Tuesday, 30 May 2023

STUDENT THEATRE REVIEW: The 39 Steps - The Ampitheatre, Preston College; Preston.


Think of Preston and the image likely to occur is that of a post-industrial Lancashire town just off the M6, not really known for having great theatres. The fact is that the city has a hidden gem that has only recently seen a return to live performances and deserves to be much better known, Preston College amphitheatre. This remarkable venue is set amidst an array of tall pine trees and has everything a theatre production might require, with side and centre walkways, a semi-circle of descending rows and a stage backed with a stone structure allowing for two middle and two side entrances. Such was the setting for the Actor Training Academy end-term production.

John Buchan’s classic novel has undergone several movie and television adaptations as a gripping thriller and in recent years been transposed into a farce with four actors playing over a hundred roles. This production took a middle ground, very much a comedy, at times bordering on farce but with several scenes of serious drama.

The amphitheatre was used to great effect starting with an entrance from the rear by Richard Haney the central protagonist, giving an introductory monologue and the action taking place in the descending aisles, along the rows and in the forest to the sides of the audience area as well of course around the central stage. Fortunately, with the evening was blessed with warm weather and a clear sky, the use of the amphitheatre was demonstrated to its full potential. The story unfolded staying close to the original film version by Hitchcock with the audience exposed to entrances and performances from all sides.

A stylising device of the production was the incorporation of some twenty members of the cast dressed in blue and orange some of whom would put on costumes for bit roles but for the most acting as an audience or crowd in various scenes, from a London music hall to a Scottish political meeting and clowning around between scenes. This worked to a degree but at times was a distraction from the period feel of the story, perhaps a deliberately Brechtian move? The central characters were fully in costume however with the story effectively revolving around the Haney character.

Luke Ray was almost never off stage during the whole show and gave a splendid performance with period speech and mannerisms as Richard Haney, the self-deprecating Londoner inadvertently involved in murder and espionage. This was a very physical role with Ray seen at some time or other seen all over the auditorium and stage. Jessica Rolfe was well cast as the woman fate had thrown together with Haney as a pair of fugitives on the run whilst gradually bonding. There were several notable characterisations, notably Lucy Vernum as Mr Memory and Tom Byers as the cockney milkman with the amusing double act of Horatio Goldthorpe and Darci Slater as Mr and Mrs McGarrigle (this was the kind of show where you could get away with a racial stereotype!).

This was a very good production but it could have better still if the pace had been faster. An essential element of farce is pace and particularly in the first Act, many of the exchanges between characters were interspersed with far too many long pauses. There were also some key scenes which would have been more effective had they been shorter, cases in point being Haney addressing the Liberal party rally and the bedroom scene at the McGarrigles. Otherwise, this was an excellent production in an excellent venue.

Reviewer - John Waterhouse
on - 26.5.23


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