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News: Pubs and theatre. An age-old pairing.
This exciting project will no doubt resonate with anyone that has ever stepped into a pub, so this February, grab your pint of Drunken Nights and witness something completely original and unique.
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News: The 28 Day Project launches wonderful opportunities
The 28 Day Project is an exciting initiative offering emerging talent a step into the film business.
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Have you got the Star Wars X Factor?
Thousands turned away at open auditions after standing in the rain for hours.
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News: TheatreCraft returns to help young people’s backstage careers
The 8th annual event returns to the Royal Opera House later this month.
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BLOG: Theatre: the best casino shows around the world
Casinos around the world offer some of the best theatrical entertainment you can find.
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BLOG: 5 Best Actors in Superhero Cinema
Is “superhero” acting any less challenging?
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Blog: Films to study for inspiration
Watching great actors can often inform your own work.
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Blog: Shakespeare experimenting with the limits of contemporary drama
Briony Rawle heads to Yorkshire and takes a closer look at Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale.
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Review: Bat Boy, Southwark Playhouse ✭✭✭
A campy fun musical with bite screams Douglas Mayo.
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Review: Visitors, Arcola Theatre ✭✭✭✭
Barney Norris first full-length play is an exquisitely written examination of love and loss, writes Alex Delaney.
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Review: 1984, Almeida Theatre ✭✭✭✭✭
This fresh vision of 1984 feels like a rediscovery of Orwell’s dystopia, writes Sophia Longhi.
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Review: Secret Theatre - Show 4, Lyric Hammersmith ✭✭✭✭
This review comes with a capitalised, emboldened and even italicised, SPOILER ALERT. That should do, writes Briony Rawle.
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Review: Up4aMeet? Courtyard Theatre and on tour ✭✭
Ed Theakston reviews the ‘naked gay comedy’ that doesn’t quite make the grade.
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Up4aMeet is a play about gay social networking apps like the GPS based ‘buddy finder’ Grindr. It certainly lives up to its billing as a ‘naked gay comedy’, with plenty of gratuitous nudity from the start. That said, the cheap laughs, willies and over-the-top campness cannot mask the production’s shortcomings.
The play centres around the mad sequence of events which follows gay flatmates Carlos and Grant inadvertently swapping phones and, thanks to gay app ‘The Cock Shop’, mistaken identity, chaos and hilarity naturally ensue.
Chris Wills does a good job in a well-pitched performance as the handsome lonely heart Grant. Michael Blore as neighbouring wannabe drag queen Julian makes an equally good stab at his role, but somehow fails to seem comfortable onstage.
Benedict Garrett conversely seems entirely comfortable as the Spanish naturist Carlos in a role that sees him naked for most of the show. Nikki Graham is surprisingly good in her role as mouthy TV presenter Stacey. Lloyd Daniels, while looking splendid in a little pair of briefs, tends towards mumbling through a character that is rather thinly written.
Up4aMeet is a commendable farce but sadly it is lacking in pace and drive. Director and writer Jeff Moody doesn’t pull any punches in this production and marches every gay cliché across the stage like a RuPaul episode from gay hell, but the cock jokes wear thin after over two hours.
Moody does do well, however, to keep tongue planted in cheek throughout. This isn’t Chekov, but it isn’t trying to be. It is unashamedly trying to appeal to a gay audience, and with some adjustments it could be a great fun night. At the moment, though, it isn’t quite there.
** (2 stars)
On tour, various venues
Runs until 10th August 2013
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