Search results for 'animal farm' (3)

by Heather Jeffery 12 July 2024
'This is edge of the seat stuff' ★★★★ ½ This is a chance to see two of George Orwell’s most iconic novels, brilliantly adapted for the stage, at one sitting (or book each show separately). Running at a total of 2 hours 40 mins (with a 20 mins interval), it’s a real theatrical treat. 1984 is being premiered with Animal Farm which has already been on tour to Europe and been awarded ‘best adaptation’ (London Pub Theatre Awards 2023). 1984 It is superbly directed by Paul Stebbings who also adapted the novel with co-writer Phil Smith. This is edge of the seat stuff, and somehow manages to feel upbeat. The through line of the story is undoubtedly the love story between Winston and Julia, it feels like a monument to the human capacity for love. There is perhaps a question here about whether love is about sex and hormones or something far deeper. The show opens with the scenes of torture, and as the audience hasn’t yet grown to love any of the characters, there is no fellow feeling or empathy. Those of us who know the novel really well are waiting for Winston to do what he knows his tormentors want, to tell them to “do it to Julia” instead. It doesn’t happen, instead the story jumps backwards in time to their first sighting of each other. Their love story then unfolds beautifully with all the peripheral characters coming into their lives showing the challenges they face. Their seniority in this post-apocalyptic surveillance society, doesn’t bring them any comforts. Those in the proletariat landscape are better off, with some loveliness to look at, including those artefacts from a bygone age in Mr Charrington’s shop, such as creamy good quality paper, a diary for writing secrets. The diary that Winston purchases, seeming to be the only luxury and joy in his life, alongside his escapism with Julia. Committing thought crime writing ‘down with Big Brother’ in the diary and renting the room above Mrs Charrington’s shop for his love affair with Julia. The pair are duped, believing that they are part of a resistance, but they are shopped to the authorities. We’re back in the torture room and the expected response comes from Winston. Ultimately, we see that there is no resistance possible, and this is the bleak ending to the show. The world that Orwell imagines in 1984, contains such phrases as ‘doublethink’ and ‘hate speech’. Winston’s job at Oceania’s Ministry of Trust, is records editor. The kind of work that he is expected to do is to dress up bad news as good news. The chocolate rations were at 30 percent and will now be 25 percent. This terrifies Winston’s colleague as he doesn’t know how to present this in a positive light. Well, today’s advertisers could help Winston’s colleague with this. They are on a seven-year cycle. Sell a candy at a set price, which over the years gets smaller and smaller, then back to the original size, at a much higher price (on special offer for a short time) and off you go again. Actor Jack Herlihy, as Winston, delivers his lines with cynicism tinged with disgust and bitterness. He comes across as intelligent and being internally opposed to the system, even though he is too afraid to openly object. He continues the work of the ministry, without having any belief in the regime’s ideals. Others rather chillingly embrace the system. There is wonderful acting from the team showing the gamut of human nature from those who play the system to those who suffer the consequences of resisting. The cast should also be commended on their singing voices, and the songs, or perhaps more correctly, anthems, were a welcome addition giving light relief and entertainment (music and sound score by Christian Auer). The set appears to be recycled from the structural set used in Animal Farm. It adapts well to the Big Brother screens which are a feature of this dystopian society. There is no escape from being observed. Another little touch in the play, right at the start an actor is using his opposable thumbs hammering away on a mobile phone which neatly reminds us of privacy issues. We’ve often said that elements of 1984 are uncomfortably close to our reality today. The story brings home the importance of freedom of speech, but Paul Stebbings has also highlighted many other things that we value, such as the freedom to love and the freedom to enjoy beautiful things. Read our review of Animal Farm here 1984 and Animal Farm - A George Orwell Double Bill at Golden Goose Theatre, Camberwell SE5 9 - 20 July 2024 Box Office https://www.goldengoosetheatre.co.uk/whatson/animal-farm-and-1984---a-george-orwell-double-bill 1984 Cast Jack Herlihy - Winston Smith Ellen Victoria - Julia Bruno Roubicek - O'Brien Tom Vercnocke - Parsons/Charrington Avena Mansergh-Wallace - Mavis/Prostitute/Washerwoman 1984 Creative Team Paul Stebbings - Director Paul Stebbings and Phil Smith - Writers Christian Auer - Music and Sound Score
by Heather Jeffery 12 July 2024
