Lights on a Darkening Shore

  • Home
  • Lights on a Darkening Shore

Lights on a Darkening Shore Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Lights on a Darkening Shore, Media, .

Conceived during the pandemic when the theatres were closed, LOADS is a production company that encompasses writing, theatre, cinema – and sometimes hybrids of these.

I'm a tiger in this film. We all are. It's a one-off screening at the Bloomsbury Festival next weekend. ❤️🐅❤️🐅❤️Next Sat...
12/10/2024

I'm a tiger in this film. We all are. It's a one-off screening at the Bloomsbury Festival next weekend. ❤️🐅❤️🐅❤️

Next Saturday screening of performance film human/animal in London with Q&A. Saturday 19th October 3pm-4pm. Covent Garden/Holborn - afternoon in London. If youre thinking of coming buy a ticket!

This performance film shows actors deep in trance-like transformations between human and animal states, guided by instincts and behaviours which

This just gets better and better…We just got ‘Highly Recommended Show’ in Fringe Review! 🤩In his tower on an island in t...
20/08/2024

This just gets better and better…
We just got ‘Highly Recommended Show’ in Fringe Review! 🤩

In his tower on an island in the river, Martuni weaves, keeps fit and masturbates, calling down to unseen staff for his food. His main distraction is the h***y suitors calling on his dating app. Outside, war rages, we hear explosions, from the tower he watches a stream of people through his viewfinder. Page wants to rescue him, but Martuni doesn’t seem to understand that the world is in catastrophic meltdown, and that the lake is synthetic material, there is no water. Written and performed by Gareth Watkins, this is a powerful play about the ignorance within a social media bubble as climate change rages.

But the play is more complex than that, it’s beautifully intelligent and performed on an excellent set design by Stephen Stephenson. It is a Gothic masterpiece, everything looks as if created from black and white science fiction films, and all from recycled material. It has a feeling of Metropolis about it, and it creates a strong world, battered and just about hanging on. Watkins gives an extraordinary performance, complex and entertaining, thrumming with self denial, (or perhaps selfie denial.) One caller, Page, is desperate to save Martuni, yet the fey self obsessed man can’t see it. He is as blind as one of his suitors, as perhaps we are as the media continues to ignore the rising temperatures and focuses on celebrity gossip. Watkins uses his impressive physicality as he role plays with different callers. He pretends to be Daddy, to be Sir, but even here he fails. He tries on different identities, but he doesn’t know how to “be” with new people. Like the Lady, his beauty is about to be destroyed.

Influenced by Absurdist Theatre, there are echoes of the great Samuel Beckett, particularly Krapp’s Last Tape, the listening to voices, the regret of missed opportunities and the existential love of words. It also allows the audience to layer meaning onto the text, metaphors abound in this stylish production. Are the voices he hears in his head, does he know he is entirely alone?

Superbly directed by Peter Gomes, the tension increases as we wonder if he will ever break his narcissism and leave the tower. In Tennyson’s original, the Lady is cursed if she looks upon the real world. Here, the world itself is cursed. It’s a powerful statement that, in our Insta age, the Apocalypse will be viewed through our phones. A thought provoking, beautifully crafted piece, unlike anything else I’ve seen at this year’s Fringe.

Visit the post for more.

Apparently, theatre of the absurd isn’t in fashion these days!! Quite a surprise for everyone (considering how fashionab...
19/08/2024

Apparently, theatre of the absurd isn’t in fashion these days!! Quite a surprise for everyone (considering how fashionable I am in all other aspects of life!) therefore that this is my preferred method of artistic expression.

This is an interview we did with Paul Levy from Fringe Review to explore this outdated phenomenon in more detail. Fortunately, Pete is rather lucid, while I am rather rambling to say the least!

