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REVIEW: Strangers on a Train @ THEATRE ROYAL

Strangers on a Train

Strangers On A Train is based on the  1950 novel by Patricia Highsmith with a heafty nod at that Oscar-Winning Alfred Hitchcock film.

We begin the story as a fateful encounter takes place between two men in a carriage of a train crossing America. Guy is the successful businessman with a nagging jealousy; Charles is the cold, calculating chancer with a dark secret. A drunken dangerous plan seems to develop from this casual conversation setting in motion a chain of events that will change the two men’s lives forever.

The cast is led by Christopher Harper, playing the charismatic and manipulative Charles.  John Middleton as Detective Arthur Gerard , Jack Ashton as the troubled Guy Haines alongside Hannah Tointon as Guy’s fiancé Anne Faulkner.

I suppose I’ve been on too many trains, with too many drunk and weird strangers to find this stylish over stuffed Cho-Cho anything other than a vintage trip along memory lane, carefully crafted to appeal but not to challenge. Like a trip on the Blue Bell railway, or a return to Hassocks on the last train on a Friday night,  it gives good visuals, but felt oddly unsatisfying. It looks great, stylish, technically accomplished and its thumping narrative rhythm never lets anything get tired, there’s no time for that, but I was still not on the edge of my seat.

A thriller is supposed to thrill and director Anthony Banks seems to have missed out this vital part of the production. Most of the acting is convincing Christopher Harpers speech about his stalking and murdering the first Mrs Haines is compelling and he convinces us of his deranged, entitled, morally corrupt world, but when this dissolves into dipsomania it becomes a more predicable performance.  Although Jack Ashton’s performance is strong thought-out  and they work well together as a pair their increasingly fraught and scheming  interactions failed to convince me of a man driven to murder against his will.

I, sigh…. have an issue with these sotto voice homophobic characters, Hitchcock loved killing his twisted queers off and Highsmith also not so subtly suggests that the drunk, repressed & unhinged Bruno gets exactly what he deserves. Blame it on the mother, Pat. The drinking and repression echo’s Highsmiths’ own experience and this gives us insight into the author more than the play, curiously of all the repressed evil homo’s she wrote she also sneaked a ‘happily every after’ lesbian romance novel out immediately after penning Strangers on a train, it was called The price of salt.

Hannah Tointon is lovely, floating through on a cloud of perfect costume and flawless coiffeur giggling and getting some good lines  but without much substance in the role.

Some of the more seminal moments are not even staged, the murders, the discovery’s and the ex-police man role is reduced to just about as cardboard as you can get without corrugating in front of our eyes. John Middleton was wasted in this production. We were warned by the ushers this was a ‘quiet play’ before going in, not so for Middleton, he roared!

The set is a delight in its filmic glory but I wondered during another of the moments when my concentration begin to slide as much as the geometric panes on the stage why bother making it into a play if the effects are going full movie hog?  It’s great to watch and suggested a huge Chinese box puzzle, one where all the elements had to be aligned correctly before the secret was resolved. The witty, clever projections from Duncan McLean are a delight and assist in suggesting place and tone successful.   This is the same team who worked very successfully on the atmospheric and enjoyable Gaslight tour last year.

Costumes and lighting are lovely, sound scapes on point and the set, once again, looks like Edward Hooper and Frank Lloyd Wright got fresh with each other on the I Love Lucy set. It’s perfect retro Americana. I wonder if by intent the constant unsettled movement of the set to expose new space, new scene and new action results in a feeling of things isolated and disconnected from their environments, unsettling us and making me think of the solitude of each of these characters lives.

The play gets faster as it nears the end, with accusation, denouement and discovery landing with great thumps alongside some delicious acting as they all crumble into madness & gothic despair.  The final scene is superb and closes the action well, leaving the plot holes gaping still, but the audience seemed satisfied with the denouement and gave this production some serious applause.

My companion enjoyed herself immensely; I wandered off into the cold night without so much as a shiver but with some superb new ideas for wallpaper.  This is a charming production of a flawed play done with great style and commitment by the cast and this Iron Horse steams along at a great place but lacks a true heart, either one beating with dark wickedness or light goodness that would pull it up to heaven.

Until Sat 13th January

Theatre Royal

Brighton

For more info or to buy tickets see their website here. 

 

 

Clear out your old IT for free

A new pop up shop is being opened by the city council and its partners to allow people to declutter their old tech in a post-Christmas clear out.

Anyone with unwanted tech like computers, laptops, phones, cameras and cables – possibly because they’ve bought or received new equipment over the festive season – can safely dispose of their old items and have them safely and professionally data wiped for free.

The tech will then be available from free online reuse network Freegle, given to charities to distribute, sold to people less able to afford new tech or, if the equipment is beyond repair, it will be dismantled for material recycling.

The Tech-Takeback shop, the second of five over the next year, will open at 13 Pavilion Buildings, Brighton, BN1 1EE, this Saturday, January 13, between 10am – 5pm, for 9 days.

The first shop, opened for 10 days in December, was visited by 420 people and a total of 1,036 items were dropped off, including 84 mobile phones, 123 laptops, 53 computers, 67 hard drives, 201 USB memory sticks and hundreds of cables – all weighing in at almost 1.5 tonnes.

This amounted to a carbon saving of 4.5 tonnes of CO2e – equivalent to the energy needed to produce and cook around 1,295 cheeseburgers or produce 44,440 plastic carrier bags.

