Change »
Edinburgh Fringe 2000 (59)
Edinburgh Fringe 2001 (316)
Edinburgh Fringe 2002 (354)
Edinburgh Fringe 2003 (376)
Edinburgh Fringe 2004 (422)
Edinburgh Fringe 2005 (415)
Edinburgh Fringe 2006 (547)
Edinburgh Fringe 2007 (668)
Edinburgh Fringe 2008 (733)
Edinburgh Fringe 2009 (773)
Edinburgh Fringe 2010 (927)
Edinburgh Fringe 2011 (963)
Edinburgh Fringe 2012 (1022)
Edinburgh Fringe 2013 (687)
Melbourne 2005 (26)
Melbourne 2006 (29)
Melbourne 2007 (31)
Melbourne 2008 (36)
Melbourne 2009 (36)
Melbourne 2010 (56)
Melbourne 2011 (36)
Melbourne 2012 (46)
Melbourne 2013 (57)
Misc live shows (203)Montreal 2004 (6)
Montreal 2006 (10)
Montreal 2007 (15)
Montreal 2008 (17)
Montreal 2009 (17)
Theatre (28)
Tour (240)
West End run (14)
See Less »
A Tribute To Pete & Dud, Ronnie Scott's
Alan Seaman: Normal For Norfolk
Alfie Moore: Laughter Police
Allah Made Me Funny: The Official Muslim Comedy Tour
Amused Moose Comedy's Hot Starlets 2000-2008 Showcase
Andy Zaltzman: Political Animal
Angie Le Mar: In My Shoes
Annabel Giles Talks Too Much
Arabella Weir: The Real Me Is Thin
Argus! The Musical
At Last! The 1981 Show
An Audience With The Hee-Ha's
|
|
|
|
Argus! The Musical
Every performance is inspired by newspaper articles cut out by the audience just minutes before curtain time. This is improv like you may not have seen it before: no tricks or gimmicks or games, just a live, onstage comic exploration, through scenes and songs, of the secret heart of Brighton. It is the Brighton only hinted at by our local paper, but finally revealed by the comedic X-ray vision of the Maydays.
|
Original Review: What a good idea this is: to take stories from the local newspaper and improvise scenes around them, topical and relevant to the town you’re performing in. The ambitious part is that there is no formal structure to the sketches The Maydays construct from the headlines: no improv games to provide a reassuring framework, nor formulaic set-ups to get the creative juices flowing. The ethos is to just have an idea and go with it. Oh, and just to add to the challenge, sometimes the cast sometimes burst into song, too… It’s a wonder this comes off at all, let alone as well as this talented sextet manage to achieve. There is a fair share of duds, to be honest, but generally the humour flows more freely that you might hope to expect. Some of the stories pulled out of the hat are hardly inspiring – and makes you see why many local newspapers are in a parlous state. Seagull eats noodles was one yarn; another trivialised the horrific Sri Lankan civil war for a cheap publicity stunt, claiming the conflict would lead to a lack of coconuts for the shy at a local fate. Of these, the first sparked an imaginative scene about the gull-obsessed photographer who got the snap, while the flimsy premise of the second proved beyond the team’s wit and could produce only a dead-end idea. Elsewhere, highlights included Jamie Oliver training up staff for his new store; a depressed Ken Dodd being cheered up before his gig and a teenage boy passing off his unkempt bedroom as an art installation. The team seemed to lose their mojo in the interval, and the second half seemed to run out of steam more easily, a fact surely not helped by the fact it was by now way beyond midnight. But the big song-and-dance number about MPs’ expenses drew the show to a fitting finale. Katy Schutte seems to be the driving force in many of the scenes, forcing the action onwards just to see what happens, while Heather Urquhart provided a flash of inspiration that turned a scene around more than once. Her idea that Dodd was down because his dad’s dog had died, for instance, was a stroke of genius. But the star was not one individual performer but the instinctive rapport the whole company had between them. For one person to start a scene, perhaps not even with a line but just a pose, then others to gather around them to know roughly where the idea is heading takes practice, trust and talent, which this Brighton-based team have in spades. Reviewed by: Steve Bennett |
No comments are currently available for this show. |
