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"Patsy Byrne is Dead! (Bitch Eat Bitch)". Pilch

Walking into the Pilch to see Patsy Byrne is Dead! (Bitch Eat Bitch) is like stepping into the biggest dressing-up box in the world. Glitter hangs from every surface, mutely yelling ‘Fame is meaningless tat!’ – a neat summary of this play’s underlying message, that success without talent or hard work is as insignificant and hollow as a swathe of tawdry party decoration. Behind the glittery facade is a blank, featureless wall. This is both the truth and the ever-present fear that stalks the lives of ‘nepo-babies’: those who benefit from well-connected parents. They know they’ve got some talent. But they suspect it might not be enough to bring them the roles and rewards they relish. The evil of theatrical nepotism is not that it heaps fame and fortune on talentless twerps, but that it gently and continuously tips the scales in favour of those who don’t quite deserve it. And while they prosper, more deserving actors live a life of rejection. It's a fascinating moral grey area to ex

"Tess". Oxford Playhouse

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This review was written for Daily Information, and appears on their website here .  Welcome to the 100 th President’s Husband’s Review. I decided to celebrate by… going to the theatre. There can’t be many theatre companies like Ockham’s Razor. They combine physical performance and circus skills to create bold, distinctive, beautiful experiences. They tell stories of human suffering, love, tragedy and emotional honesty, and they express all that through the medium of human pyramids, tumbling, rope-work, and even the occasional bit of clowning. Don’t expect red noses, enormous shoes or lion-tamers though. This is serious art, not Billy Smart. Ockham’s Razor’s latest production is Tess , an adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s tragic 19 th -century novel Tess of the D’Urbervilles . Even with a cast of only seven (almost supernaturally gifted) performers, the stage seems constantly full of activity as they roll, dance and climb over planks, walls and each other. The story is narrated by just one

"The Maid's Metamorphosis". Magdalen Auditorium.

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Outside the cloistered confines of academia, you may never have heard of ‘boys’ companies’. But back in Shakespeare’s day they were all the rage: theatrical troupes made up entirely of eight- to twelve-year-old kids. They had their own plays specially written for them. They were sometimes sponsored by the more established companies like The Lord Chamberlain’s Men. And playwrights like Ben Jonson and John Lyly would even use them to create satirical pieces mocking each other’s work, leading to Elizabethan-style battles of the theatrical bands, played out by lovably energetic Mini-Mes. They were so popular that, as Professor Laurie Maguire points out, in Hamlet the travelling players actually complain that they can’t compete with these little tykes who ‘cry out on the top of question, and are most tyrannically clapped for't: these are now the fashion.’ Like all fashions, boys’ companies didn’t last. By 1615 the fad had passed. But it left a legacy of plays that offer a quirky and fa

The President's Husband's Drama Review of the Year

Who decides when the year begins and ends in creative circles? It’s a meaningless marker. The Oscars, in March, don’t coincide with any kind of new life in the film industry. The Oliviers, in April, probably have more to say about the end of the West End financial year than the artistic one. And yet, in Oxford, there is something about the end of Hilary term. For many who have devoted their three undergraduate years to theatre, it’s the point when they put away their audition tapes and M&S sharing buckets of chocolate cornflake mini-bites (or whatever treats they like to bring to rehearsals) and settle down to focus on Finals. The old guard passes on. And Trinity feels like a new birth: plays sprout up in college gardens like young saplings, and a new OUDS committee looks to the future. So what better time for the President’s Husband’s Drama Review of the Year, taking in productions from May 2023 to March 2024? It’s been a year of astonishing output for Oxford student drama, with m

"The Trail to Oregon". Pilch. Review by Katie Kessler

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The Trail to Oregon has perhaps one of the most alienating premises imaginable to an audience of British Gen-Zers: a comedy musical based on an edutainment video game from the 1970s about the Oregon Trail. When I first watched it on YouTube, in a free-to-view full pro shoot just like every other StarKid production, I had no clue about the inspiration behind it. I was perfectly happy to go along with whatever this oddly conceived thing was, based on my familiarity with the theatre company and my trust that they’d deliver something entertaining. It was on the same basis that I came to The Mollys’ production of Oregon : familiar with the play and the people who made it originally, I was primed to root for a student-mounted version of it. And I was right to do so. The story of Oregon is one of a family of five: two parents, two kids and a grandpa, who leave their farm in Missouri to trek the dangerous Oregon Trail and seek their fortune. As these are video game characters, the audience has

"The Drifters Girl". New Theatre

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This review was written for The Reviews Hub, and appears on their website here . Of all the pop music of the late 60s, none more joyfully captures the new vision of racial harmony generated by the US civil rights movement than that of The Drifters. Their music is a carefree celebration of the simple things in life, which young black people had been unable to enjoy in earlier decades: going to the movies, sitting wherever they wanted to sit, making out on beaches, lying on the roof looking at the stars; in short, just enjoying the novelty of free time. Their iconic album cover from 1973’s Greatest Hits sums up their naïve appeal: a comic-book-style collection of panels depicting a young man enjoying life (complete with chauvinistic tropes only too common at the time). That innocent pleasure persists to this day. At the last count there were at least 20 Drifters-style bands working the British tribute circuit, including The Ultimate Drifters, Let’s Drift and Soul Kinda Wonderful. In fac

"The Sun King". Burton Taylor Studio

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In the hallowed halls of English literary analysis, allegory often gets a bad press. ‘This’ means ‘That’. ‘X’ means ‘Y’… Readers who yearn for a more nuanced, impressionistic view of life tend to turn their noses up at it. The Chronicles of Narnia are a perfect example. What could have been a flight of purest fantasy becomes a clunkily prosaic piece of doggerel as soon as you start realising that Aslan = Jesus and White Witch = Satan. But children know the truth. Children know that the secret of enjoying allegory is to forget or – better still – never to realize that it means something else; to enjoy the symbolism not for what it means but for what it is : a magical lion, a Green Knight, a corrupt pig. Symbolism can be beautiful and enticing, and once you stop worrying about what the symbols actually mean, you can truly appreciate their unreal beauty. That unreality is what The Sun King invites us to dive into . Uğur Özcan’s long, meditative play has at its heart a child: a young bo