A show like Pass The
Spoon could only be born from the mind of artist, David Shrigley, and his
unique, infantile style transfers surprisingly well into this ‘sort-of-opera’.
It would be more accurate to call this sort-of-everything; there are elements
of pantomime, melodrama, and features pastiches of hymns and musical theatre in
the score as much as opera. This is Shrigley’s first hand at writing something
of this length, but considering that the humour in his work is often verbal,
this wasn’t going to be a challenge.
Photo taken from: whatsonstage.com |
The beyond bizarre story follows a cookery show hosted by
the always cheery June Spoon (Pauline Knowles) and the always camp Phillip Fork
(Stewart Cairns). They are cooking dinner for Mr Granules tonight (a
nightmarish, gigantic puppet manned by Tobias Wilson) who is rumoured to have
eaten babies. Inevitably, when things go wrong, Mr Granules can’t help but feel
peckish.
Before this though, they must make the dinner. This
involves: interviewing the candidates for the vegetable soup – adorable puppets
designed by Shrigley, straight out of a children’s book. They must appeal to an
ecclesiastic butcher (sung stunningly by Peter Van Hulle), for him to grant
them mercy in the form of homosexual pork chops. And seek assistance from a
manic depressive, alcoholic egg (Gavin Mitchell), and a Latino banana (Martin
McCormack) in his pre-banana custard (‘yellow bastard’) form. These two actors
are outstanding, not just because playing foodstuffs does stand out, but
because they’re played physically and vocally as you’d imagine a common-sense
banana and depressed egg would act. Strange as that is, the comedy is spot on.
David Fennessy’s music is genuinely innovative and original,
going so far as to include bubble wrap and kitchen knives within the
composition. When it isn’t mocking conventional genres; take the repetition of
opera lyrics (‘SOUP! SOUP! SOUP! SOUP! SOUP! SOUP! WHAT KIND OF BLOODY SOUP?’),
Fennessy’s score is disturbingly eerie, playing against Shrigley’s script and
reflecting a darker undertones of Pass The
Spoon. It makes sharp commentary upon human appetite in its twisted way, and
at the same time Shrigley’s satirical but self-conscious tone makes opera
accessible. There is no snootiness about opera when the audience must clap and
chant with the performers, rather than waiting until the end of the movement.
Altogether, director Nicholas Bone has brought together an opera for the 21st
century. But beyond all this is an achievement for Shrigley; like a page of his
nonsensical doodlings brought to life, only he could make a not-just-an-opera
that features a singing and dancing Shit, successful. Pure silliness, Pass The Spoon is hilarious.
Unfortunately, Pass
The Spoon was only revived for two days at the Southbank’s Queen Elizabeth
Hall, but to find out when it will (undoubtedly) show again, see Magnetic
North’s website: www.magneticnorth.org.uk
No comments:
Post a Comment