Showing posts with label Hercule Poirot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hercule Poirot. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 February 2014

BLACK COFFEE - THEATRE REVIEW




BLACK COFFEE AT THE WOLVERHAMPTON GRAND THEATRE

Theatre Run: Monday 3 - Saturday 8 February 2014
Performance Reviewed: Monday 3 February 2014 (Press Night)

Reviewed by Kyle Pedley


Black Coffee serves as a most welcome blending of the familiar with the fresh; the archetypal components of any Agatha Christie murder mystery of this ilk - the isolated country estate, an ensemble of questionable types amongst the well-to-do, more red herrings than you can twizzle a preened moustache at - are all present and accounted for, and yet in being the only stage work of Christie’s to feature her now seminal Belgian super sleuth Hercule Poirot, it feels a somewhat more distinct and special affair. Newcomer to the role yet established veteran of stage and screen Robert Powell channels David Suchet’s oft-imitated yet never bettered work in the role complimented with a charm and presence of his own, finding in both the character and play as a whole just enough bonhomie and bounce to keep the whole proceeding suitably entertaining and amusing without undermining the grizzly business of unravelling a typically obscure yet progressively accessible Christie plot of murder most foul.

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

THE MOUSETRAP - THEATRE REVIEW



THE MOUSETRAP AT THE WOLVERHAMPTON GRAND THEATRE

Theatre Run: Monday 27 May - Saturday 1 June 2013
Performance Reviewed: Tuesday 28 May

Reviewed by Kyle Pedley

As one of her most prolific and familiar works, The Mousetrap is quintessential Agatha Christie fare and for those few who are not already familiar with the production or its story, they should nonetheless have a good idea of what to expect going in. A group of assorted strangers stranded in a stately guest home, each bringing their own particular brand of suspicion and secrets to the fray, links to a tragedy of yesteryear and a much more recent strangling nearby, enough red herrings and twists to keep Marple or Poirot on their feet, it remains in many ways the archetypal and definitive murder mystery experience, and yet one that has defied the odds (Christie herself initially predicted the show would only last 8 months) and evolved into something of a curious, almost inexplicable paradox and enigma in and of itself - a murder mystery play with a single outcome that has nonetheless gone on to become the longest running show of any kind anywhere in the world. Ever. And now, as a further testimony to its longevity and success it is being celebrated with this diamond anniversary production, which itself is quite surprisingly the first time the show has toured the UK.