1,478 posts
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Post by Steve on Jan 25, 2018 23:01:02 GMT
Three great performances, of three great characters, by Sope Dirisu, Jonathan Ajayi and Anthony Welsh, make Bijan Sheibani's poetic revival pure electricity. Some spoilers follow. . . Characters, how they speak, how they relate, are everything here, so plot takes something of a back seat. Further, the playwright and director clearly intend the character relations depicted to assume a universal mythic resonance, so there are African drums and musical accompaniment, the action is staged in the round in an intimate chalk circle, and characters narrate their own entrances and exits in the third person. Yet despite such distancing techniques, I cannot imagine seeing three more astonishingly vital performances again in the remaining eleven months of this year. The playwright, Tarell Alvin McCraney co-wrote the Oscar winning movie "Moonlight," based on his own play, and what made that movie resonate, also makes this show resonate: principally, the poetic, unstereotypical, depiction of the relations of complex and sensitive African American men, in which the dialogue sizzles in it's authenticity, humour and sharpness. Still, it's the performances that thrilled me most: Sope Dirisu towers as a lumbering tank of a man, Ogun, with the softest centre; Anthony Welsh is languorously steamy in his enigmatic looseness, and, as Ogun's weak-willed lost brother, Oshoosi, Jonathan Ajayi is a tragi-comic tour de force, as his lazy body lithely contorts into the most wild and crazy effusive comic explosions ever seen in a straight performance. Truly astounding performances, and great characters, more than compensate for the plot-light, myth-heavy stylings of McCraney, which while effective, are not to my instinctive taste. 4 and a half stars!
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2,848 posts
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Post by couldileaveyou on Jan 29, 2018 21:53:55 GMT
Saw this tonight, very fine production, great performances from everyone, especially Jonathan Ajayi. But I don't know why, it did nothing for me, it just didn't click.
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1,081 posts
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Post by andrew on Jan 29, 2018 23:39:17 GMT
Saw this tonight, very fine production, great performances from everyone, especially Jonathan Ajayi. But I don't know why, it did nothing for me, it just didn't click. My and my friend had exactly the same experience. Nothing particularly to criticise, we just didn't get the same vibe that the majority of the reviews give off. Maybe it depends which of the 4 sides you sit on...
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40 posts
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Post by dave72 on Jan 30, 2018 3:06:16 GMT
The production is terrific, the actors all extraordinary, the movement and music impeccable. But in truth it's just not a very good play: sentimental, predictable, simplistic. It was McCraney's very first play, written while he was in graduate school, and it shows. He's obviously very talented, but this is apprentice work.
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204 posts
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Post by argon on Jan 30, 2018 7:21:41 GMT
Each actors self narration of their own character was a distraction, possibly the actor that played Elegba would have been better to be the narrator since he featured least in the play.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 10, 2018 16:07:09 GMT
Did very little for me either although I thought all performances were great. Most of the audience loved it though with cheering and a standing ovation at the end
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Post by perfectspy on Feb 11, 2018 23:06:22 GMT
I saw this when first staged in 2008 at the Young Vic. Very skilful acting.
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11 posts
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Post by theatrewithtom on Feb 13, 2018 9:48:47 GMT
Hi all, I saw this last night. For me, I was carried along by the intensity. I thought the acting really made it, I enjoyed the poetic nature of the script (in particular the part when his friend was recounting Oshoosi's first night in prison). After reading what you guys have said, I do agree that it could have been more nuanced at times. I did a blog about it if anyone wanted to see more of what I thought theatrewithtom.wordpress.com/2018/02/12/the-brothers-size-the-young-vic/
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