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Post by Steve on Feb 1, 2023 22:28:30 GMT
Caught this tonight, and it's at once a two hander about sexual power games and status, as well as an updated commentary on Strindberg's Miss Julie. I really enjoyed it for the excellent moment to moment performances of husband and wife duo, Oli Higginson and Meaghan Martin. Some spoilers follow. . . The play feels like "Venus in Furs," (a BDSM game) but it takes all its significant beats from "Miss Julie" (genuine underlying psychological savagery). Consequently, the memory of Natalie Dormer hung heavily over this show for me, as I saw her in the former play at the Haymarket and I saw her in Patrick Marber's version of the latter play at the Young Vic. This play does not come close to feeling as dangerous as Dormer did in either of those plays. Where those plays served up danger with a side helping of fun, this modernised version of Miss Julie serves up fun with a side helping of danger. And the chemistry between the light, breezy but knowing Higginson and the curious playful ingenue, Martin, is moment to moment magical, always on point, even if ultimately you're not quite sure what it all adds up to. If you have seen or read either Miss Julie, or Marber's "After Ms. Julie," you will have the additional fascinating layer of wondering, as each of Strindberg's plot beats is parallelled, how much of the psychological torture of the Strindberg characters lies beneath the surface of this ostensibly fun, teasing, potentially romantic encounter. Anyhow, even if the destination of the encounter is (intentionally) underwhelming, the journey to that destination was pure pleasure, for me, thanks to all the back and forth moments, conjured by the actors' chemistry, along the way. 4 stars from me.
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Post by nwtheatre on Feb 2, 2023 8:57:39 GMT
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Post by lonlad on Feb 2, 2023 23:52:00 GMT
Saw it tonight and echo everything Steve said: a truly terrific production of a play that strikes me as much more intriguing and nuanced than the posturing acting exercise that is VENUS IN FUR - SMOKE is exceptionally well acted by its married actors, beautifully directed and designed, and a full house responded notably warmly at the end. Press night is tomorrow.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 3, 2023 1:15:08 GMT
General admission seating?
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Post by Steve on Feb 3, 2023 6:48:24 GMT
General admission seating? Yes. In the round, with about three rows on each side (one side has four rows, I recall). It's such a small stage, and the rows are tiered, so I doubt there's a bad seat in the house.
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Post by lonlad on Feb 3, 2023 9:43:02 GMT
There isn't a bad seat in the house and the production accommodates its circular environment with unusual ease.
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698 posts
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Post by thistimetomorrow on Feb 3, 2023 10:35:45 GMT
There next week! Quite excited to see Oli doing a straight play instead of a musical
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Post by theatrescribe on Feb 3, 2023 13:04:39 GMT
Is there any nudity?
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Post by nwtheatre on Feb 3, 2023 16:18:19 GMT
Oli takes his top off at one point... does that count?
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Post by frauleinsallybowles on Feb 23, 2023 19:38:25 GMT
General admission seating? Does anyone know what time doors open for seating?
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Post by Steve on Feb 23, 2023 22:38:50 GMT
General admission seating? Does anyone know what time doors open for seating? For me, it was about 5 minutes before the show began, but a queue formed 10 minutes before that, and that's obviously the more important thing, cos queue etiquette is important lol. Still, I don't think there's a bad seat for this. Perhaps you might consider sitting the side where there are four rows (rather than 3), as that side gets a better view of the final scene.
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