A FUNNY SHOW HAPPENENED ON THE WAY TO THE COLISEUM
Ancient Greece is suffering drought and near-famine, and on a small island (population 16 and a half) prayers to Dionysius (“Dionysus, end this crisis!”) are getting nowhere. The Tyrant of Athens summons scattered Greece to a prayer competition, meeeting little enthusiasm from the grumpy middle-aged elder Melampus, her nervous servant Atlas and the preeningly military Adonis. Young Thespis and his sister Poly offer to write the new prayer, and he has a moment of inspiration. Since they’re all fed up one way or another, and sing about being trapped in their disappointing selves, Thespis suggests they should understand each other better. Well, obviously the way to do this is to “walk in their sandals” – impersonate someone and get inside another’s character and feelings.
They all try this: thrillingly, they have just invented Theatre! And, naturally, modern cries of “I feel seen!”. As the young caper and clamber around the elegantly distressed columns and pilasters and persuade Melampus, for all the cheerful nonsensical songs, I was oddly moved. That, after all, is what this art is all about.And I was already softened up by Claire-Marie Hall’s first number as careful, swotty Poly. “A girl who knows everything and nothing at all”.
The idea of theatre throws old Melampus into a prophetic fit (MIa Jerome beautifully going into Caribbean every time she has a vision) and she foresees much, including tales of “Kings and Queens and a play where everybody is a cat with no discernible plot”. So Thespis leads them in some drama-school exercises and they set set off to Athens to see how this revolutionary idea of therapeutic impersonation goes down. Obviously, it first gets them arrested for blasphemy, but since the rain arrives…
Hats off to the Mercury, whose homegrown premiere this is, and more comedy hats off to Mischief Theatre, the goes-wrong troupe for branching out into their first musical , written by co-founder JOnathan SAyer with music and lyrics by Ed Zanders. I was a bit doubtful – apart from anything else their glorious normal ‘goes-wrong” trope can’t quite work in this genre, especially with a sstory (very necessary right now in the UK) of youth confidently and bravely looking for a future. I also wondered how long any musical comedy in-joke about actors could last.
I was wrong. Sayer and Zanders have avoided every pitfall. It’s fast, its funny, and it has some absoslutely banging numbers which never, ever go on for too long. Some are touching, some rockingly absurd: when the other islands attempt their new prayer there is wicked pastiche of rock, romance and rap. In the second half Melampus has the most storming of all, as she leads the ensemble as bearded old codgers in “Old Man Tango – where did my man go?” in search of her long-ago lost lover (the rhymes are good, no grim Tim-Ricery but a lot of cheek).
It was crafty to give us elders that glorious moment, but exhilaratingly a lot of the show feels very Gen-Z: very open to delighting the young in the packed house last night. Poly and Thespis (a delightful James Spence) are brother and sister, so the cautious romance is actually between him and Luke Latchman’s anxious, helpful shy Atlas, who has a number about how he needs to play a part as someone less feeble in order to propose. Mark PIckering as Adonis is consistently funny, the most OTT of them all. There’s a satisfying plot development Thespis takes the familiar journey of becoming both a major star and a dickhead drunk on the success of his own “merch” and big contract, but is redeemed by his cast-mates.
And hey, Sayer even offers us both a greek-tragedy ending moment and a beautiful joke at the end, as Rhys Taylor the heavily bejewelled Tyrant realizes that in every theatre company there is room for someone like her, with money and power and ruthlessness. A producer. Of course.
mercurytheatre.co.uk is selling out fast till 23 May
then touring – to July. BATH · SWINDON · GUILDFORD – WEEK 1 · CHELTENHAM · CARDIFF · GUILDFORD – (twice)







