Review: Swallows and Amazons, Festival Theatre
Swallows and Amazons could be a tough sell for the Festival Theatre. A week shy of February break for local schools and subject matter that, while family friendly, reeks of another age, means that they’ll be relying on the sentimentality of childhood fans and nostalgic grandparents to put bums on seats.
****
For the most part the production is a sympathetic, well crafted re-telling of the adventures of some jolly middle-class children messing about in boats in the Lake District. It’s what you expect Ray Mears’s childhood might have been like if there were four of him – we even have a scene where the production methods of charcoal are discussed, shortly before a song about how bored one of the characters, Titty, is. It’s easy to empathise with Titty. The Bristol Old Vic has created a beautiful world, infused with all the magic and ingenuity of childhood; the parrot is a pair of pliers and a feather duster, the performers take massive dives into the water with a little help from some stage hands and boats Swallow and Amazon sail off into the audience as a finale. Their characters are well portrayed, the sisters Amazon unfairly hogging all the best lyrics and lines. Yet the subject matter the company has chosen to adapt is safe at best.
The children experience mild peril in a thunderstorm and manage to foil some burglars, even if they don’t manage to catch them (unlike every other fictional bunch of pesky kids). What scares a modern parent more than anything is the notion of blithely sending a seven-year-old who can’t swim off on a boating adventure with no adult supervision or water wings.
For those of us who spent the best part of childhood hiding in apple barrels with Jim Hawkins, outrunning Arawn’s sinister outriders with Taryn and listening to the terrifying thuds coming from the church crypt with John Trenchard, Swallows and Amazons is a pleasant evening of well sculpted theatre that your Morningside granny would thoroughly approve of – while you wait to steal your brother’s copy of The Hunger Games.
Runs until February 4
Josie Balfour
- Rangers takeover: Duff & Phelps threaten legal action against BBC
- Family mourn death of Glasgow ‘fight’ schoolboy
- Today’s youth not fit to be employed, says car firm Arnold Clark
- Rangers administration: Fans fear Duff & Phelps claims could scare off Green
- Rangers takeover: triple penalty punishment enough, says Johnston
- Alistair Darling leads ‘No to independence’ fight over tea and biscuits
- Scottish independence: SNP flip-flops over Nato
- Scottish Independence: SNP ‘won’t be Yes campaign’s only voice’
- Today’s youth not fit to be employed, says car firm Arnold Clark
- Scottish independence: Politicians and celebrities join forces for ‘Yes’ campaign launch
Looking for...
Featured advertisers
Jobs
Search for a job
Motors
Search for a car
Property
Search for a house
Weather for Edinburgh
Saturday 26 May 2012
Today
Sunny
Temperature: 8 C to 20 C
Wind Speed: 16 mph
Wind direction: North east
Tomorrow
Sunny
Temperature: 11 C to 21 C
Wind Speed: 10 mph
Wind direction: North east


Your view
Please sign in to be able to comment on this story.