The Scotsman

Tap Dancing with Jeanpaul Sartre

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

Oran Mor, Glasgow

IT’S ALL charm, this brief but beguiling Play, Pie And Pint show from writer James Runcie and director Marilyn Imrie, inspired by a line from a song in the film Funny Face. The place is Paris in the 1950s; and audrey hep burn and fred Astaire are in town filming.

When we first meet them, they’re rehearsing their dance moves, with the recently widowed Fred taking a largely paternal interest in Audrey’s progress as a dancer, and in the state of her long-distance showbiz marriage.

The stakes are raised a little, though, when the philosophe­r Jean-paul Sartre comes to call, and begins not only to relate the sheer existentia­l joy of their tap routines to his own philosophy of being and nothingnes­s, but to make fierce

advances to Audrey, in a style so stereotypi­cally French that the audience can only laugh.

He’s particular­ly fond of the song It Don’t Mean A Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing; and by the end – when he persuades Fred and Audrey to give a tap demonstrat­ion during one of his Sorbonne lectures – the sheer delight of the show’s dance of ideas becomes irresistib­le.

Ashley Smith is sharp and sweet as Audrey, Darren Brownlie superb as Fred, bringing the dimension of inspired tap-dance the show needs; and although Kevin Lennon’s Sartre is probably more twinkly, self-mocking and gifted on the dancefloor than the real Sartre ever was, his performanc­e makes sense of James Runcie’s gorgeous little joke of a play, and sends us all home determined to create our own meaning, with a

joyful tap of the feet.

Or a nm or, glasgow, today, traverse theatre, Edinburgh next week, and Lemon Tree, a berdeen, 24-29 september.

 ??  ?? Tap Dancing with Jean-paul Sartre is a beguiling show
Tap Dancing with Jean-paul Sartre is a beguiling show

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