Newbury Weekly News

Alive with that Cuban vibe

The Watermill premieres their rollercoas­ter comedy full of colourful characters

- Review by ROBIN STRAPP

Kat Heath’s inventive set perfectly captures the atmosphere of the old streets of 1950s Havana during President Batista’s administra­tion before Castro came to power.

James Wormold, impressive­ly played by Nigel Lister, is a vacuum cleaner salesman whose extravagan­t 17-year-old daughter Millie, the delightful Daniella Agredo Piper, is excessivel­y spending his money on shopping trips which he can ill afford; especially as she wants a racehorse for her birthday.

When he accidently meets the MI6 agent Hawthorne (Alvara Flores) in the local bar he is recruited to spy on the suspected Soviet activity on the island with the promise of unlimited funds to support his activities. An ideal solution to his financial problems.

The trouble is that he doesn’t have any intelligen­ce informatio­n to pass on and is persuaded by his long-time friend and confidant Dr Hasselbach­er (Adam Keast) to invent characters and situations to send back to London. He gathers names from the local newspaper to use, which has disastrous consequenc­es.

MI6 begins to get suspicious and sends Beatrice (Paula James) to allegedly provide secretaria­l support but really to investigat­e Hawthorne, much to his angst. She also plays the alluring Maria and has a powerful captivatin­g singing voice.

Flores also plays the corrupt police officer who has desires on Milly and his seductive romantic song to her is truly comical.

There is a wonderful scene when he plays a game of chequers with Wormold with miniature spirit bottles as the pieces.

It’s become obvious to Hawthorne and Milly that “the game is up” and the only way to survive this tangled web of lies is to escape from Cuba.

This vibrant energetic production has the usual Watermill’s trademark of actor/musicians who create the Cuban vibe with so much skill, moving from instrument to instrument under Antonio Sánchez’s inspired on-stage musical direction.

Directed with pizzaz by Abigail Pickard Price this is not to be missed.

 ?? ?? THE Watermill theatre have a world premiere with Ben Morales Frost and Richard Hough’s musical adaption of Graham Greene’s satirical novel Our Man in Havana – and it sizzles with the exotic Cuban atmosphere.
THE Watermill theatre have a world premiere with Ben Morales Frost and Richard Hough’s musical adaption of Graham Greene’s satirical novel Our Man in Havana – and it sizzles with the exotic Cuban atmosphere.
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 ?? Pictures Pamela Raith ?? Our Man in Havana
Pictures Pamela Raith Our Man in Havana

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