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Written and directed by David Farmer, with music by Kenny Forrest.
Three actor/musicians. 50 minutes. Script and music available.
Originally a co-production with the Lyric, Hammersmith and Tiebreak Theatre Company, Jack and the Beanstalk toured throughout the UK in 2005. Read interviews with David Farmer about the production at bbc.co.uk and Derby Telegraph
'A beautifully imagined account of this children's favourite, performed with gusto and real storytelling suspense.'
- The Sunday Times
'Intelligent, humorous, inventive theatre for young people - achieved with remarkable imagination and flair.'
- The Stage
'There is a wonderful lament by Milkywhite the torch-singing cow, while unlikely musical instruments include scrubbing brushes in buckets and flower pots on strings.'
- Time Out
Review in The Stage 16/03/05
What an inspired idea to recreate a familiar tale through the ‘let’s
pretend’ device of three children playing. It makes perfect sense of
the role sharing. Characters frequently change roles, handing over the
requisite yellow football shirt or pinny and excitedly consulting the
storybook to see what they should make happen next. The gentle
interaction with the audience - mostly under-8s and their families -
works well too without being pantomimically laboured.
Versatility drives this show. Amanda Owen captures exactly the
demeanour of a six-year-old at play, by turns truculent, inquisitive,
exuberant or inconsolable. Owen has quite a gift for accents and can
tootle on sax. Rebecca Naylor - her singing voice exceptionally
attractive - is a fine musician who gets tuneful melodies out of
several wind instruments and creates catchy percussive effects.
Naylor’s performance as Milky the Cow, which includes a perky song and
dance routine, is a delightful piece of theatre. Zoot Lyman is also a
charismatic singer and guitarist as well as a well-paced actor. Onstage
throughout is company stage manager and musician Sean Ashton-Peach who
provides well-timed musical sound effects.
This show is full of
Kenny Forrest’s good songs, often sung in folksy harmony. One of them
is neatly modelled on a classical fugue and the traditional ‘Fee fi fo
fum’ becomes a compelling cross-rhythmic quartet. As we have come to
expect from Tiebreak there is lots of colour in Jack and the Beanstalk
and the quality of movement is outstanding. This is David Farmer’s last
show with Tiebreak after 24 years as artistic director. It’s a rousing
finale.
Susan Elkin .
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