'gets to the heart of Orwell’s political fable but also brings something new' ★★★★ This is a chance to see two of George Orwell’s most iconic novels, brilliantly adapted for the stage, at one sitting (or book each show separately). Running at a total of 2 hours 40 mins (with a 20 mins interval), it’s a real theatrical treat. Animal Farm has already been on tour to Europe and been awarded ‘best adaptation’ (London Pub Theatre Awards 2023). The company now returns with their premiere of 1984 in this double bill. Animal Farm Adapted by Paul Stebbings and directed by Gaspard Legendre, with two new cast members, Bastian Tyrko and Jack Herlihy, the show gets to the heart of Orwell’s political fable but also brings something new. We well remember the novel satirising the events of Russia’s Bolshevik revolution and subsequent betrayal of the people. In animal farm, the animals rebel and take over the farm. The clever pigs under the benign leadership of Snowball, promise seven commandments including ‘no animal shall kill another animal’ and ‘all animals are equal’. Eventually these phrases are adapted by the scheming pig, Napoleon, by adding a condition, ‘no animal shall kill another animal without cause’ and ‘all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others’. While all the other commandments are also shown to be overruled. Bringing a particular spin on the production, the story is brought up to date with mention of ‘chicken nuggets’, confusing the chickens as they don’t even have ‘nuggets’. Taking the tone from Orwell’s timeless allegorical masterpiece it explores human nature (personified in the animals), particularly highlighting their greed and love of power but also their cruelty, the obscene treatment of animals. Those of us who still eat meat, might pause and think more deeply about animal welfare. The show brings out the great suffering and injustice, but what lifts the mood is the treatment and the acting. Brechtian devices such as placards and short scenes are used, giving a very upbeat pace to the show. It has a very adaptable set, which is often pulled apart and remade, to suggest a barn, a windmill, and other farm buildings. The actors taking on the roles never totally lose sight of their human appearances but the suggestion of the animals they represent is very strong. It’s not possible here to mention all of these excellent players, but only the most striking. Tony Wadham as Old Major, the revolutionary pig (who is shot) and Boxer, the enormous carthorse, helped to bring poignancy to the work. He gave a very convincing performance as the hardworking horse, whose role in life is to work and not to think. This animal remembers how the revolution promised good things and questions the lies, but allows himself to be hoodwinked, making his death, a particularly bitter betrayal. Bastian Tyrko managed to convey much, as an exceptionally expressive dog, and Janiks Babidorics made a really chilling Napoleon becoming more gentrified as the piece went on. Golden Goose is a very informal space, and just the place for such provocative theatre. Read our review of 1984 here Animal Farm and 1984 - A George Orwell Double Bill at Golden Goose Theatre, Camberwell SE5 9 - 20 July 2024 Box Office https://www.goldengoosetheatre.co.uk/whatson/animal-farm-and-1984---a-george-orwell-double-bill Animal Farm Cast Tony Wadham - Boxer/Old Major Gerald Dorrity - Snowball/Whymper/Goose Bastian Tyrko - Dog/Squealer Jack Herlihy - Farmer Jones/Cow/Crow Janeks Babidorics - Napoleon Animal Farm Creative Team Gaspard Legendre - Director Paul Stebbings - Writer John Kenny - Music
by Nilgin Yusuf 9 July 2023
‘a rumbustious, riotous revolution of a play’★★★★  After a five month tour of Europe, Adge-Tnt & Theatre du Heron’s production of George Orwell’s classic, Animal Farm, has notched up 160 performances in 14 countries. This rumbustious, riotous show (140 mins with an interval) had its closing performances in Camberwell’s Golden Goose Theatre, a South London venue, established in 2020 that has hosted a run of thought-provoking plays by many award-winning theatre companies. The all-male ensemble of Animal Farm: Kevin Martin Murphy, Gerald Dorrity, Tony Wadham, Janeks Babidoriks and John Fagan are a loud, hairy lot and take on literature’s masterpiece with energy and passion. Paul Stebbing’s adaptation brings the text up to date with references to fake news and chicken nuggets while the direction by Gaspard Legendre is spare, witty and dark. With a stripped down minimal production, the stage is set up with a pair of metal framed beds. This modular set solution is reformed and repurposed into battlegrounds, pubs, barns, chicken coops and a windmill. The audience are invited to participate in this funny and moving re-telling of Animal Farm by activating their imaginations. We must believe a pillowcase is a dead sheep or gossiping chicken. And when the same chicken/pillowcase is hung for treason, we feel great sadness. The cast do a tremendous job of evoking both the animal and human characters at the heart of the story as well as the machinations of power that propel the story forward. Using their bodies and voices, they huff, bray, moo and honk through the drama, transporting audiences to this flawed animal utopia. Secret Agent Cat slithers sinuously. Packhorse Boxer lumbers and labours but doesn’t do “thinking”. Comrade Dog is a flurry of wild movement and savage teeth-baring. The inept humans meanwhile are usually pickling their livers in the pub and having some fun with the audience in the process, speaking to them directly and drawing them into their action - or inaction. It’s a sad indictment that George Orwell’s classic, written in 1943, eventually published in 1945, is as relevant today as when it was penned. This short allegorical fable of an animal uprising remains a depressing indictment of human greed and self interest and speaks far beyond Stalin’s totalitarian regime, the original inspiration. We see aspects of Animal Farm in all stratas of society, industry and politics, nationally and internationally and, this theatrical interpretation is a worthy addition to the canon. It illustrates in a bold, vigorous way, how power structures operate and, how vulnerable democracy is to its insistent, insidious creep. ANIMAL FARM at Golden Goose Theatre 4 – 8 July 2023 Presented by Adge-Tnt & Theatre du Heron https://theatreduheron.fr/spectacles/animal-farm Reviewed by Nilgin Yusuf