Cllr Saoirse Horan
Cllr Saoirse Horan

Councillor Saoirse Horan, deputy chair of the city’s environment, transport and sustainability committee, said: “The first tech-take back shop was a massive success and we’re looking to collect even more unwanted tech to either reuse or recycle.

“We all have old or unwanted tech collecting dust in our drawers or cupboards at home. What better way to have a post-Christmas clear out than giving it a new lease of life or having it recycled?”

The pop-up shops are being run by Brighton & Hove City Council; Freegle, the free online reuse network; circular economy environment specialists SOENECS; and computer data erasure experts EraseMyData.

Cllr Horan added: “Many people think if they simply delete everything on their computer, or reset their phone to ‘factory settings’, then the data is completely gone. However, only by getting data professionally and expertly wiped can people be reassured that their personal data has been safely and entirely erased.”    

Dr David Greenfield, co-founder of Tech-Takeback and managing director of SOENECS, said: “We were delighted with the response from the public to the first pop-up shop – it would be great if we could do even better and collect more than 2 tonnes of tech at the January pop-up shop.”

The shops are being sponsored by special funding after the city council won a £25,000 WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) Local Project grant under the national Distributor Takeback Scheme.

Sea Serpents RFC play Seaford II this Saturday

After a few weeks off over Christmas, Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents return to League action this Saturday, January 13 against Seaford 2nds.

Go along and support the Serpents as they aim to win their first match in the Sussex League.

The game is at Hove Rugby Club (Hove Recreation Ground, Shirley Drive, Hove BN3 6NQ) which is open to all and has a fully licensed bar and cafe serving lots of delicious grub.

Match Kick Off is at 2pm.

In the evening the Serpents will be in the Village with their opponents from Seaford for ‘a few’ drinks starting from 8pm at the Camelford Arms.

The Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents are Sussex’s first Gay & Inclusive rugby club, members of International Gay Rugby (IGR), the Sussex RFU and the Rugby Football Union (RFU).

Sea Serpents kit is sponsored by The Camelford Arms.

Sea Serpents at Brighton Pride 2017
Sea Serpents at Brighton Pride 2017

 

Conservative councillors say “NO!” to Varndean College green space development 

Action group calls on Varndean College to withdraw planning application.

Local Conservative councillors in Withdean and Patcham, including Lee Wares and Geoffrey Theobald, have written to Liz Hobden, the Head of Planning at Brighton and Hove City Council, listing 16 detailed objections to Varndean College’s plan to build on green space behind the college to create a luxury housing development.

Withdean councillors Ann and Ken Norman and Nick Taylor said: “Having listened to residents closely we understand and support the objection to the development of this precious green space. The playing fields are of prime ecological value to the community and we want that to be preserved for future generations.”

The College also plans to build a floodlit, all-weather pitch in front of the college which objectors claim will destroy desperately needed green space including valuable wildlife habitats. These are unlikely to recover in spite of the College’s claims to the contrary the objectors claim.

Local residents have also expressed their frustration at the underhand way Varndean College have dealt with local people. Retired GP and neighbour Dr Rosy McConnell claims that Varndean College has misled the public, local residents and local councillors by claiming the land was robustly and transparently marketed in 2016 for Open Space use.

She says: “The original small advertisement for disposal of the land only appeared once in the Brighton Argus in May 2016! It was simply a check-box exercise. No local residents were ever consulted on the sale and possible use of the land as a community amenity. That is why we are now applying to have the land classed as an Asset of Community Value.”

Anton Pruden, who lives nearby, was a Community Governor at Varndean College for eight years until December 2017. A key member of the Finance Working Group, he was always opposed to the development.

Mr Pruden says: “This is an ill-conceived property development. Any sports facility development mentioned (such as the all-weather pitch) has been an after-thought to aid the planning process and not reported to the governors as a priority.”

“The integrity of the college brand is facing a huge backlash as people realise just how underhand the college has been,” says another neighbour, Dr Katrina Lake, Consultant Clinical Psychologist.

“Far from being unused land surplus to requirements,” she says, “the site has been a valuable biodiversity resource for all the schools on the campus (one primary school, two secondary school as well as Varndean College). It is in fact officially part of the sports field it abuts and so development directly contravenes planning guidelines.”

Leading the Green Varndean Action Group, Dr Lake says that the green space is also a vital link in the wildlife corridor connecting the Downs with Withdean Woods and other woodlands in Brighton.

Dr Lake is also very concerned about the hidden impact of further loss of green space on well-being and mental health. “Varndean Green is a special oasis of quiet, open to the sky with a magnificent coastal vista. Research indicates that views of open green space are critical to the mental stability of urban populations. It is of grave concern that the proposed development destroys the iconic view across the ancient field system of Varndean Campus to the city and the sea beyond. It will be lost forever. Varndean College are privatising a view that belongs to everyone in Brighton.”

Local resident Elma Still says that the proposed development sets a dangerous precedent for everyone living in Brighton. “If the wildlife sanctuary of Varndean Green ends up being bulldozed, then no small green space in Brighton will be safe. It’s hugely important to take a stand against unnecessary development now.”

The Green Varndean Action Group is calling on Varndean College to withdraw its planning application and to be straight with the local community about what the money is really needed for.

“One more plastic football pitch isn’t a priority for the College or the neighbourhood and it’s a poor reward for the loss of so much beauty and nature!” says near neighbour Sue Dibb. “We recognise that colleges such as Varndean are underfunded, but selling off land just isn’t the answer. Will it mean that every time the college needs more money to repair or develop the college that they’ll need to sell off more land? Looking at their plans that would seem to be exactly what they plan to do but that’s not a sustainable way to run a public institution.”

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