This edgy play is best for fantasy and sci-fi fans decides Liz Vercoe.....
.... Otherwise, be prepared to feel uncomfortable. If you are too old to have absorbed much about Dungeons and Dragons or too young to have cut your post-apocalyptic teeth on the movie Soylent Green you might struggle with several of the references in this new 19-scene play by Alistair McDowall.That still might not matter if you remain intrigued by the unfolding (or, rather, rolling up) of the story. However, although it’s a story that drags you in with a punch you sometimes feel you are just hanging on in there because, ironically for a fantasy, the core of the story is not quite original enough.
Guy Rhys as Zeppo © Ben Clare
The Orange Tree stage has been transformed into a square drain; think of an abandoned lido paddling pool. Here we meet a bearded man with a leg brace wearing a filthy parka over vest and underpants. He’s chicken nugget-loving Zeppo, played on hyper-drive by Guy Rhys . With him is Egyptian-eyed Newcastle lass Ollie (captivating Nadia Clifford) who has come to Manchester to hunt for her missing sister. The third figure on stage is a silent woman in a dainty skirt and an octopus-head mask who must be fed chunky polyhedral dice.
For those in the know, which from sniggers seemed to be a great number of a young audience, the references have already started.
Over the next 100 minutes (no interval) we get to know Gale, an icy Madame with a secret in her laptop (played by Grace Thurgood); good-hearted prostitute Fay (Rebecca Humphries); Moe (Sean Rigby), a struggling security guard and part-time psychopath; and Charlie (Sam Swann), a disturbingly endearing weirdo with delusions of omnipotence. Oh and meek little Keaton (Annes Elwy) who befriends Charlie and who, you can’t help notice, wears the same clothes as octopus woman. |
Sarah Middleton as Keaton & Grace Thurgood as Gale © Ben Clare |
Liz Vercoe
November 18, 2014