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DIRECTOR SHOULD BE PROUD OF HIS COMPANY
EQUUS', at Bradfield Outdoor Greek Theatre, on Sunday, July 23 and Monday, July 24.
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It
was an ambitious choice for Shining Lights Youth Theatre to perform Peter
Shaffer's challenging, psychological play 'Equus' in the delightful surroundings
of Bradfield College's open-air theatre. The play concerns both a young
boy's self-destructive obsession with his horse-god Equus and his psychiatrist's
professional crises over the uses of passion and reason. Joe Thorpe is
a talented youngster who gave a splendidly furtive and passionate performance
as the petulant, troubled, Alan Strang, the boy who blinds his horse,
Nugget, and five others with a spike. Consequently he is sent by the magistrate
(Laura Hamblin) to psychiatrist Martin Dysart, confidently played by Marc
Godfrey, who is desperately hungry for divine contact. The doctor's unravelling
of the voting man's motives highlights his own internal deconstruction.
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Charli
Johnson brought a lively characterisation as Alans religious bewildered
mother and Paul Kerry played the powerful father in family who shows us
frustrations of people although married living alone. The
chorus of horses, (Sophie Hicklin, Melanie Rosier, Abi Preston, Rhys Swinburn)
in the original splendid masks from the National Theatre's 1973 production
are always present both on stage and in Alan's mind and their carefully
stylised choreography added a visually ritualistic dimension to the play.
Carl Stallwood portrayed Nugget with strength and conviction particularly
in the powerful scene, which ended the first act when rider and horse
were as one. |
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Stable
owner (Nick Davies) introduces Alan to Jill Mason, sensitively played
by Amy Phillips and their friendship grows but when she decides to seduce
Alan in the stables in front of the horses the horror is enacted and Alan
has to heed true to his passion for Nugget. Director
Pete Watt inventively used every part of the theatre space with great
effect. He should he proud of his talented company, as Peter Shaffer wrote
to the company: "daring really is many times its own greatest reward".
ROBIN STRAPP
(NWN)
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