Skip to main content

Review of Dizzy Boo (White Cobra) at The Playhouse Theatre, Northampton

Having had the pleasure of seeing six previous and all excellent productions from White Cobra, it is perhaps inevitable one day that one might eventually disappoint. Setting a standard so high means that anything other than excellent feels below par. Sadly their new show Dizzy Boo fails to hit the spot. Not so much in the performances, as White Cobra have once again assembled their excellent company of actors who have yet to be a letdown, it is more that the play itself by Brian Wright seems a little unsure of itself at times.

Set in Saxons Mead housing estate, the play centres around the sale of Nick (Fraser Haines) and Donna's (Kate Billingham) house following his discovery that things may not stay the same forever on the homes overlook of meadows. Add into the mix some roaming immigrants escaped from a lorry and some musical numbers and you have a curious mix between comedy and tough drama.

This mix is at times where some of the problems lie as although the best plays balance between drama and comedy, in Dizzy Boo, the tough part feels seriously and dangerously played too lightheartedly. If you are going to have such a powerful scene as that between Nick and Donna towards the end of the first act, you really should have a tough resolution or at the very least a tougher response from the other characters than we get. Likewise the immigration story is handled very casually considering the path is takes and at play end more seriously is left unresolved as the play just stops. You expect some loose ends at the end of a play as life goes on for the characters, but with Dizzy Boo, everything is left loose with no resolution to any of the major stories.

Having said all this, there is still much to enjoy from the play. The cast are excellent and the script itself works extremely well with the doubling up of roles, possibly one of the best I have seen in fact with a small cast and so many character switches. None of them seem awkward and all are brilliant handled by the performers, each of the six leads creating specifically different feeling characters.

Fraser Haines is great as the generally unlikeable Nick, opinionated and full of pure self-interest, you totally hate him long before that scene with Donna, and after that you simply have no time for him at all. Kate Billingham likewise gives a great performance as the put upon Donna, having to deal with all of Nick's behaviour in all its various quirks. Kate also is superb as her second character, which with all the build-up, frankly has to be a great performance or it is going to be a tremendous let-down. Her antics with the near mute Pasco (Denise Swann) are really great fun and one of the highlights of the play.

Bernie Wood and Richard Jordan as Louise and Jez Herbert are sweetly kind natured and blunt and forceful respectfully. Richard also has many of the best comedy moments including his first arrival in main character as full Mario and his tale of the call out is extremely well delivered. Rod Arkle and Kimberley Vaughan offer great support and some really fun tunes as neighbours Ben and Paddy.

Production wise there are a couple of occasions in Dizzy Boo that set my set changing twitch off as unfortunately. First was the incredibly cumbersome way that the house name was changed. I just wanted to jump on the stage and switch the sign from one side of the stage to the other, so the poor stage manager didn't have to walk across the stage and could have just flipped it quickly. Also, I would have had that wonderful set of crockery initially placed on a tray for quick escape rather than a horrific bag packing scenario occurring. However I confess that scene changes are my OCD and others might have been fine with this. The set from Derek Banyard offers a wonderful backdrop for the play and does feel very garden-like.

So, Dizzy Boo is entertaining, but would be better billed as a comedy drama and with better expansion on the bold drama it deploys and then briskly discards. It sadly never reaches the mighty heights of Brian Wright's most recent offering Shaxpeare's Box and while it is as always brilliantly performed, it isn't quite White Cobra's finest hour.
★★


Performance reviewed: Wednesday 29th March, 2017 at the Playhouse Theatre, Northampton

Dizzy Boo runs until Saturday 1st April at The Playhouse Theatre, Northampton before continuing its tour. For details visit: http://www.whitecobraproductions.co.uk/

For full details about the Playhouse Theatre visit their website at http://www.theplayhousetheatre.net/

Popular posts from this blog

Review of Shrek the Musical at Royal & Derngate (Derngate), Northampton

Once upon a time, there was a splendidly green ogre who went by the name of Shrek. For many years, Shrek starred in a captivating and thrilling adventure set upon a theatre stage. This came to pass following a tale told in a Dream(works) in a cinematic spectacle. His tale was told in a truly fun way, with staging sublime, and endless mirth from a nefarious baddie who in many ways came up short.  However, around the corner, there was greater evil afoot as our green friend's show was undergoing a transformation for further adventures on stage. What possible way could this evil be stopped?  Sadly, for all, it could not and the evil reigned for a full UK tour which journeys most recently to the magical kingdom of the Royal & Derngate after a long adventure across the land. So, dear reader, forgive my fairy tale preamble, and perhaps, from that you might imagine this show isn't up to much and sadly you would be right. Shrek when it toured before to Northampton was a little ligh

Review of Cluedo 2 at Milton Keynes Theatre

Back in 2022, the original Cluedo stage play, based on a 1985 play by Sandy Rustin, itself based on the cult US film Clue , journeyed to Milton Keynes Theatre as part of a UK tour. It was, it has to be said, an average affair, made good by some excellent staging and at times a very fair tribute to the original board game. Now two years later, the success of that tour clearly warranted a return to the franchise and we find Cluedo 2 now on stage at Milton Keynes Theatre. So, is a follow-up warranted, and does it address many of the issues of the original? Let's find out. Unlike the original and with no film source material to create a second play from, legendary TV comedy writers Maurice Gran and Lawrence Mark have taken the helm to provide the script for this production. Sadly, the legendary writers have for the best part plowed through their archives of extremely dated, and tiresome comedy. Much of the script is heavy on the obvious, high on the cringe, and while at times it can

Review of Unexpected Twist at Royal & Derngate (Royal), Northampton

This new stage adaptation by Roy Williams of Michael Rosen's Unexpected Twist is a very important piece of theatre. Much like a pantomime's appeal, this special little production could be key to a lifetime of theatre activity for young people who experience it. The production, directed by James Dacre, ticks so many of the boxes to make this interesting for them, talk of mobile phones, streetwise kids at the stories centre, R&B, and beatboxing. It is as down with the kids and as cool as any Royal & Derngate Made in Northampton production I have seen and in arrangement with The Children's Theatre Partnership this is something very special. Not to say that this show is just for kids, as this is as much for grown-ups as well. Rosen's story takes Charles Dickens Oliver Twist , and wait for it, twists a new story from it while linking brilliantly to the trials of life and families in 2023. You see, every modern character in this story sees their world collide with a