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The hip-hop impro duo work 2012 comedy highlights into a freestyle rap.
The Shakespeare Olympics begin April 22 at the Globe
All life is crammed into a tiny, Trinidadian back yard in Errol John's bruising, brilliantly witty 1953 play. The inhabitants of five, down-at-heel rooms (lovingly rendered in Soutra Gilmour's weatherbeaten design) bicker, spit and tease tales from each other as they jostle around the single water tap, or the shared outhouse.
It's as hard to keep a secret as it is to starch your whites here, but dreams are nursed by all. Esther yearns to take up her scholarship at the big, expensive school; café- girl Rosa feels new life stirring in her belly; her lover, Ephraim, a terse trolley driver with unplumbed depths in Danny Sapani's magnetic performance, is only dreaming of his escape route to the old world.
It is the women who rule this space, and director Michael Buffong's stage. Jenny Jules's show-stoppingly bitchy hooker, Mavis, is engaged in an unceasing war with a foreboding matriarch, Martina Laird's frowsy, formidable cleaning lady, Sophia. Conducted through every raised eyebrow and tossed chin, their hostilities prove an unfailing delight. And, as Rosa's buoyant happiness begins to sag, what's at stake takes on a dreadful resonance.
Buffong draws every ounce of comedy from John's wonderfully precise, West-Indian dialogue. In his huge-hearted production we are always aware of the frustrated love, pasting this impoverished, post-war community together.
The play hasn't aged perfectly: its plotting creaks on occasion, there are few surprises, and some characters are not fully fledged. But the lead performances are simply firecracker fare and, as the pressure mounts and bruises blossom, this cramped, highly particular Trinidadian yard becomes a window onto deprivation everywhere.
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What is 'following'?As far as studio spaces go, the National Theatre's Cottesloe is up there with the best. Flexibly arranged over three levels (and with room for...
Read full venue reviewTransport Waterloo ,Waterloo
020 7452 3000
in rep, times and days vary; see magazine or venue website for details
£12-£32. In rep. Runs 2hrs 30mins
Wonderfully moving, magnificent performances from all the leading cast. Never seen an audience more gripped from start to finish.
Set evokes the claustrophobia of life in t the slums of Port of Spain. Performances , range from the good to the overdone, but they do bring back an earlier time and evoke thought.
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