Company: High Tide
Venue: Latitude Festival, Henham Park, Suffolk
This review first appeared on the Whatsonstage.com website
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Sarah Hoare and Sean Hart |
Widower Ben Pilgrim is dying and it’s
not going to be an easy process. He and his family – sons Matthew and
Jon, daughter Sarah, and Matthew’s partner Vera, all fresh from the
council estates of Ipswich – are en-route to Suffolk’s Bluedale Eisteddfod to tell their folk-tales.
However, this family is more dysfunctional than most and soon the
skeletons are rattling their ways out of its many cupboards. Sarah and
Vera harbour the biggest skeleton of all and it’s very angry and
threatening to tear the family apart.
In all honesty, it’s hard to find any affection for the Pilgrims – Matthew and Vera (Alex Warren and Laura Prior) are prime contenders for The Jeremy Kyle Show, weak-willed Jon (Sean Hart) ups tail and runs for the hills at the first sign of anything in the least bit threatening, while father Ben (Keith Swainston) is a gruff obsessive and it’s surprising that the dear departed Julie stuck with him as long as she did. It’s only Sarah Hoare’s Sarah, desperate to escape her mediocre life and see the world, who solicits any real pathos.
Eisteddfod
is beautifully-crafted theatre that, even performed in a forest in the
rain with nothing but a campervan as a backdrop, impresses with the
power of its narrative and certainly its performances. However, it’s
not without flaws. Some of Luke Barnes’
dialogue, especially Ben’s, is a little wordy and occasionally
incongruous with the characters – who clearly do not originate from
Suffolk.
While there’s not enough time to establish their
back-story, the question arises why these pieces of Suffolk rough are
heading off to perform at a rural folk festival in the first place –
they’re hardly the Von Trapps.
Director Rob Drummer has excelled at bringing his small cast together to create a genuinely engaging piece. Whatever defects Eisteddfod has are minor ones and are far outweighed by its virtues.
The show has been compiled by HighTide from snippets of real-life
experiences garnered from events such as the company’s annual theatre
Festival. With a few judicious trims here and there, it clearly has a
life outside the festival circuit.
PAUL COUCH
PAUL COUCH
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