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The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde

THEATRE REVIEW

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde at Greenwich Theatre, London

“you just have to sit back and let it overwhelm you”



Bracknell-based Blackeyed Theatre have toured this country since 2004, producing everything from Brecht plays to The Great Gatsby. They have previously visited Dracula and Frankenstein, too. Their current production is a return to this horror genre which obviously suits them really well. Nick Lane’s adaptation is as close to the book as a play can be, utilising monologues to zip the story along when it is needed.


Lane also directs, using a cast of four stunning actors to whisk us from scene to scene with precise choreography.



At first, the whole piece seemed a little messy - a hotchpotch of styles: musical numbers, monologues, ensemble effects, live and recorded sound effects, recorded music, physical theatre, natural theatre, slow-motion … it goes on. What The 39 Steps does for comedy, nothing here is played for laughs, the intensity of the play driving through at all times, for instance when two characters mime jumping into a taxi to dash across London.


And it works.



The audience had a large number of teenagers and they gasped with awe at each revelation, turning the theatre into their own version of Gogglebox, reacting quite freely. This lack of restraint is wonderful to witness - the ‘awwww’ at the romance, the shock at the cruelty. A few ‘Duff-Duff’ Eastenders-style moments left them reeling and buzzing with excitement. They were truly gripped. It was like a pantomime without the jokes.


On top of that, the hero of the play - assuming the weak Jekyll role and the masculine Hyde persona - is a Poldark lookalike. Jack Bannell has the long hair, the unshaven swagger of testosterone oozing from him as Hyde. From the moment he first appears, twirling his walking stick with gay abandon like a Terry-Thomas moustache tweak, we know he is dangerous. Then he physically shrinks and limps, to become the frail, desperate Jekyll - and the teens lapped it up.



Supporting this stand-out performance, there is Paige Round, primarily playing the Irish Eleanor Lanyon, both loving and lusting for both Jekyll and Hyde. She appears as a cockney tart and a housemaid, too, showing a grand versatility. As do Zach Lee and Ashley Sean-Cook, playing a multitude of characters throughout. Sean-Cook’s Dr Lanyon is touching and believable, a light character in this dark world. Lee’s solicitor Utterson, hard and edgy.


There is much not to be impressed with in this production. Although the lighting and the set suit the mood and fulfill all their requirements, it somehow feels dated and unadventurous in its presentation and style. It is theatrical box-ticking. Yet, it is undeniably spot-on for getting its points across. The darker, heavier and meatier elements of the story slightly brushed over, for the gothic gore - ‘giving them what they want’. For this, there is a lot to be admired. Knowing the book is on the GCSE syllabus has allowed the company to get the funding and have the courage to tour a full-on version.



It could so easily have been a long and dull, worthy and wordy adaptation of the text. I saw an RSC production many years ago that was just that. But Blackeyed have triumphed.



In the end, you just have to sit back and let it overwhelm you. It’s worth it!




Length: 2 hours (including an interval)


Notes: Ages 11+


Box Office: Tickets are available from individual theatre box offices.


Website: www.blackeyedtheatre.co.uk.


Twitter @Blackeyedtheatr, #JekyllandHyde


Director Nick Lane

Composer Tristan Parks

Designer Victoria Spearing

Costumes Naomi Gibbs

Lighting Claire Childs

Producer Adrian McDougall

Photography Alex Harvey-Brown


Tour dates remaining:


9th – 10th Oct Norwich Playhouse, Norwick – 7.30pm (1pm, Tues)

www.norwichplayhouse.co.uk


12th – 13th Oct Waterside Arts Centre, Sale – 7.30pm (1.30pm, Fri)

http://watersideartscentre.co.uk


14th Oct The Atkinson, Southport – 7.30pm

www.theatkinson.co.uk


17th – 19th Oct Devonshire Park Theatre, Eastbourne – 7.45pm (2.30pm, Wed)

www.eastbournetheatres.co.uk/venue/devonshire-park-theatre


20th Oct Roses Theatre, Tewkesbury – 7.30pm

www.rosestheatre.org


24th Oct Queen’s Hall Arts, Hexham – tbc

www.queenshall.co.uk


26th Oct Adam Smith Theatre, Kirkcaldy – 7.30pm

www.onfife.com


27th Oct Gaiety Theatre, Ayr – 7.30pm

http://ayrgaiety.co.uk/


28th Oct The Brunton, Musselburgh - 7.30pm

www.thebrunton.co.uk


30th Oct Eastwood Park Theatre, Giffnock – 7.30pm

www.eastwoodparktheatre.co.uk


1st Nov The Majestic Theatre, Darlington – 7.30pm

www.majestic-theatre.co.uk


2nd Nov Kings Theatre, York – 2pm

www.kingstheatre.com


7th Nov The Lights, Andover – 7.30pm

www.thelights.org.uk


8th Nov Cornerstone, Didcot – 7.30pm

www.cornerstone-arts.org


9th Nov New Theatre Royal, Portsmouth – 7.30pm

www.newtheatreroyal.com


10th Nov The Berry Theatre, Hedge End – 7.30pm

www.theberrytheatre.co.uk


13th – 14th Nov Garrick Theatre, Lichfield – 7.30pm

www.lichfieldgarrick.com


15th – 17th Nov Arena Theatre, Wolverhampton – 7.30pm (1pm, Fri)

www.wlv.ac.uk/arena-theatre


20th Nov Stahl Theatre, Oundle – 7.45pm

www.oundleschool.org.uk/Stahl-Theatre


21st – 22nd Nov Stanbury Theatre, Milton Keynes – 7.30pm

www.stantonburytheatre.co.uk


23rd Nov Lincoln Performing Arts Centre, Lincoln – 7.30pm

http://lpac.co.uk/


24th Nov Bridge House Theatre, Warwick – 7.30pm

www.bridgehousetheatre.co.uk


27th – 29th Nov Mumford Theatre, Cambridge – 7.30pm

www.anglia.ac.uk/arts-law-and-social-sciences/mumford-theatre


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