1,250 posts
|
Post by joem on Feb 23, 2022 14:00:53 GMT
Another coming of age play - they seem to be all over the place in London at the moment - this one by Sonali Bhattacharrya. Two sisters with different problems; Asha is 17 and struggling with political concepts, Bettina is younger and having her pocket money taken from her on the school bus. Bettina asks Asha for help and the former then has to think about how she can apply her political concepts into practical methods.
A problem with two-handers with big themes is how do you introduce these themes into the play without it involving obvious artifice or an excess of informed monologues? Especially when both characters are on different vibes? Well, that is one of the issues here. Asha's investigations, particularly into the disputes between Gandhi and the Dalit leader Ambedkar and trying to find links with this and the suffragette agenda in UK, are very interesting, but can only be delivered as monologues to the audience as the only other character in the play is clearly not interested.
Ticked all the right boxes but somehow doesn't sparkle. Yes it's trying to tie in battles of the past with struggles of today but sometimes tried too hard. There's nothing wrong with the but the relationship actually drags the play down. You want to learn more about the politically conscious Asha rather than the smaller picture.
The Orange Tree's summary of the play with "warnings" is really daft. If everyone were to read it the auditorium would be permanently empty. No-one would need to see the play.
|
|
427 posts
|
Post by dlevi on Feb 24, 2022 9:13:05 GMT
I think Joem is being kind about the play and the production (not that there's anything wrong with that); I think it's a bad play. All of the important virtually all the action of the play takes place off-stage with characters we never meet - the teacher, the mother etc. The play is awkwardly staged and the setting is completely generic. The two performances are clearly well-intentioned but they aren't particularly interesting. And the small all-white audience which was present at the performance I attended was clearly bored. Paul Miller has done a great job of "modernizing" the Orange Tree with putting contemporary works alongside Edwardian ones. But I felt this was a case of political correctness and not theatrical necessity.
|
|
63 posts
|
Post by pledge on Feb 24, 2022 11:13:42 GMT
It began life as a twenty-minute or so "short" - which may explain why it starts to flag after fifty minutes or so, relying as has been said on off-stage action and cast narration- an annoying feature of a lot of new plays at this venue. The two performances are impeccable, and I can see that this would appeal a lot to younger audiences, but I fear that more mature viewers will not find it a particularly satisfying evening...
|
|
1,867 posts
Member is Online
|
Post by Dave B on Mar 5, 2022 9:57:07 GMT
Last shows cancelled with a case of Covid in the cast. We were due this afternoon. Email from OT yesterday afternoon and they followed up with a phonecall early evening so good work on communicating it out.
|
|
|
Post by imstillhere on Jun 27, 2022 10:15:39 GMT
This will be returning in the upcoming season.
|
|