Fittings Multimedia Arts | Krazy Kat |Royal Exchange Theatre: Edmund the Learned Pig

This performance is placed in a sideshow carnival circus world, and is presented by Fittings Multimedia Arts, a Liverpool based disability led arts organisation – most of the spoken word is also signed by Kinny Gardner and Caroline Parker, Sally Clay playing the bearded lady on the keyboards is sight impaired and Garry Robson plays The Boss ringmaster character from his wheelchair.

The performance begins with a funeral – Edmund’s life has ended and the story of his life begins. The show is down on its luck – the aerialist has vertigo, the tattooed lady Missus has nothing to cook apart from Mr Mesmo’s performing doves and is considering taking up cutlery throwing. The arrival of a clever talking pig – puppeteered and voiced by Anthony Cairns – means a potential lucrative new act. Edmund is on a mission, however, given to him by his mum: find out where all his older brothers and sisters have gone.

Full of entertaining turns, songs, acts and mysteries to solve, this show packs a lot into a relatively short time. The centre of the show is Edmund, who moves from humble ingenue to big-headed star, innocent creature to aficionado of George Orwell’s Animal Farm. A series of placards regularly changed at the side of the stage provides the story chapters – and if there isn’t an illustrated book for children to accompany this show, there should be to help the audience remember everything that has happened. There is no single stand-out performance as the cast and crew work as an ensemble to create this show, with individual turns for each of the character acts.

At one stage Edmund is blindfolded as part of his act – a bold move that doesn’t quite work as the magic of the puppet is in his eyes and as soon as they are covered the puppeteer becomes too noticeable. There are some wonderful turns and sequences. Kinny Gardner delivers some hauntingly beautiful songs in a high-pitched contralto. Annette Walker as the silent Ariella is beautifully engaging, and provides the perfect wrap up to this powerfully engaging piece of theatre for all ages and abilities.

Gideon and Hubcap: The Gideon and Hubcap show

The tiny space of the Underbelly’s Wee Coo seems appropriate for a musical duo who tour by accepting invitations to play in the living rooms, sheds and social spaces of people recommended by previous audience members. Thus begins a night of songs sung in close harmony, including some wonderfully funny song lyrics; a huge variety of musical instruments played with skill; and comic gags and turns of all kinds.

Gideon is a ‘stove top’ country folk troubadour from a great American tradition with a fine singing voice and down-home charm that is downright dangerous. Hubcap is a bespectacled archaeologist of historical musicology with wit aplenty. The songs are so enjoyable to hear the audience hangs on every word, not wanting to laugh too much in case they miss the next line. Every so often the songs are interspersed with jingles for their ‘sponsors’, Johnson’s Edible Bugs.

This lovable musical duo isn’t afraid to go for the cheap and cheesy laugh or the almost corny visual joke, but neither are they afraid to lay down the most wickedly salacious lyric or expose their own flaws and vulnerabilities, taking outrageous risks in their endless varieties of props, instruments, routines and songs. This is Abbot and Costello meet Bob Hope and Bing Crosby; a Marx Brothers for the 21st century.

One cannot help but be charmed by this unpretentious pair of contemporary American vaudevillians, but sometimes it feels that they keep filling each moment with as many gags, pranks, witty lyrics and stunning musicianship in a youthfully determined effort to amuse and entertain. If, in a few years, Gideon and Hubcap are still presenting their living room music and entertainment show, it would be great to see them relying less on the props and gags and more on the beautiful, witty and poignant songs they do so well.

Robert Lepage / Ex Machina 887

Making Better Memories: Robert Lepage

Ex Machina’s 887 at the Edinburgh International Festival sparks fond memories and new resolutions for Michael Begg

My good friend Dimitri sent me a line from Moscow two nights ago. It was in response to a letter I had sent to him indicating that I had some difficult decisions to make. Decisions involving employment, and safety nets, and courage. He said: ‘If we could tell what the future held, it wouldn’t be the future, by definition.’

This is not a review. It is a memory. It is also a contrivance aimed at connection. Theatre is all about connection, a shared moment, or as Robert Lepage would have it, an occasion for friends to use the firelight to make tricks and stories emerge from the shadows.

Some things I want to remember. I want to remember because the older I get the more I realise that the well-tended memories that arise in text, in performance, in conversation, are the most tangible things in our lives. The only works of substance. Transient for sure, but we are transient. Our voices, through which we announce our very existence and our individual identity, are thin as air and escape the body in order to be heard.

Here is a memory from over twenty five years ago. I am in the company of a young film-maker from Toronto called Peter Mettler. He is here attending the Edinburgh Film Festival with a film called, I think, The Top Of His Head. Whilst here in Scotland he is continuing to work on a new project. This project is to capture performance elements, and some supporting context footage from around the country, in support of a theatre project by his fellow countryman Robert Lepage. The show was called Tectonic Plates, and I have vertiginous  memories of books piled on a floor being transformed into a city skyline at night reflected in water, and also of two grand pianos dancing with each other, folding into neat alignment, drifting away from each other, becoming continents right there on the floor of Glasgow Tramway.

