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Press Reviews
Oh! What a Lovely War
Published Monday 15 September 2008 at 14:00 by Ian Barge
The
Stage
Taking on Oh! What a Lovely War with a cast of five is some challenge, but it
is what one has come to expect of Blackeyed Theatre, one of the most innovative,
audacious companies working in contemporary English theatre.
For the Courtyard, hosting
the production prior to its national tour launch, this is a magnificent tenth anniversary
treat. Under Adrian McDougall’s incisive direction, Blackeyed make spectacular nonsense
of the concept of limited resources. Such is the energy, versatility and inventiveness
of the cast, they are able to recreate so much of the collaborative improvisation
which was the hallmark of Littlewood’s original sixties production with Theatre Workshop.
This can be so easily lost, notably in the film version, under layers of lacquered
gloss, however brilliant.
Intimacy and immediacy are certainly the most impressive
aspects of the Blackeyed performances. In the small Courtyard mainhouse, there is
almost a studio rapport between actors and audience. Without mikes or any pre-recorded
soundscape, the cast generate an extraordinary electrical charge. All sentimentality
is ruthlessly undercut by the satirical savagery so crucial to Joan Littlewood’s
vision. The singing is as haunting as it is harrowing, again deliberately unpolished
in parts to provide a poignant authenticity.
The counterpoint between slide-projected
war images, stark statistics and the delusional hypocrisy of official attitudes assumes
a lacerating contemporary relevance with the inclusion of images drawn from Iraq,
the Falklands and Northern Ireland, as well as the familiar iconic First World War
trench photographs.
Any assumption that Oh! What a Lovely War is a period piece is
shot to shrapnel. Forty years on, we need Littlewood’s vision more than ever. Blackeyed
Theatre restore it to us with astonishing power. Catch it if you can.