18 May |
B-
Hoo-rah!
- Epic in scope in a manner usually reserved for musical theater
- I love the connection between the ripped sketchbook page and the giant projection screen that helps tell the story
- I like the idea of showing World War I through the eyes of a horse and the reminder that they are these truly beautiful, noble, obedient creatures who will work until they die of exhaustion.
- Music always helps… and it did for this too
- Despite the size of the stage and some very large and impressive set pieces, some sets were created in very simple and elegant ways that I liked (e.g. sticks held by actors that form different kinds of fences)
- Doesn’t shy away from the horrors of war, including death, shell shock, starvation…
- I like how long Albert and Joey are kept apart… I liked following Joey’s story more than Albert’s.
- Good puppetry
Blech…
- puppetry was amazing in London…so that felt disappointing in that I talked it up so much for my friends I went with. Sometimes the horses here would move in ways I simply know horses do not.
- pretty one-dimensional characters
- really distractingly bad accents. It made a big difference in the London production that the Brits were played by Brits and the Germans were played by Germans.
- I just don’t care about Albert; he’s too over-the-top sentimental for me.
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