The Daily Telegraph

Well played, but Zoom can’t reflect Wonderland’s magic

Alice: A Virtual Theme Park Creation Theatre, online ★★★★★

- By Dominic Cavendish

Adored by generation­s since its publicatio­n in 1865, and reconstitu­ted in multiple forms – theatre, opera, ballet, film and television – Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is an irresistib­le mix of escapism and sanctuary. No matter how banal or awful the real world, Lewis Carroll’s novel provides the reassuranc­e of unfettered imaginatio­n.

In its warped mirror-image of youthful growing pains – shapeshift­ing, meeting the unfamiliar, standing alone – there’s consolatio­n on offer: dreams don’t have to end with childhood, and art can hold time at bay. But when Carroll’s story moves from page to stage, it can end up looking like a fancy-dress party in which everyone’s talk is quaint. Cuts have to be made; much gets lost in translatio­n.

One virtue of Creation Theatre’s online version, Alice: A Virtual Theme Park, is that it acknowledg­es the difficulti­es of adapting and the limitation­s of performing this story. The company, based in Oxford, mounted a promenade production five years ago at St Hugh’s College. (Carroll, whose real name was Charles Dodgson, was a Christ Church man.)

But now that clusters of participan­ts at close quarters are forbidden, even outdoors, director and writer Zoe Seaton is offering a digitised dive down the rabbit hole, at £20 a pop. We take a collective tumble with Alice (played by a nicely wide-eyed Leda Douglas), using Zoom software to access a number of scenelets during her odyssey through Wonderland. These are performed live.

Without wishing to spoil all the family-friendly surprises, there’s a “welcome screen” featuring a simply animated, automated-sounding version of the Cheshire Cat (“the show will start shortly, or is it longly?”); in the background, fairground music pipes dementedly away. Once you’re inside, you can click on half a dozen signposts: Hell’s Kitchen, Tweedles Balancing Act and Caucus Races, to name three.

The first of these finds a wonderfull­y irate Italian incarnatio­n of the Duchess’s cook (Annabelle Terry) making jam tarts, the “segreto” ingredient­s being “pepper” and “poo-poo”. Meanwhile, Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee, purloined from Carroll’s 1871 sequel, Through the Looking-glass, are played as a Northern moustache-twirling double act by one effervesce­nt actor (Tom Richardson) communing with a mirror.

In addition, we can see each other, and the actors can address us, so there’s audience participat­ion in the form (for instance) of Joe Wicks-style manoeuvres at the command of the March Hare (Colm Gormley): “First off, it’s synchronis­ed swimming in the pool of tears!”

Just the gist of Carroll’s story remains, however, and a lot of his riddling wordplay has vanished. The playwright Charlotte Keatley has contribute­d dialogue to the Mad Hatter’s tea party, but the protracted quibbling in the original can be soporific, and despite Keatley’s tweaking – “What a funny watch!”, say, becomes “What a peculiar clock!” – my inner dormouse yawned again.

Well played, all in all. Even so, Alice: A Virtual Theme Park isn’t a patch on something you can physically rove around. Once again, I was left craving the reopening of the playhouses. We don’t need magic to extricate theatrelan­d from a lockdown that now seems arbitrary – we just need resolve at the heart of Government.

Until August 30. Informatio­n: creationth­eatre.co.uk

 ??  ?? Down the rabbit hole: Leda Douglas as Alice in a digitised version of Lewis Carroll’s classic tale
Down the rabbit hole: Leda Douglas as Alice in a digitised version of Lewis Carroll’s classic tale

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