Theatre Record

 

This Edition

 

 

Issue 16/17, 2009

Prompt Corner

Issue 16/17, 2009In this issue, you can read coverage of the National Theatre’s Watch This Space festival and the Riverside Studios’ Tête À Tête opera festival, but LIFT’s Molten festival doesn’t appear to have received any coverage, and events on the Camden Fringe have been digested within the issue as a whole; next issue, Grimeborn at the Arcola, then BAC’s Scratch festival…  Are we in danger of becoming festivalled out?  Not really, because the word “festival” is in danger of becoming meaningless in theatre programming.  Any themed season simply sounds more exciting and dynamic when you call it a “Festival”.  This, in turn, devalues those programmes of work which do qualify for the term, stretching across organisations and venues, such as Molten and Camden.

Tangle

And with so many festivals around, what need of so much coverage even of the biggest arts festival in the world?  Yes, once again the Edinburgh International Festival and Fringe received less media attention this year than last, despite being bigger and more successful.  (Ah, but we’ll come to that point later…)  Once again, Lyn Gardner of the Guardian and I were the only national reviewers in situ for pretty much the duration, and I think each of us had less space; I certainly did in the Financial Times.  Even the Scotsman, hitherto considered the Festivalgoer’s journalistic bible, was publishing noticeably less review coverage from a far smaller team of reviewers.

Conversely, to cater for a Festivalgoing population of tens, even hundreds of thousands of people seeking guidance among over 2000 shows, the Festival freesheets and latterly web sites have become more and more influential… filling the vacuum, as it were.  But do they fill it?  They often rely on eager students or “civilians” to provide copy, but lack any real sense of identity or weight in themselves.  The effect has been to buck the overall trend in online arts coverage: just as the sector in general begins to shake down with an increasing awareness of which sites are more reliable and authoritative, Edinburgh review coverage is not so much a labyrinth as a great big tangle.  Any show that can’t extract a five-star review, or at least a couple of fours, from this plethora of competing voices (because it’s just the star ratings that get plastered on posters, not – heavens forfend – actual words), really isn’t trying.

Falling away

Yet the Edinburgh Festival and Fringe did more business this year than ever.  At the end of the season, the Fringe Society reported 7% more tickets sold overall this year than in the previous record year of 2007.  (A not very discreet veil is drawn across 2008, when the Fringe’s new ticketing software collapsed, causing hundreds of thousands of pounds in lost business by their own estimate.)  When I arrived in the city this year, three days before the official beginning of the Fringe, I was astounded by crowds such as I had never seen so early in the season.
Indeed.  Here’s an interesting thing: ticket sales were up 7% over the entire Fringe season, but at the end of the first of the three weeks they had been up by a massive 42%... yes, even on that 2007 record.  One venue complex alone (albeit the biggest), the Pleasance, reported having taken over £750,000 in box office by that point.  In other words, that healthy overall picture breaks down into a phenomenal start to the season, followed by a massive falling away of business.  One experienced producer told me that he would normally rate the four weekends of the Fringe as follows in terms of business: 3, 4, 2, 1 in descending order.  This year, he said, it was 1,2,3,4.

Snark

There is, I think, a logical explanation.  In this year of recession, Edinburgh had fewer visitors from overseas; more of its business was domestic, and in particular from Scots who had decided to holiday at home this year (that horrible neologism, “staycationers”).  But the United Kingdom’s calendars are not all that united.  The Fringe runs for the three weeks immediately prior to the late August Bank Holiday (which, confusingly, is a holiday in England & Wales only, not in Scotland).  This year, that holiday fell on the last day on which it could, August 31st.  However, the term calendar of Scottish schools runs along different lines.  They would normally begin the new school year in the middle of the third week of the Fringe, but this year the late Bank Holiday and consequently the late Fringe dates meant that Scottish children were back at school – and Scottish parents also back to their term-time routines – in Fringe Week 2.  The principal market in this unusual Fringe year, as in The Hunting Of The Snark, softly and silently vanished away.

They took with them much of the morale in the performing and producing community.  Shows which would in normal years have sold out presented those onstage with disconcerting, disheartening, “gappy” audiences.  Fringe performers, crews, publicists… even journalists… always grow exhausted and eager to leave towards the end, but this year it was an exhaustion born not of frenzy but of lassitude.

The moral is…

All of which is simply to say that when I see reports of West End business being up in early summer, I have serious doubts as to whether that trend will be sustained.  We shall see.

