Tuesday 16 November 2010

The London Word interview

Oooooooh just a little interview I did for The London Word, a rather cool online magazine, written by the delectable Miss Lottie O'Conor. She has grasped the essence of my often confused, often controversial self splendidly.
 

Hang on. Did I just go and self-promote?

Yup.
 
 

Tuesday 9 November 2010

Passion, The Donmar


THE show that everyone has been RAVING about. I wanted to see what all the fuss was about, naturellement. Passion is one Sondheim musical that I know nothing of. It is the winter flu of my musical theatre world - should I prepare for it and am I going to get it? WELL I went totally unprepared, not knowing the story, music, NO nothing not-a-thing, and I was READY to understand the secrets that lay beneath. Don't say that I'm not daring...
 
Director Jamie Lloyd has created a beautifully atmospheric production - lighting and audio are excellently and effectively employed to summon up beating, warm rain or daylight streaming through towering shutters, perfectly evoking the grandeur of 19th century Italy, where the story unfolds. An overall, haunted feel is created throughout the one-act production, with candles musting the air and costume designed to reflect the stark contrast between the masculine military austerity and the female blithe spirit.
Lloyd's direction is faultless. Movement is a sublime mixture of ethereal poise ruptured by measured, soldierly precision. The narrative is painted in the space romantically, with dream-like quality. Spellbinding moments occur as the all-male ensemble lend their combined voices to Sondheim's closely-knit harmonies.
 
Scarlett Strallen as the refined, lithe Clara floats balletically across the space, entertwining with synchronic scenes at the provincial army out-post as she reads and writes letters to her love, Giorgio. She is as graceful as ever.
 
David Thaxton's Giorgio however was rather too naive, leading my mind far too swiftly and easily to the predictable conclusion. HE.IS.DOOMED. (I imagine that I might not have been so quickly and innocently led astray myself. SCHOOL BOOK). However in 'No one Has Ever Loved Me' he displays a depth of performance that would have been welcome in his interpretation of Giorgio throughout the rest of the piece. 
 
Elena Roger, the minute ingenue, conjured up the haunted Fosca with powerful, disturbed affliction. Her delicate, exotic voice lilts so skillfully from piercing pain to soft despair and her slight frame commands attention and caution as the troubled and difficult Fosca in equal amounts. Fosca's 'Loving You' was disturbing, tender and quite simply wonderful. Here, Sondheim and lyricist James Lapine have superbly immersed themselves within the fragile neuroses of a woman. As that wise devil William Congreve said, 'Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.' Except Fosca is never quite as simple as this quote suggests. Hats off to Elena. She plays in 6D.

The piece, however, is flawed. Above all, this is a tale of love, as the title 'Passion' suggests. Yet, with a score that mostly sails upon one orchestral tide and timbre throughout, the passion feels somewhat overlooked in lieu of romantic sadness and longing. Whether it be at fault of the production or the piece, it is much more affecting to watch people struggle to rise above grief and pain. I rather fear that this epic tale, drenched in a gothic romanticism, allowed the collective cast to drown a little in theirs.
Sondheim's presentation of intertwined love affairs is tangible and studied for the most part, yet there is little comic relief in his composition. Rather, Sondheim has here focussed upon the serious side of love, but without any dramatic or notable musical climax. I felt that, in terms of musical composition, 'subtle' is the key word here. Thus, I remained in an emotional limbo, a kind of wishy-washy dream. Normally Sondheim is the master of musical ebbs and flows that govern emotion in his works. Yet, with only one exposed storyline in Passion, it evident that musical colour is limited.
 
Passion as an emotion is, alas, rarely a wishy-washy affair. Instead, it is achingly raw, and throws one left to right with little care for the consequences. This production remained steadfast, albeit true, to its path straight down the middle. Never quite reaching far enough out of its comfort zone.
 
Was 'PASSION' the passionate ache that I had hoped for? Sadly, no.

Friday 5 November 2010

Channelling Chanel

I'm a little bit in love with silent film actress Dorothy Janis. 
 

And oh how we all love Marlene.
Meine Damen Dietrich could very well step right on to any catwalk. 
She is a true androgynariun.
Yes I made that word up.
 
Chin up lads, but she was on it years ago. 



On that note...
Chanel adverts win, every time.





Thursday 4 November 2010

Three Little Maids

The game, my friends, is afoot! Word on the street is this. There will be a fancy free, pretty darn hot cabaret group called Three Little Maids, skulking around the cobbled lanes o' London Town. Tomorrow night. Twill be a dish fit for the gods. Now thereby hangs a tale...
Remember, remember the 5th of November... Believe, for, as good luck would have it, I am one of these Maids. I bear a charmed life, indeed.

Tom James Photography (2010)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
Boguslaw Maslak Photography (2010)


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  



We Three Little Maids are a musical trio composed of Kate, Alex and Jen, three well-bred fillies specializing in 1940s-style close harmony singing, with a certain ‘je ne sais quoi’. With a set of delicious and delicately- spiced songs – those familiar, those familiar-with-a-twist, and those as fresh and unweathered as our bonnie complexions – we create our own curious brand of cabaret. 
 
Interested? Dost this set your teeth on edge? Read more...
 

Tom James Photography (2010)















www.threelittlemaids.net

Go on, have a look at our website. Though this be madness, there is method in it. It's a fools paradise for retro-rebels, musical miscreants, jazz jockeys, and those who like a jolly good witticism. We are as merry as the day is long.

Come join us on our wild goose chase tomorrow night 5th November, 10.30pm at the Old Vic Pit Bar, The Cut, London.



Brevity is the charm of wit, so stiffen your sinews and prepare yourselves for short shrift and hot-blooded high time.

Now dost thou understand all that? For my part, it was all Greek to me.
If you are exceedingly well read, you may notice that fine master Shakespeare has made his mark on my mind today. Oh, he dost play the fool with the Queen's English! Such stuff as dreams are made on...Et tu, Brute.
 

Boguslaw Maslak Photography (2010)