The Miser

March 2, 2010

In August 2009 I directed Moliere’s  The Miser at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manachester

, .The Miser review British Theatre  Reviews

simon gregor and derek griffith

A Tender Thing

March 2, 2010

In November 2009 premiere of Ben Power’s A Tender Thing for the RSC (Newcastle Season).

Review in The Guardian A Tender Thing

Innocence

March 2, 2010

This was at the Arcola Jan- Feb 2010

Review from Time Out

By Andrzej Lukowski Posted: Tue Jan 12 2010

‘I want mirrors to stop’, howls young immigrant Elisio, as he, too, finally succumbs to the madness that grips everything in German playwright Dea Loher’s extraordinary 2003 drama. As with much of ‘Innocence’, a clear meaning to his words is never established. But this piece has a mirrorlike quality, reflecting Western decay without judging it, no more accusing than a pane of polished glass.

It

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‘I want mirrors to stop’, howls young immigrant Elisio, as he, too, finally succumbs to the madness that grips everything in German playwright Dea Loher’s extraordinary 2003 drama. As with much of ‘Innocence’, a clear meaning to his words is never established. But this piece has a mirrorlike quality, reflecting Western decay without judging it, no more accusing than a pane of polished glass.

It begins as the streetsmart Elisio and his friend Fadoul witness a woman silently drowning herself in the ocean. As Elisio tries to grasp what happened, a chance encounter leads Fadoul into a relationship with Absolute, a blind, brittle stripper. In a clean, poetic translation from David Tushingham, Loher’s drama proceeds to embark upon a blackly comic ramble through dark places. The plot splinters into myriad parallel stories: a spinster is compelled to pose as the mother of murderers; a crazed philosopher shrieks wisdom and idiocy; a malign mother-in-law forces herself upon her family like a fat, poisonous parasite; an undertaker who takes corpses home.

For more than two hours Loher barrages us with these images, and yet ‘Innocence’ resolutely remains a pleasure. Helena Kaut-Howson’s production is playful and well played, often laugh out loud funny and wearing the fourth wall lightly indeed. It avoids portentousness because Loher’s script gives us credit enough not to need to explain everything: there’s no sense of the playwright pointing her finger and saying ‘this is why things became so bad’. ‘Innocence’ is the worst of our society reflected in a cracked mirror, a society riddled with death and insanity, false gods and entropy, blindness of every kind. But Loher doesn’t grumble, just cocks an ironic grin: it’s our chaos – we might as well enjoy it

Hello world!

March 2, 2010

Welcome to my blog!


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