I am thinking to myself: Where does that show now exist? The film was released in 1992 but I have never seen it. Anyway, it would be a different artefact. A different memory. Anyone else reading this remember the show? What moments do you recall? Can we get together and compile this collective memory into a single representation of the show? Who would direct? Who – in film terms – would get final cut? And once complete, would we recognise it?

 

Robert Lepage Tectonic Plates. Photo Claudel Huot

Robert Lepage Tectonic Plates. Photo Claudel Huot

 

After Tectonic Plates, Lepage founded Ex Machina and has, since then, continued to pursue a path of often astonishing vision. Seeking to fuse the vocabularies of cinema and theatre, bridging outré experimentalism with the open-hearted dedication of the traditional storyteller, dualism, juxtaposition or constant realignment of seemingly incompatible phenomena are always close to hand. In Tectonic Plates it had been the music of Chopin and the drift of continental plates. In The Geometry of Miracles it was the life and work of architect Frank Lloyd Wright and the philosophy of Armenian mystic Georges Ivanovich Gurdjieff. In 887 the shape shifting and volatile configuration of francophone and anglophone influences on his Quebecois upbringing.

Lepage informed my sense of story. These days, I cannot begin any work in earnest until there are two or three seemingly unconnected voices. From those voices the work emerges to find me. Then, and only then, is the work real.

Central to his expansion – expansion seems most appropriate for an artist who has successfully taken on Wagner’s Ring Cycle for the Metropolitan Opera and whose Lipsynch production runs to nine hours – is his full on embrace of technology and craft. His production company, Ex Machina, harbours a community of set designers, computer graphics experts, technicians and multimedia artists with scripts commonly arising not so much from a writer’s pen as from the exploratory sandpit of hints, sketches, dreams, and technological proposals, nurtured democratically from this multi-disciplinary group.

Lepage informed my sense of loneliness, and cast a light on my feeling of theatre as the best place for an artist not to be alone. My work is lonely. I work, when I can, in theatre to escape that loneliness.

Other memories stir. Memories of huge casts, and rolling mirrors that present a multiplicity of possible scenes, possible stages. The copyright attribution, in the published script for Ex Machina’s The Seven Streams of the River Ota, 13 names. The show ran over by two hours. But at least it ran. Elsinore, Lepage’s one-man take on Hamlet, buckled beneath the collective weight of its numerous technical difficulties and failed to run in Edinburgh.

Lepage informed my sense of failure. He somehow assured me that it was unfortunate, but valuable. Necessary, even.

 

Robert Lepage | Ex Machina 887

Robert Lepage | Ex Machina 887

 

In 887, Ex Machina’s formidable mastery of scenic transformation, lighting, and technology is placed in the service of Robert Lepage’s memory. Having witnessed, as a boy, his grandmother fall victim to Alzheimer’s, Lepage is keenly aware of the fragility of memory, and so here he is accorded the indulgence to build his memories – apartment blocks, his father’s taxi, his apartment kitchen, a room by room walkthrough of a childhood Christmas home, a library, whose collapsing shelves reveal other rooms in another home, a detailed – absurdly, beautifully so – representation of his taxi-driving father’s favourite soda bar. What a luxury, one reflects, to be able to take wood, paper, paint, photographs, news clippings, and physically construct memory. Only, of course, to further reflect that the expense, time, invention and energy applied to the task are ultimately in the service of a theatrical performance that will exist only for 2 hours and beyond that merely in stills, and the memories of those who attended.

Lepage worries that his cold-cut – the prefabricated obituary written in advance of a celebrity’s death in order to facilitate immediate publication – will do little to recognise his contribution of almost four decades to theatre. Why? Because theatre is a connection made live between people in a shared space in a shared moment. There is taste, smell, the immediacy of emotion and the thrill of invention and magic. That kind of memory lives in the mind. It cannot be boxed conveniently, literally or figuratively, or digitally. There is very little filmed and recorded evidence of his output.

‘If a tree falls in the wood and there is no-one there to film it on their iPhone… Does it really fall?’

All of his family photographs, all of the family records, packed into five boxes, would take up 1% of his cell phone memory, he offers. As if to illustrate the irony that there is nothing tactile about the handheld, he lifts the lid on a box with the handwritten scrawled label ‘Nöels’ and uses his phone camera to swoop us down into a tour of a childhood Christmas, moving from room to room in the lovingly crafted dollhouse, individually wrapped presents, costumed and painted figurines gathered around a pipe-cleaner tree. He finally appears as a giant head peering into the front room of his own childhood.

We do what we can to keep important memories alive. And that goes for collective, social and cultural memories as much as our individual histories. Lepage weaves his own childhood development into the complex and volatile fabric of the collective Quebecois consciousness. Such is the process by which Lepage picks into the tensions that framed his youth between separatists and federalists.

The victor writes the memories, and in the case of Canada, the victors – or those who sought to protect their own self interest first and foremost; who got to determine the flag. So, what was originally a poetically realised embrace of diversity and geography (three peoples – anglophile, francophile and indigenous – represented by three maple leaves, bordered by two blue oceans) became a harshly realised statement of oppression and victory – a single anglophile leaf in a field of English red.

