REVIEW: Noises Off on the Phoenix Theatre

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REVIEW: Noises Off on the Phoenix Theatre



Farce is without doubt one of the most interesting theatrical traditions rooted within the British obsession with manners and respectability. A heady brew of slapstick, confusion and blended messaging between pissed off characters. From Shakespeare by means of Oscar Wilde to Noel Coward and extra not too long ago Henry Lewis, the style always reinvents itself. Noises Off by Michael Frayn is without doubt one of the greatest and makes a welcome return to the West End on the Phoenix Theatre.

This is the basic play inside a play, as a pressured firm of actors rehearse for a provincial run of ‘Nothing On’. The outer play splits into three distinct acts however portrays a single act from three completely different views. First, there’s the ‘technical’ or costume rehearsal, the place all of the glitches are supposedly ironed out. Secondly, the act is performed on the primary evening however proven from backstage. And lastly, the act is proven from the entrance of the home, the place the backstage shenanigans and eventual penalties start to make sense.

Like any good farce, it is a masterpiece of logistics and bodily drama. Every journey, slip and miss-step is deliberate to the nth diploma and executed with out fault. There are real laugh-out-loud moments because the forged gamely will get to grips with the narrative and establishes their motivation. Unlike most performs, it has no want of a robust plot, because the visible gymnastics have greater than sufficient power to please and compensate.

For all its jollity, Noises Off supplies actual perception into what goes on behind the scenes when a present is in progress. Michael Frayn was impressed to put in writing the play when he watched from the wings of one other manufacturing. He clearly famous the superstitions, habits and foibles of actors earlier than they ship a efficiency; and captured a tantalising glimpse of the human situation.


The stellar forged has an absolute ball with a play that does precisely what it says on the tin. A number of acquainted faces from movie and TV give the manufacturing a useful reference level. Felicity Kendal performs Dottie, an actor frequently on the verge of a nervous breakdown; Matthew Kelly does a flip as Selsdon, an elder statesman with a keenness for the odd tipple whereas Tracy-Ann Oberman is in full diva mode as Belinda. The Phoenix Theatre has by no means seemed higher with its Italian-styled inside and epitome of West End splendour. The second interval required by the play’s construction slows the tempo considerably. But is a small worth to pay for a superior evening out on the theatre.


Review by Brian Penn

Seat: G2 Dress Circle | Price of Ticket: £55

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