The Scotsman

How to truly enchant youngsters? Nanny knows best

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

THEATRE

Small Wonders The Warehouse, Elizafield, Edinburgh

This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing Byre Theatre, St Andrews

The idea that children’s imaginatio­ns are special and powerful has been around in theatre ever since the first performanc­e of Peter Pan; but it has surely never been expressed more vividly than in Punchdrunk’ s enthrallin­g show-cum-installati­on Small Wonders, now in residence in Edinburgh in the run-up to this year’s Edinburgh Internatio­nal Children’s Festival.

In a warehouse off Newhaven Road, we find ourselves – an audience of excited seven- and eight-year-olds, plus a few adults – ringing the doorbell of what looks like an ordinary flat. The door opens and Nanny Lace yap pears, followed closely by her harassed-looking daughter Bella. Nanny Lacey is keen to share her stories; and in no time we’re all gathered in her cosy, cluttered living-room, admiring the dozens of miniature tab - leaux she has made out of pieces of scrap, to embody her best stories. It’s a skill she learned from her mother and grandmothe­r and, before long, Nanny has enlisted the children into a rock-solid alliance with her, in the battle between the transformi­ng power of the imaginatio­n and the joyless rules of supposedly sensible adulthood.

In this thrilling production by Tara Boland, Peter Higgins and writer Nessah Muthy, that battle plays itself out in unforgetta­ble style, as the children help Nanny to make one last spectacula­r journey, and also to restore Bella’ s lost faith in magic. In a production with two alternatin­g casts, I saw Liz Watts-legg give a truly irre-sistible performanc­e as Nanny, welcoming us into designer Kate Rigby’s meticulous­ly made world, which highlights both the strength of the imaginativ­e bond between the old and the very young, and its

power to remind us all of life’s magic, and its value.

A family of strongwome­n also features in this year’s first ever Imaginate commission from Scotland’s femaleled company Stellar Quines, whose Scottish premiere of Fin egan K ru ck em eyer’ s acclaimed play This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing tells a story of sister hood, and of triplets who each react very differentl­y when their widowed father abandons them, aged 13, to make their own way in the world.

One travels east ward i inn hope, one travels west in grief and anxiety and the third stays exactly where she is in the forest. It’s a show, in other words, about three different female journeys through the crucial years between 13 and 33, all made easier by the knowledge that somewhere in the world there are people who will always love and support us.

InJe mi ma Le vick’ s production, with fine songs and sound by Novasound, it’s told with passion and delight by Rehanna Mcdonald, Kim Allan and Betty Valencia, with Ewan Somers as their father, found and forgiven, in the end, for the broken heart that made him send his daughters away, into a wide and waiting world. Small Wonders is at The Warehouse, Elizafield, until 2 June.

This Girl Laughs etc is on tour across Scotland until 25 May, and at the EICF at the Brunton Theatre, Musselburg­h, from 28 May to 1 June.

 ??  ?? 0 Rehanna Mcdonald, Kim Allan and Betty Valencia in This Girl Laughs etc
0 Rehanna Mcdonald, Kim Allan and Betty Valencia in This Girl Laughs etc

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