Earlier in the Fringe Paul Levy was in conversation with Actor Gareth Watkins and Director Pete Gomes about The Gentleman of Shallot at Edfringe 2024. In this conversation, Jules Smekens is added t…

This is dynamite!! We have been listed in The Stage as one of the best shows to see at the Fringe this year!
15/08/2024

This is dynamite!!
We have been listed in The Stage as one of the best shows to see at the Fringe this year!

Here's a round up of every show The Stage's team of critics has given a four or five star rating at the Edinburgh Fringe 2024. We will be updating this list daily.

14/08/2024

Another fantastic review - this time, in The Stage

REVIEWS
AUG 11, 2024
BY PAUL VALE
SPACE ON THE MILE, EDINBURGH
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Gareth Watkins in
The Gentleman of Shalott
at Space on the Mile

Stylish but solid reworking of Tennyson

This new play, written and performed by London-based actor Gareth Watkins takes it lead from Alfred Tennyson’s 19th-century lyrical ballad The Lady of Shalott.

For those unfamiliar with the source work, the Lady is locked in a tower by a river that leads to Camelot. Cursed if she gazes on the real world, she weaves all day, viewing the outside reflected in a mirror. She catches sight of Lancelot in the mirror and turns fatefully to look on the real world, invoking the curse.

For Watkins’s sharply observed neuro-q***r reworking, Martuni is holed up in a tower in a land succumbing to climate change. Battles rage in the distance, which Martuni only observes through a viewfinder, but his day is taken up exercising, ma********ng and weaving. The monotony is broken with regular video calls from would-be lovers, who for various reasons he refuses to meet.

Themes of objectification still permeate Watkins’ script, but there’s an absurdist humour too, that cuts through the strangeness of the situation as Martuni fields would-be suitors.

At its core, The Gentleman of Shalott is a comment on the insular life men lead, as they are drawn deeper and deeper into the blinkered hyper-reality of social media. Awareness doesn’t necessarily equal understanding and Martuni panics if his routine is disrupted. It is only when he engages with a man unable to see that his resolve crumbles and his fate is sealed.

Tightly directed by Pete Gomes, with a fascinating dystopian set design from Stephen Stephenson, Watkins proves a provocative and insightful voice on the q***r theatre scene.

09/08/2024

It’s quite a challenge to get reviewers along in Edinburgh. But reviews don’t come better than this!

The Gentleman of Shalott,
TheSpace on The Mile.
(The Real Chris Sparkles)

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

They say if you’re going to do a cover version of a song, make it different and make it your own, don’t just copy the original. Here’s a cover version of The Lady of Shalott – not just the famous painting, but also the poem by Tennyson; she spins in her tower and will be cursed if she look down to Camelot. Therefore she can only look at the shadows in her mirror, which reveals characters such as the shepherd and the page. But when Sir Lancelot rides by the temptation is too great and she takes to a boat which will float her down to Camelot – and her ultimate downfall.

Gareth Watkins has turned this story on its head and performs as The Gentleman of Shalott, also trapped in a tower, weaving on his loom, connected to the outside world by his periscope that acts as the mirror, and the sex-line link which he uses sometimes to rebuff and sometimes to open up to his gentlemen callers.

Mr Watkins has a terrific stage presence and a powerful but warm voice which he uses to great effect in his various associations with those other gentlemen. There is something of a coup-de-theatre in the final scene which I won’t spoil for you but remains in perfect keeping with Tennyson’s original. A very creative and inventive treatment of a much-loved 19th century poem brought bang up to date. Perplexing yet invigorating, a rewarding theatrical achievement!

09/05/2024

As some of you may know, we are heading up to Edinburgh in August this year with a production of The Gentleman of Shalott.
We will shortly be releasing the ticket link!
❤️

09/05/2024

As some of you may know, we are heading up to Edinburgh this year with a production of The Gentleman of Shalott.

Ticket information to follow shortly! ❤️

Address


Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Lights on a Darkening Shore posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Shortcuts

  • Address
  • Alerts
  • Claim ownership or report listing
  • Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company?

Share