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REVIEW: A Clockwork Orange, Park Theatre ✭✭✭✭
HomeNews & ReviewsReviewREVIEW: A Clockwork Orange, Park Theatre ✭✭✭✭
Review 17 February 2017 · 2 min read · 406 words

REVIEW: A Clockwork Orange, Park Theatre ✭✭✭✭

The production of A Clockwork Orange is a kind of Berkoff ballet, true to the spirit of the source material, but imprinted with an originality that will stay with you after the play ends. If you like your theatre muscular and direct, this is the show for you!

A Clockwork OrangeAlexandra Spencer JonesDamien HansonJames SmokerJonno DaviesOff West End

A Clockwork Orange.

Park Theatre

16 February 2017

4 Stars

Book Tickets Action To The Word’s version of the Anthony Burgess classic has been touring the world since its debut in 2011, and now arrives at the Park Theatre for a run. In the programme notes, director Alexandra Spencer-Jones speaks of the still relevant work, “The pathways of damage inherited by our young look like broken yellow brick roads leading to a miserable and all too white house of horrors... It is ever painfully relevant.” An exhilarating 90 minutes, it has Berkoff encoded in its DNA, East and Greek providing the foundation upon which this production is built. This is physical theatre with a capital PHYSICAL, rubbing testosterone into the face of the audience, performed to a blistering soundtrack of not just Beethoven.

The ensemble of nine work as one, the lines and invented language of the Droogs as chiselled as the abs and Pecs on show. Tricky to pick any one individual out, but Jonno Davies is a powerful Alexander, particularly in the prison and rehabilitation scenes, with Damien Hasson an excellent Chaplain and Simon Cotton a sinister Dr Brodsky providing effective counterpoints to the horror. James Smoker and Will Stokes are prime examples of the excellent ensemble playing, projecting energy that fills every particle of the auditorium. The cast waste not one minute drilled to a high level, and it may have been interesting to have reduced the dialogue even further and tell the tale through physicality even more. They have your attention from the minute they walk slowly into the bare space, demanding your concentration.

Given the heightened physical style of the production, inevitably some roles are little more than caricature. Sadly this is the case with almost all of the female and the elderly roles. Whilst the horror of the physical, sexual and mental assaults are not glamorised, too often these roles are played solely for laughs. There is more to be mined there that could not only say more about Alexander’s place and rage in society but of women too.

The production is a kind of Berkoff ballet, true to the spirit of the source material, but imprinted with an originality that will stay with you after the play ends. If you like your theatre muscular and direct, this is the show for you!

Until 18 March 2017

Photos: Matt Martin

BOOK TICKETS FOR A CLOCKWORK ORANGE AT THE PARK THEATRE

Paul T Davies
Paul T Davies

Paul is a playwright, director, actor, academic, (he has a PhD from the University of East Anglia), teacher and theatre reviewer! His plays include Living with Luke, (UK tour 2016), Play Something, (Edinburgh Festival Fringe/Drayton Arms Theatre, London 2018), , (2019), and now The Miner’s Crow, which won the inaugural Artist’s Pick of the Fringe Award at the first ever Colchester Fringe Festival 2021. In lockdown 2020 he created the audio series Isolation Alan, available on Youtube, and performed online in the Voice Box Festival. He is the founder member of Stage Write, a Colchester based theatre company, and his acting roles include Rupert in How We Love by Annette Brook, first performed at the Vaults Festival 2020 and revived at the Arcola and at Theatre Peckham in 2021. Follow: @stagewrite_

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