Ian Shuttleworth | ian@theatrerecord.com

At the Back

"At the Back" does not appear this issue

Reviewed in issue 16/17, 2009

       

London

       
THE ADVENTURES OF JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS New adaptation by Phil Willmott Scoop 7 Aug 6 Sep 882
BRAZIL x 2The Last Days Of Gilda by Rodrigo de Roure / The Assault by José Vicente Old Red Lion 21 Aug 5 Sep 895
THE CARAVAN Transfer of the piece by Mimi Poskitt, Liam O'Driscoll & Ben Freedman Roundhouse 8 Aug 23 Aug 884
CIRCA Circus show Riverside Studios 30 Jul 1 Aug 866
LE CIRQUE INVISIBLE Return of piece by Jean-Baptiste Thiérrée and Victoria Chaplin Queen Elizabeth Hall 4 Aug 23 Aug 870
CONFUSIONS Revival of group of plays by Alan Ayckbourn Union SE1 13 Aug 29 Aug 883
DIRT New play by Robert Schneider Arcola 30 Jul 15 Aug 863
A DOLL’S HOUSE Revival of play by Henrik Ibsen in new version by Ida Forde (Candy King Th) Greenwich Playhouse 20 Aug 13 Sep 897
THE GREAT AMERICAN SONGBOOK Musical cabaret New End 5 Aug 13 Sep 889
HELEN New version by Frank McGuinness of play by Euripides Globe 5 Aug 23 Aug 873
HELLO, DOLLY! Revival of musical by Jerry Herman Open Air 10 Aug 12 Sep 885
HIGH SCHOOL MUSICAL 2 Book by David Simpatico, from film script by Peter Barsocchini New Wimbledon 22 Aug 5 Sep 898
I KISSED A FROG: THE THREESOME Three new plays by Anna Victoria & Rob Smythson Hen & Chickens 11 aug 29 Aug 897
JUDITH Revival of play by Howard Barker (Ashes And Diamonds) Lord Napier 6 Aug 22 Aug 881
KITTY AND DAMNATION New play by Joseph Crilly (Giant Olive TC) Lion & Unicorn 13 Aug 12 Sep 897
THE LONDON FOLIES New variety / burlesque show Leicester Square 6 Aug 29 Aug 876
LUV New play by Thomas Sainsbury (Fingerprints & Teeth) Tristan Bates 28 Jul 15 Aug 862
MADNESS IN VALENCIA Revival of play by Lope de Vega (Black And White Rainbow) White Bear 11 Aug 30 Aug 884
MEDEA New adaptation by Stella Duffy of Greek tragedy Scoop 7 Aug 6 Sep 882
MISTERO BUFFO Revival of play by Dario Fo (Thinktanktheatre.com) Courtyard 11 Aug 30 Aug 884
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING Revival of play by Shakespeare (Veni Vidi TC) Lauderdale House 25 Aug 28 Aug 879
NO WAY OUT (HUIS CLOS) Revival of play by Jean-Paul Sartre Southwark Playhouse 20 Aug 12 Sep 896
PORNOGRAPHY London premiere of play by Simon Stephens Tricycle 6 Aug 29 Aug 877
THE PRESENT Revival of play by Nick Ward (Good Night Out) Cock Tavern 20 Aug 5 Sep 892
SING FOR YOUR SUPPER Celebration of the music of Rodgers & Hart, book by David Benedict Cadogan Hall 5 Aug 9 Aug 881
THE SIX PACK Three new double bills (National Youth Theatre) Soho 17 Aug 12 Sep 890
SIXTEEN New play by Helena Thompson (SPID) Kensal House 31 Jul 28 Aug 869
STATE FAIR European professional première of musical by Richard Rodgers & Oscar Hammerstein II Finborough 6 Aug 29 Aug 880
SUDDENLOSSOFDIGNITY.COM New compilation by various writers Bush 3 Aug 15 Aug 867
Tête À Tête – The Opera Festival See reviews pages for full production details Riverside 30 Jul 16 Aug 861
THREE MORE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS Revival of play by Caryl Churchill (NT) Lyttelton 31 Jul 27 Aug 864
THE TRIAL OF MARIE ANTOINETTE New play by Peter Langdon (Once Th) Courtyard 6 Aug 30 Aug 892
Watch This Space Season of outdoor work incl. Swiniopolis and Macbeth: Who Is That Bloodied Man? National 1 Jul 27 Sep 860
Regions        
ANOTHER DOOR CLOSED New play by Peter Gill (Peter Hall Co) Bath, Th Royal, Ustinov Studio 11 Aug 29 Aug 901
HOLIDAY SNAP New play by Michael Pertwee & John Chapman Reading, Mill at Sonning 26 Aug 3 Sep 902
MAN OF THE MOMENT Revival of play by Alan Ayckbourn Northampton, Royal 30 Jul 15 Aug 899
THE RAILWAY CHILDREN Return of adaptation by Mike Kenny from book by E Nesbit (York Th Royal) York, National Railway Museum 29 Jul 5 Sep 899
TWELFTH NIGHT Revival of play by Shakespeare (Lord Chamberlain’s Men) Surrey, Ham House 2 Aug 2 Aug 900