Speak White, Michelle Lalonde’s incendiary damning of linguistic oppression at the heart of the separatist movement looms large through the show. As clear an example of creative act as resistance as one could hope to find. And one that lives on in print and in commemorative readings (and also on film here if you’d like to check this precious recording made in 1970).

Lepage has, I think, offered us an act of resistance. Resistance to the fallibility and frailty of memory. But more than this, he recognises the limitations of a theatrical mode that cannot be archived authentically, or held up for future posterity, and he announces loudly, clearly and in the most protesting terms possible that this is, nonetheless, what he does, this is what works, and in the instance of the performance passing into the audience to be carried forward in the privacy of their own memories, it’s all that matters right now.

For my part, he is the kind of theatre maker that I want to tell my kids about. He makes the moment at hand precious, vital. He honours tradition, craft and discipline whilst endlessly pouring new processes, new approaches, new vitality into the craft. ‘I am an ephemeral person,’ he has said. ‘I will be a forgotten theatre person.’

887, transitory as it is and has to be, rebellious in nature, substance and form, an elliptical beast that views a piece of technology as common as a smartphone more in terms of what it can offer to a live happening than as a feeble prosthesis for diminished and undervalued memories, is a show that I will remember, cherish even, for as long as I can.

Dear Dimitri, Late last night I made my decision. I kissed each of my children in their beds, said goodnight to my wife and went downstairs to pen my resignation to the academy. I pasted a photograph of Robert Lepage to a sheet of paper and wrote: ‘From Michael Begg, aged 49. I am leaving now, because this is what I want to do when I grow up. I want to make better memories.’

 

Robert Lepage/Ex Machina 887

Robert Lepage/Ex Machina 887

 

The European premiere of Ex Machina’s 887, written, directed and performed by Robert Lepage, played at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, 13–22 August 2015. See www.eif.co.uk

 

Lowri Jenkins - Invisible City

Lowri Jenkins: Invisible City

Lowri Jenkins - Invisible CityThis one-woman show written and performed by Lowri Jenkins is very simply staged using translucent vertical blue drapes and quite a lot of lemons. Chronicling a young woman’s transition from rural to big city life – through a series of phone calls to her mum, visits to the shop, and attempts to find work (and love) – Lowri Jenkins uses voice, physicality, voiceover, and lemons to create an internal and external portrait of the joys and difficulties of ‘transitioning’.

Lowri’s presentation is accomplished and completely engaging. She begins brilliantly haltingly right at the front of the stage, keeping the audience in a moment of high suspense before launching into her first conversation with her mother, whose voice we never get to hear ourselves. This device parallels and counterpoints beautifully with her visits to the shop, where all we get to hear is the increasingly absurd corporate announcements. Lowri’s face is a picture as she listens with excitement and innocence to the wonders of the loyalty card offer.

Increasingly struggling to hold herself together in her new environment, the movement choreography, text, and lighting all combine to create a build of anxiety and pressure which climaxes in the spurring and absurd image of lemons – which have been suspended above the stage (in shopping baskets) – raining down on the hapless girl. Soon Lowri finds herself forced to fictionalise – to start making up a great life and lovely boyfriend in a bid to keep her mother from finding out how tough she is finding everything. This show has enough dramaturgy to support the more expressionistic parts of the performance and keeps us on the edge of our seats from beginning to end.

Rough Magic - How to Keep an Alien - Photo by Mihaela Bodlovic

Rough Magic: How to Keep an Alien

Rough Magic - How to Keep an Alien - Photo by Mihaela BodlovicWriter and performer Sonya Kelly had a Dublin Fringe hit with The Wheelchair on my Face a few years ago, an autobiographical storytelling piece about her eyesight. A mix of stand-up and memoir, the show confirmed Kelly as a writer of wit, well able to connect to audiences’ hearts.

How to Keep an Alien is again based on real life. Kelly recounts her life’s love story – a chance meeting with ‘Kate from Queensland’ whilst working on a play. Kate’s visa was up a mere few weeks after their encounter, and so began an odyssey of immigration, deportation, head and heart getting constantly mixed up, and a fight against red tape.

Kelly is joined onstage by Justin Herbert ‘playing’ her stage manager. He provides her with props, cues the sound, and occasionally plays a variety of parts as well as offering a good talking to when necessary. His presence onstage, diligently following the script, lifts the piece from generic autobiographical storytelling to frame a pleasing theatrical form that’s always aware of itself. In a hilarious moment, Justin gets his own song – he almost steals the show.

But he can’t quite beat the Sonya and Kate love story. Kelly’s writing is pitch-perfect. Her self-awareness is paramount to her success, and she has it in spades. What could be a cloying and cheesy show becomes gloriously funny and quietly profound. Drawing on letters from Kate’s ancestors who emigrated from Ireland in the 1850s, their experiences in the immigration office (that throw up uncomfortable questions about the right to live somewhere), and searing honesty about the difficulties to love someone, Kelly gently weaves together a moving portrait of fighting tooth and nail for that love. The final sequence brings the real-life world into the theatre via projections of Sonya and Kate – I couldn’t help but well up.