Archive for January, 2010

Storytelling at the Hippodrome

January 15th, 2010

This week I have been storytelling at Birmingham Hippodrome, using their Panto, Sleeping Beauty as the starting point. I had a very enjoyable morning yesterday with a group of  Early Childhood students from Solihull College joined in with great enthusiasm.  There were a number of great storytellers amongst them and Jo their tutor was very supportive of the work.

Photos to follow shortly

January News

January 11th, 2010

The company is busy planning  its forthcoming projects for 2010.  January includes outreach work for Birmingham Hippodrome and Role Play for Aston University’s Audiology Department.  If your school or company are interested in our skills please get in touch on 0121 777 9086

The Gruffalo at Birmingham Town Hall

January 4th, 2010

Saw this production on Sunday and was very disappointed. The book is magical and loved by children. They enjoy the rhythm and rhyme of the language and that they know the repetitions. It should be a fairly simple job to recreate this on stage and yet this production lacked so much. It had a great set which was hardly used, was full of rock-type songs and the script  was littered with deconstruction moments which went completely over the head of the 3 and 4 year olds that were watching in the auditorium. I suspect these were in there to appeal to the 7 or 8  year olds who might come with the school but it was in the holidays and  in actual fact the show was so ‘mid tour’ that the throw away lines were lost in the malaise of  the on stage ‘business’.  If the songs had rhymed and the script had rhymed, even if it developed the story, it would have kept more of the essence of the book but the ’snake’ commenting about his silly moustache and one of the actors telling the other that he was just the supporting artiste just didn’t work.

There were moments which I liked; the creation of the Gruffalo with the 3 actors before one became him was lovely (they were using the books words at this point and the children in the audience came to life and joined in) and the mouse was physically interesting to watch but I am afraid it was all too ’shouty’ and whilst it was only an hour it felt much much longer.

It was an opportunity missed and you felt that the adaptor and director were thinking more about performing in huge theatre spaces than in doing the book and the audience justice. (No programme at venue – lots of merchandising of course- not quite sure where light sabres fit into this story?! – so I don’t know anything about the company/ production team)  Not recommended by me.

Happy New Year to you all

January 2nd, 2010

Well this is my first message in the new decade  and I am optimistic for the future. 2010 will hopefully produce Don’t Blame it on the Wolf  - The Tour in the Autumn/Winter and there are many other fingers in creative pies to explore.

Wishing you all a healthy, productive year.

Gillian (Artistic Director)