Friday, 25 May 2012

‘Travelling Light’ - National Lyttelton Theatre - Thursday 26th April 2012


(Rated 3.5/5 )

This is a delightful little play by Nicholas Wright about the discovery of movies and what makes them work. It is set in a Jewish shtetl (small town) and, though the characters are in fact fictional, based on the stories of many of the real life pioneers of the motion picture business in America, who came from such communities in Poland, Russia, Hungary…, we feel the magical emotion of the underlying real life stories, experiences and insights set before our eyes as though happening in the moment.

The entire cast are good, but Sir Anthony Sher puts them all to shame as timber-merchant Jacob Bindel. His performance is truly phenomenal in warmth, humour, drama, poignancy and sensitivity. He totally convinces as a Jew of the time – to those of us maybe who were/are not! His character was not to become the successful movie mogul in Hollywood – that honour went to Motl Mendl (Damien Molony) who was to become Maurice Montgomery (Paul Jesson) – but, as many of the time and also now, he was the one with the big ideas to never get the credit. He understood how to convey emotion (without words) on film and what would make a great story. And it was Motl’s love interest, Anna Mazowiecka (Lauren O’Neil), who inspired the close-up and came up with the idea of cutting pieces of film to make the story.

The set was lovely and seemed authentic, as were the costumes. The snippets of black and white film conveyed both the films made by the characters, but also gave such a beautiful sense and atmosphere to the whole production.

I said this was a little play even though in fact it had so much in it! It felt little in that it was a story of everyday people of the time, in a little village far away from where main events were happening and where cinema would be born. But this little story was the conception of something massive.

Travelling Light – Review by TheRestrictedReviewer © 2012 


Twitter: @RestrictReview

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