there was one in the room! Simply fantastic. Wish I could go again now, but it's sold out for the remainder of the run, which is making me both a little sad and really happy because I want as many people as possible to see it.
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Post by londonpostie on Nov 25, 2021 22:28:16 GMT
Lost track of time here this afternoon. Rattled along nicely. Agree with the general sentiments expressed.
The one difficulty I found, after the first 30-minutes or so, was trying to associate an aspect of the mind with a performer, and how many aspects each performer represented: it's a bit inconvenient when your own inner voices clash with a number of other inner voices externally expressed - but that might have been me and my attraction to pattern recognition.
High quality peformances. Loved the physical and aural sense of intimacy. Loved the rhythms.
They seem to have shaved it down to a max of 1 hour 35. Have asked if there is a playtext.
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Post by G on Nov 26, 2021 0:02:02 GMT
The one difficulty I found, after the first 30-minutes or so, was trying to associate an aspect of the mind with a performer, and how many aspects each performer represented: it's a bit inconvenient when your own inner voices clash with a number of other inner voices externally expressed - but that might have been me and my attraction to pattern recognition. I tried to do the same and gave up. I don't think that any of them could be identified with a specific facet of the mind in a stable manner. It was brilliant. Reading a few pages of the novel online (with a very peculiar layout of words on the page) made me seasick I'm sorry to say (also I was on the tube so maybe that was the reason). I think theatre was the perfect medium for this.
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Post by londonpostie on Nov 26, 2021 0:28:47 GMT
Oh, I'll look that up. Thanks.
rightly or wrongly, I assume Mitchell doesn't do random and so the associations - or rather the frustration of not picking out the voices - became a distrction to the performance.
I sort of worked with the idea there was a left-to-right thing happeneing with the performers but, tbh, I just dropped it in favour of immersing myself in the world.
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Post by zahidf on Jan 9, 2023 11:28:18 GMT
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Post by cavocado on Jan 9, 2023 12:17:03 GMT
Thanks for the info. I liked this a lot at Hampstead. Also good to see the New Diorama back open.
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Post by Steve on Jan 12, 2023 18:16:40 GMT
Probably my favourite thing of all the things I've seen in the Hampstead Downstairs space. As long as you're ok with 4 different actors reflecting different aspects of one woman's personality, this is just the most intense and emotional trip into one woman's head. For me, Katie Mitchell at her least technologically tricksy and most emotionally open. Absolutely brilliant. Very highly recommended, for me, based on Hampstead, anyway. Will definitely see it again.
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Post by zahidf on Jan 12, 2023 22:39:37 GMT
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Post by Steve on Apr 13, 2023 22:08:07 GMT
Saw this tonight and it's terrific, with 4 wonderful actors acting out the thoughts of a day in the life of the protagonist. In an unassuming way, it's something of a cross between Complicite's "The Encounter," which used audio technology and foley effects to feed intimate thoughts inside your head, and "A Little Life," which stages traumatic thoughts and events, but for me, it works better than both. Some spoilers follow. . . 4 spotlit actors, standing in front of 4 microphones, play one person's thoughts, occasionally using foley effects to create sounds. They sometimes speak alone, sometimes in varying combinations, and sometimes all at once. The effect is very much to mirror the myriad, often contradictory, raucous rush of thoughts that invade our consciousnesses. The story told doesn't come close objectively to the level of trauma depicted in "A Little Life," but the "little scratch" of the title is undoubtedly a coping mechanism in the same vein that more extreme coping mechanisms are used in "A Little Life." And the play benefits from not going over the top: it feels so much more universal than it's more extreme cousin, much closer to the anxieties and abuses inflicted on so many more women, and because the rush of thoughts is so convincingly acted, it feels revelatory and universal simultaneously. 3 of the actors here played the same parts at Hampstead Downstairs, and they are pitch perfect. The new actor, Rebekah Murrell, taking the place of Moronke Akinola, slots in perfectly. I see in the discussion above that some audience members wondered what part of the psyche each actor is playing, but I don't think it matters: it's the effect of the sheer rush of thoughts that 4 actors can portray that matters. Incidentally, I do think there is a pattern to who says what, and for what it's worth, my thoughts are that the 2 outer actors are the instant unfiltered reporters of the protagonist's thoughts: on the far left, Eve Ponsonby plays the character herself, reporting instantly her thoughts and feelings about every incident, instantly, without too much analysis. Meanwhile, on the far right, Ragevan Vasan also gives instant reports, but ones which are less about feelings, more about facts. The two central actors have a lot less to say because their utterances are about the very deepest feelings and thoughts of the character, maybe like an Id and a superego, with Eleanor Henderson on the centre left revealing the most primal uncontrollable childlike feelings of the character, and Rebekah Murrell giving the thoughtful rationalisations and potentially optimistic hopes of the character. At Hampstead, Moronke Akinola found more humour in the protagonist's self-analysis, whereas Murrell plays it straight, avoiding any archness. Both approaches worked powerfully for me. Eve Ponsonby, with the most lines, and reported thoughts, perfectly embodies the frantic moment to moment of a day in the life of someone scarred by trauma, her casual rapidfire both endearing and unnerving; and when the deep-voiced emotion-ravaged Henderson lets loose the protagonist's most primal internal narrative, her deepest most uncontrollable fears and desires, this concert of one person's daily thoughts becomes overwhelmingly moving and powerful. This is a brilliant and revelatory piece of theatre, I feel, if you're up for the unconventional premise and setup. 5 stars from me. PS: we were out at 9:05pm, so the advertised running time of 1 hour 35 minutes, without an interval, is correct.
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Post by zahidf on Apr 13, 2023 23:18:11 GMT
Saw this a second time tonight. This was still great I thought, with some laughs in an intense show. Definitely recommended to try and watch in this run!
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Post by alessia on Apr 22, 2023 6:02:52 GMT
Maybe it's me (from reviews, it's definitely me!) but I didn't love this. I only had a very vague idea of what it was about and I was prepared for something different which didn't help. I can't quite put my finger on why it did not work for me...could be that it's four actors rather than just one...or the use of microphones which make it more 'staged', or the 4 of them just looking at one spot above the audience's head the whole time. Whatever it was, I did not really feel either moved or engrossed. I also found myself wondering at the events narrated, and thinking mmm, would you go to work the day after (i says in the blurb that it is the day after, although I find this very hard to believe/buy into) this has happened to you, where the guy also works? mmm. Anyway, it was an interesting evening and first time I visited the New Diorama, so that was good.
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