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Jungle Book

  • Theatre, Circuses
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
  1. © Richard Davenport
    © Richard Davenport
  2. © Richard Davenport
    © Richard Davenport
  3. © Richard Davenport
    © Richard Davenport

    The Jungle Book 23rd April 2016 Photo Credit: Richard Davenport. richard@rwdavenport.co.uk. 07545642134

  4. © Richard Davenport
    © Richard Davenport
  5. © Richard Davenport
    © Richard Davenport
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Time Out says

3 out of 5 stars

This street circus take on Kipling's classic is a little edgy for a family audience

I’m lost in the jungle. Metta Theatre have shifted Rudyard Kipling’s classic children’s story onto the streets of London. Baloo is now a beat-boxing bin man, Bagheera a graffiti artist, Shere Khan a street gangster, and jungle-lad Mowgli – a feisty woman and a mean gymnast. They may or may not still be animals; it’s quite hard to tell. There’s such imagination in here, and heaps of brilliant circus and street dancing skills – but it’s also pretty baffling and perhaps a little too edgy (Sheere Khan mimics shooting poor Mowgli at one point) for a family crowd. 

Director Poppy Burton-Morgan is trying to push circus into bold new areas – but she hasn’t quite made the leap. Most of the skills on display – trapeze work, pole dancing and beat-boxing – are essentially solo disciplines. That makes it hard for the cast to gel, despite some inspired choreography from ZooNation’s Kendra J Horsburgh.  The styles also clash. Stefan Puxon is a sparky beat boxer but phrases like – ‘To you I’m invisible, a figure derisible’ – fly right over the children’s heads.

There’s a mesmerizing pole-dancing routine from Nathalie Alison as sinister snake Kaa – but it doesn’t help the story. After Mowgli (Natalie Nicole James) flees the jungle, she tries to bond with her mother. Endless dance sequences – such as ballroom dancing and ballet - are disrupted as Mowgli struggles to adapt. It’s a neat idea but - once again - goes on for much too long.

The curtain-call is the best ‘scene’ of the night. Freed from having to tell a story, the cast let rip – and tear up the stage with their mad circus and street skills.  

Written by
Miriam Gillinson

Details

Address:
Price:
£11-£28
Opening hours:
Aug 13, 17-20, 23-27, 3pm-4.30pm, Aug 13, 19-21, 27-28, 12.45pm-2.15pm
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