Theatre: A Review of David Watson’s ‘The Serpent’s Tooth’

January 13, 2024
2 mins read

By Shaun Ajamu Hutchinson

Friday, November 16, 2012.

David Watson’s excellent answer riddim to the Almeida’s King Lear continues at Shoreditch Town Hall until 17 November, so try your best to catch it. If not, you’ll be missing out on a quite superb, albeit harrowing and disturbing, piece of theatre.  

Escorted from the foyer of Shoreditch Town Hall by several intimidating, uniformed Guards to the sepulchral and tomb like basement, Tim Mascall’s atmospheric lighting, and Steven Brown’s eerie soundscape increases the disorientation.  Along the route – navigating shadowy tunnels, walls lined with military apparel – frightening sounds assault the senses.  The 50 plus audience – on its feet for most of the time – experience sensory deprivation and overload.

Signe Beckmann’s transformation of this underground warren is meticulously detailed – bare walls, exposed brickwork and pipework, overturned chairs, crates, cobwebs on light shades, a floor layered with unknown objects – perhaps dead mice, maybe rodent droppings.  It’s a scene of mayhem and chaos matched by the anarchic events to come.

The starting point is the mayhem following the death of King Lear. Some knowledge of Shakespeare is useful but not compulsory because the strength of Watson’s concise and credible writing ensures that this drama stands on its own feet, in its own right. Into this volatile episode of internecine political intrigue and assassination Abina – a loyal supporter of a government tenaciously but falteringly holding on to a fragile power – is sent to oversee the political trial of a notorious traitor.

Babou Ceesay’s Abina gives a standout performance – distinguished, authoritative and imposing.  His voice resonant, his demeanour persuasive, but frighteningly corrupted by the nightmarish scenario, unwittingly trapped and incommunicado.  

Alexander Campbell’s deranged wild-eyed, twitchy and manic Warden appears to be in control here. His performance is a good one but maybe the only jarring note and perhaps exaggerated – manic lunacy and hysteria rather than calculated psychosis. The four Guards [all female – a comment on something perhaps] display vulnerability as well as culpability, each aiding and abetting the brutal environment with wilful, malicious relish.  Imogen Doel’s Guard B appears naïve; Charlie Covell solid and commanding as Guard A; Olivia Morgan’s Guard C is persuasive and Guard D traumatised, weak and susceptible in Alisha Bailey’s depiction.  

It wasn’t explicit but perhaps the dialogue given to these women – sometimes banal, some humour seeing to fall flat – was a comment on abusive power and oppression made trivial.

The dystopian vision presented in David Watson’s The Serpent’s Tooth is perhaps not as outlandish as this production suggests. Recently revealed evidence of British torture camps in Malaya and Kenya; the northern Irish H-Blocks of the 1970s and 1980s; Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, Abu Ghraib in Iraq, Bagrham Air Base in Afghanistan, and so-called Black sites dotted around the world as part of the US empire’s network of torture centres where people hunted down by the revenge seeking US military are extraordinarily rendered and disappeared into a Kafkaesque nightmare of anonymity and endless brutal, incarceration – all are recent and very real.

 

Don’t expect a warm night in a comfortable environment though. That’s not a criticism as such – just an observation of Talawa Artistic Director Michael Buffong’s skilful and cleverly directed 60 minute promenade production. You’ll be an observer to an unfolding crime, feel the distress and anguish of the six characters and get a full-on experience. Even as the play is enthralling but disturbing, the surroundings and environment won’t soothe any discomfort – nor are they expected to.  And surely, this work can be reprised as an accompaniment to Shakespeare’s regularly produced tragedy.

Main picture by Sheila Burnett

The Serpent’s Tooth

By David Watson

Directed by Michael Buffong

Until 17 November 2012

Shoreditch Town Hall 380 Old Street, London EC1V 9LT

Box Office 020 7359 4404

www.almeida.co.uk/serpent

www.talawa.com

Shaun Ajamu Hutchinson is The New Black Magazine’s arts editor and a London-based freelance journalist.

717 Comments

  1. Howdy I am so happy I found your web site, I really found you by accident, while I was searching on Yahoo for something else, Anyhow I am here now and would just like to say thanks a lot for a tremendous post and a all round enjoyable blog (I also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to read it all at the moment but I have bookmarked it and also added your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read much more, Please do keep up the fantastic work.

  2. It is appropriate time to make some plans for the future and it’s time to be happy. I’ve read this post and if I could I desire to suggest you few interesting things or suggestions. Maybe you can write next articles referring to this article. I desire to read more things about it!

  3. You made some decent points there. I looked on the web for additional information about the issue and found most individuals will go along with your views on this web site.

  4. Usually I do not learn article on blogs, but I wish to say that this write-up very pressured me to check out and do so! Your writing style has been surprised me. Thank you, very great post.

  5. I simply could not go away your web site prior to suggesting that I really loved the usual info an individual provide on your guests? Is gonna be again continuously in order to inspect new posts

  6. I think this is one of the most vital information for me. And i’m glad reading your article. But want to remark on few general things, The web site style is perfect, the articles is really great : D. Good job, cheers

Leave a Reply to Michaelkix Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

Django: A Baadassss Film for the Ages?

Next Story

Theatre Review: Dominique Morisseau’s Sunset Baby

Latest from Blog