Friday, 10 October 2014

Propaganda Swing Review (Nottingham Playhouse)



Propaganda Swing is a story of music and romance set in Nazi Germany, during a period which became known as ‘the Phoney War’. Based on true stories and real people, the story is told through the eyes of young American War correspondent Bill Constant. It is directed by Hamish Glen, who has a plethora of theatrical productions under his belt both here and abroad. It stars Clara Darcy (Emmerdale, The Royal), as Anita Spada and Tomm Coles (Gulliver’s Travels, Muppets Most Wanted) as Lutz Templin to name only a couple.

The story begins shortly after Billy’s arrival in Germany, who has fallen in love with a young jazz songstress called Lala after a fleeting meeting. Bill, Lala and her band all love jazz, but problematically, the Nazis hate it due to its black roots and also because they believed it was a Jewish led conspiracy against the purity of German womanhood. The group’s hopes of being able to play jazz freely soon become a reality, but not in the way they wanted. An unfortunate encounter results in them having to play for the benefit of the Nazi war effort and under the strict and heavy hand of Propaganda Ministry leader: Herr Hinkel. It is in this complicated arrangement that a story of love, deception, censorship and suspicion unfolds.

Propaganda Swing is brilliant in every way from the music and characters to the set design.
The set is a cool and stylish chiascuro design, predominantly black and white laced with iron looking bars formulated into imagery reminiscent of Nazi symbols. These bars covering the white backgrounds cast prison bar-like silhouettes onto the stage throughout, encasing the performers in a cage of shadows, a constant reminder of their potential fate. The contrast is rather ironic considering the play focuses on grey areas, namely that of Nazi performance laws.
The set also matches coolly with the tone and narrative of Propaganda Swing, which feels very similar to classic film noir.

Nazis referred to jazz as 'Entartete Musik'
which translates as forbidden music


The cast are also brilliant, with several stand-out performances. The star of the show has got to be Otto Stenzl, played by Chris Andrew Mellon, a closeted Jewish homosexual who loves to party. A darker skin tone would be the only thing that could make Hitler hate him even more. He turns from a character known as ‘the fixer’, who can get you anything and everything, to a shadow of the man he once was. Miranda Wilford as LaLa Anderson, the pretty jazz singer is also another standout performance. You are shocked the first time you hear the powerful yet mellifluous voice that she emits when singing, not something you’d expect from her speaking voice. This is not surprising however, since she is a regular vocalist with several big bands including Syd Lawrence Orchestra and The World’s Biggest Big Band. Finally is Paul Lincoln as Heinrich Hinkel of the Ministry of Propaganda. Hinkel is the ever seeing eye of censorship, ensuring the strict rules of the Reich are abided by and will not hesitate to punish those that break them. He plays his character with conviction and it is hard not to dislike him from the outset.  

To bring all of those aforementioned things together is the music. As expected Propaganda Swing has a great soundtrack of jazz and pop music of the time. These include Tiger Rag, Makin’ Whoopee, Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf and St Louis Blues to name only a few. Each song is sang brilliantly by various members of the cast and backed up with a brilliant band which includes bass, percussion and piano.  

Propaganda Swing is a well told story that is funny, moving, enjoyable and expectedly jazzy. It is an overall stylish and sophisticated production that oozes emotion.
It seems fitting to say that Propaganda Swing is just like a pantomime, what with the music, love triangles, goodies that end up as baddies and baddies that aren’t that bad. There’s even a bit of damey-ness in Stenzl thrown in for good measure. The most fun you will have around men wearing Nazi uniforms, aside from going to a party with Prince Harry.


Propaganda Swing is on at the Nottingham Playhouse until Saturday 17 October, with tickets starting from £9.50. Tickets are available both in-person from the box office and online here at the Playhouse website.

Directed by Hamish Glen
Written by Peter Arnott
Musical Supervisors Hilary Brooks and Steve Tromans

Jonny Bower as Charlie Schwedler
Callum Coates as William Joyce/Lord Haw Haw
Tomm Coles as Lutz Templin
Richard Conlon as Bill Constant
Clara Darcy as Anita Spada
Chris Andrew Mellon as Otto Stenzl
Paul Lincoln as Heinrich Hinkel

Miranda Wilford as LaLa Anderson

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

A Dangerous Game Review


With the Scottish Independence Referendum looming, there is something that Alex Salmond does not want you to know. He does not really care about Scotland all that much. That is unless you measure how much someone cares about something by how much they are willing to sell it to destructive billionaires. A Dangerous Game is something Salmond does not want you to see. Neither does Donald Trump or Greg Norman.

A Dangerous Game is about self-professed environmental and ecological expert Donald Trump. It is a  documentary that reveals the destructive impact of golf resorts for the super-rich worldwide. It follows up on You’ve Been Trumped, which told the story of Donald Trump’s plans to build a massive luxury golf resort in Aberdeenshire and one man’s battle that helped stop it. This man Michael Forbes, a stereotypically strong willed and fiercely stubborn Scot, was eventually awarded the ‘Top Scot Award’ trumping the likes of Andy Murray and Billy Connolly to get it. A Dangerous Game branches out from Scotland and explores the other areas Trump tries to infiltrate with his gold resorts, places less able to stand up to him for one reason or another.

The film explores the potential destruction and that which has already happened to the homes of both wildlife and humans alike. It makes Trumps golf resort empire seem like a cancer, spreading into the world’s most beautiful areas, both natural and manmade, such as UNESCO site Dubrovnik. And it is not just the landscapes that suffer. The amount of water needed to irrigate the world’s golf courses a day is enough to supply 80% of the world’s population.

The developments turn vast natural beauty into bland patches of grass, and those who dare to stand up to Trump and the developers are subject to death threats and physical assault, a fate inflicted on some of the most vocal Croatians that spoke out against the resorts. It is clear to see how much the Croatian people did not want the beautiful city of Dubrovnik being turned into a golf resort with twice as many voting against the plans than in the entire European Parliament vote. It seems that many people worldwide see Donald Trump as a poorly mannered bodily function. Rather noxious and leaves many of those whom he comes into contact with revolted.

A Dangerous Game is a frightening insight into how money can persuade even the most established democracies. It is very Michael Moore in style and delivery and succeeds in ridiculing those who it opposes, although not necessarily purposely, as people like Donald Trump generally succeed in doing that themselves. Michael Forbes made sure Mr Trump felt as welcome in Scotland as his namesake in a cramped elevator but other people are not as fierce as Michael.  There are only so many beatings and threats some people can take before giving into a seemingly losing battle.

If you are voting in the IndyRef on Thursday, A Dangerous Game and You’ve Been Trumped are must watch films before you cast your vote and even if not it is one that should be seen by all. Donald Trump has turned his back on Scotland for now and is unleashing his tentacles elsewhere but what is to say he will not return? A Yes vote might not just be a vote for independence; it could be thumbs up to another Donald Trump, maybe even the man himself. After all, in the words of Robert F. Kennedy: “There are Donald Trumps everywhere – there are people like him in every country and in every community.”

Check out the trailer for A Dangerous Game below.