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    May 07, 2008

    Backward Glance at Brighton's Komedia

    J'ai perdu mon Eurydice. I hesitate to put myself forward as Seaford's Ken Tynan, but the performance I saw in the Komedia Studio Bar on Sunday of multi story's Backward Glance deserves a review.

    Multi story are two actors, Gill Nathanson and Bill Buffery, with an international reputation in fringe theatre. They offered last year's Brighton Fringe their Cassandra, and return to Greek myth this year with Backward Glance, a play based on Orpheus's loss of Eurydice and death at the hands of the Maenads. Transposing the story to the present, Orpheus and Eurydice are both writers in a vicious drunken relationship, Eurydice the more successful and famous of the two. After Eurydice's death, stung by a bee, Orpheus, drunk at his laptop, is interrogated by a journalist and a detective, and railed at by his mother-in-law. He cannot explain where he was or what he was doing at the time of his wife's death. The intrusions of police and press make the audience think of our mythologising of the Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath relationship.

    Backward Glance both gives new insights into the myth, a story I must have first read or heard as a small boy, and successfully links the two parts of the story, the descent into Hades to bring Eurydice back, and the wandering poet's later death. Gill and Bill offer deep and striking interpretations of the characters. The play runs for two more nights at Komedia, and then goes to Prague: http://www.komedia.co.uk/event.php?id=1232&dst=1210096801

    December 17, 2007

    Zounds

    I hope this blog will not turn into an arts review. There are plenty of people better-qualified to hold forth on the latest plays, films, books and so on, and some of them can even claim salaries for doing so. That said, I cannot let last night's Radio 3 production of  Sheridan's the Rivals pass without comment, not least because the play provides the epigraph for this blog. It was beautifully done and I had forgotten how funny the play is. The phrase 'croaking like a frog in a quinsy' has stayed with me all day.

    May 2008

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