Saturday 31 March 2012

Blood and Ice (Mary Shelley and Frankenstein)


A play about the creator of Frankenstein would seem an excellent way to spend an evening here in deepest darkest Larkhall... For three nights only Rondo Theatre Company Productions’ ‘Blood and Ice’ by Liz Lochhead directed by Lisa Thrower explores the tumultuous and tragic life of Mary Shelley and the extraordinary people who influenced her.
The core of the story is the infamous summer of 1816, the ‘Year without a Summer’ when eighteen-year-old Mary Shelley nee Godwin (Bex Key), her lover the poet Percy Bysshe Shelly (Tim Hounsome), and her step-sister Clare Clairmont (Lucy Brownhill) were joined by Lord Byron (Matt Nation) at the Shelleys home on shores of Lake Geneva Switzerland. As a means of entertaining themselves during the largely dreary weather, Byron issued a legendary challenge to see who could write the most terrifying ghost story. Mary’s answer was Frankenstein, published anonymously in 1818. While the play looks back at this particular summer we are invited to watch events where Mary is haunted by her own creation, racked by guilt at events and scandals that surrounded her romance with Shelley, and the many tragedies that followed. Through flashbacks and dream-like soliloquies Mary takes us to a time when she was passionate and idealistic in stark contrast to a present where she is near broken, grief-stricken and completely demoralised.
Lochhead’s play revised numerous times since its first production in 1982 had me googling some fascinating facts and historic figures as soon as I got back to the DeafboyOne cave! What’s more, these are people who seem to have epitomised the conflict between intellectual fervour gone mad and the skewing of social norms for the period. These were the original New Romantics, the New Enlightment figures of their time. These cerebral explorers lived their lives of sex, drugs and passionate philosophical discussion. "It was a world where men played around, women got pregnant and everyone died..." 

Blood and Ice
By Liz Lochhead
28th – 31st March 2012
8:00pm
The Rondo
St Saviours Road
Larkhall, Bath BA1 6RT


Regards DeafboyOne

Monday 27 February 2012

Murder we wrote...

Move over Dahrlink...
Come into my world for a second would you...?
Its a sultry grey summers day in June 1926... the 8th of June to be exact... Newspaper headlines tell me Thomas Edison has just died in his sleep, Al Capones been convicted by a Jury... and I receive tickets for 'Summertime Surprise' starring Miss Daisy Duncan and Funny Freddy Finlay with The Duncan Dancers, Magic Bruce Meeres, The Flying Turnbulls, Carol Brunt and her Performing Puppies, the Andy Nobes Orchestra and Miss Violet Radcliffe... at the 1805 Club Theatre Royal Bath... to commence no later than 7.30pm prompt that evening...

So with top hat and tails I saunter off down ye olde London Road for a gander of events which  includes evening supper, couple of glasses of red and a damn good chin wag with friends... Its all going to be a jolly good 'do' I surmise... When I arrive everyone is dressed up in latest 1920s fashion garb... fabulous... there were feather boas, girls in pearls and flapper dresses... and the latest sensation... one Daisy Duncan... the new "starlet" so her agent tells me... looked absolutely divine flashing her sparkling smile and fluttering those twinkling eyes...
Her Agent being none other than Archie Mulloy Junior... a loud American intent on making money out of the new invention 'Talkies'... Daisy remaining absolutely fabulous in every conceivable way of course... Little did I know the events that were about to unfold...

It was a Murder Mystery evening you see... the suspects were as follows... Daisy Duncan- Starlet... Archie Mulloy Jr - Agent... Charles De Montford - Investor... Lady Lydia Ponsonby - Fiance of Charles... Cyril Prenderghast - Agent... and Violet Radcliffe - Star... Each character came amongst us... communicated their musings and we found it amusing... it was good to share... The Menu: Pork and cider stew with an apple mash and seasonal vegetables followed by profiteroles under a warm dark chocolate sauce... I must say... we were salivating...

The plot unfolded before our very eyes.... Watching carefully I saw clues dropping like flies throughout the evening... We could question the suspects as much as we wished... but were advised not to believe anything communicated... At the end of the evening we were asked in turn, by table, to give our reasons for why the MURDER (that we were witness to!) had taken place, how and by whom... it was absolutely bloomin marvellous! Hear Hear... So looking forward to the next Interactive Murder Evening...
                                   THE SEVERAL UNUSUAL SUSPECTS OF THE NIGHT...
                           DAISY DUNCAN a loveable narcissicist who demands your attention...
                                CYRIL PRENDERGHAST the ebullient Gatecrasher...
CAPTIVE AUDIENCE MEMBERS STEVE AND MARJORIE...
     VIOLET RADCLIFFE an uninvited star in her own right with a distinctive singing voice...
                  LADY LYDIA PONSONBY dripping with jewels the impatient fiance...
                      CHARLES DE MONTFORD wheeler dealer investor extraordinaire...
 
ARCHIE MULLOY JR loud brash American dragging the world into 20th Century with his talkies...

CONCLUSION...
Set in the 1920s, the plot revolved around the theatrical lives of actors, dancers, singers and their agents. Murder had never been such fun... Fancy dress was optional but welcomed and could be as simple as a feather in the hair for the ladies or a bow-tie for the gents… Keep your eyes peeled for the next Interactive Murder Evening at 1805 Rooms Theatre Royal Bath. Simply homicidal!

Do come again... Murder has never been so much fun...move over dahrlink...

Regards DeafboyOne