617 posts
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Post by loureviews on Mar 9, 2017 14:50:22 GMT
Not quite sure where to put this as it isn't really a 'play' but an improvisation.
Anyway, I went to see 'Lost for Words' yesterday evening. It's a co-production between the National Theatre and Improbable, a company who work heavily on improvised pieces.
In this case the actors are a group of veterans all over seventy. Caroline Blakiston, Lynn Farleigh, Georgine Anderson, Anna Calder-Marshall, Tim Preece, and Charles Kay (although he did not appear last night, unsure why not). They are gently prompted and given suggestions by the directors who are on the stage, and there are additional people improvising lighting, sound, and musical accompaniments.
I really liked it. It ran for an hour and I think we had six different scenes. The first was a mother and daughter at the beach, eating fish and chips, then swimming (Farleigh and Anderson did this one). Then a 'game' where the letter s could not be included, which was played as a father emigrating with work and his daughter worrying about it, with slips from both getting oohs from the audience (Preece and Calder-Marshall). Then a piece between two people who have lived together a long time but still find everything interesting, at breakfast ("Marmite toast!"), which turned out to be two sisters plus a ghostly visit from mum when one sister had gone for a lie down (Calder-Marshall and Blakiston, plus Farleigh at the end). A piece where a couple trade wishes and have the last dance of their lives under a conveniently descending glitterball (Preece and Farleigh). A group scene for a birthday which ended up hinting at cross-dressing and a lovely line about being allergic to rabbit skin (all five). And a largely solo piece including a brokenly sung aria about love, with a ghostly husband visiting at the end (Blakiston, and briefly Preece).
It was a joy to watch this group of actors at work in a playful, funny, and ultimately touching piece about relationships, age, and dreams. It is, apparently, totally unscripted, so there were prompts like "this is called Mum decides to swim for the first time", "one of you says they feel tired and are going for a lie down, leaving this character alone", "this is the last dance of their lives", "you were singing something then and it was lovely, so let it come out", etc. It doesn't feel forced or fake, and is beautifully performed. I'm assuming each show is unique given the improvising aspect.
It plays until the 18th of March and if this sounds like your kind of thing, do check it out.
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2,048 posts
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Post by Marwood on Mar 9, 2017 15:05:59 GMT
Thanks for that rundown, I'm going to see this tomorrow night.
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406 posts
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Post by MrBunbury on Mar 9, 2017 15:27:30 GMT
Not quite sure where to put this as it isn't really a 'play' but an improvisation.
Anyway, I went to see 'Lost for Words' yesterday evening. It's a co-production between the National Theatre and Improbable, a company who work heavily on improvised pieces.
In this case the actors are a group of veterans all over seventy. Caroline Blakiston, Lynn Farleigh, Georgine Anderson, Anna Calder-Marshall, Tim Preece, and Charles Kay (although he did not appear last night, unsure why not). They are gently prompted and given suggestions by the directors who are on the stage, and there are additional people improvising lighting, sound, and musical accompaniments.
I really liked it. It ran for an hour and I think we had six different scenes. The first was a mother and daughter at the beach, eating fish and chips, then swimming (Farleigh and Anderson did this one). Then a 'game' where the letter s could not be included, which was played as a father emigrating with work and his daughter worrying about it, with slips from both getting oohs from the audience (Preece and Calder-Marshall). Then a piece between two people who have lived together a long time but still find everything interesting, at breakfast ("Marmite toast!"), which turned out to be two sisters plus a ghostly visit from mum when one sister had gone for a lie down (Calder-Marshall and Blakiston, plus Farleigh at the end). A piece where a couple trade wishes and have the last dance of their lives under a conveniently descending glitterball (Preece and Farleigh). A group scene for a birthday which ended up hinting at cross-dressing and a lovely line about being allergic to rabbit skin (all five). And a largely solo piece including a brokenly sung aria about love, with a ghostly husband visiting at the end (Blakiston, and briefly Preece).
It was a joy to watch this group of actors at work in a playful, funny, and ultimately touching piece about relationships, age, and dreams. It is, apparently, totally unscripted, so there were prompts like "this is called Mum decides to swim for the first time", "one of you says they feel tired and are going for a lie down, leaving this character alone", "this is the last dance of their lives", "you were singing something then and it was lovely, so let it come out", etc. It doesn't feel forced or fake, and is beautifully performed. I'm assuming each show is unique given the improvising aspect.
It plays until the 18th of March and if this sounds like your kind of thing, do check it out. Thanks, going next Wednesday :-)
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103 posts
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Post by sondheimhats on Mar 9, 2017 20:51:50 GMT
I believe it's called "Lost Without Words," not "Lost For Words"
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617 posts
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Post by loureviews on Mar 9, 2017 22:06:45 GMT
You are absolutely correct and that's my fault for typing too quickly. Could a mod amend please?
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Post by Deleted on Mar 10, 2017 5:31:56 GMT
Could a mod amend please? Done.
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617 posts
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Post by loureviews on Mar 10, 2017 7:26:43 GMT
Thanks. Dozy brain.
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Post by Jan on Mar 10, 2017 8:53:19 GMT
Charles Kay (although he did not appear last night, unsure why not).
Charles Kay. Interesting. I saw him play Shylock in 1975.
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Post by sondheimhats on Mar 10, 2017 9:26:16 GMT
I heard from one of the actors in the show that Charles Kay dropped out of the production, though I didn't get any other details.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 10, 2017 9:57:59 GMT
He misunderstood the instruction to improvise hailing a taxi.
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Post by lonlad on Mar 11, 2017 7:24:27 GMT
Oh dear: coy and patronising and faintly embarrassing, I'm afraid. The Improbable team could take a leaf from Caryl Churchill's extraordinary Escaped Alone as regards writing for the elderly without getting all cutesy and cloying about it. The audience responded like doting friends and or children/grandchildren but it's a very long 55 minutes and pretty much a total waste of time. No Charlie Kay last night, by the way.
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