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  • You’re not supposed to leave the theatre rooting for the Nazis

    I have a friend who’s really into musical theatre, and we enjoy each other’s company and comparing notes, so it’s got me happily out of the house a few times over the last couple of years. At its best, it’s hard to imagine anything better. I publish this bad review precisely because I’m not a professional reviewer, and not even ChatGPT will mistake anything I have to say for reportage. So here’s an account of the least accomplished professional show I’ve seen in recent memory. The reason I feel so strongly may be because I know this musical quite well and, at its best, it’s very good indeed. I might be underwhelmed by any show for a hundred petty reasons: what turns this into something like anger are two feelings. First, that I have just witnessed a masterpiece desecrated. Second, that a play that treats prejudice with such care has been allowed to become riddled with it.

    As a show, Cabaret has no heroes: just very recognisable, flawed people drifting towards disaster. Having three dimensions to your characters, against a backdrop of the most dismal events of the 20th Century, makes storytelling hard. Cabaret compromises by flattening its male and female leads, Emcee and Sally. But it’s very powerful theatre. As calamity overtakes them, the cast remains relatable, a bit complicit, and very doomed.

    Emcee and Sally are cabaret performers, so they carry both the show-within-a-show and the story outside it. Neither character is written fully formed: their inner thoughts are concealed on purpose, so the cast and director must work to elicit their humanity. The former’s loves — an eternal one for the theatre and (dare we suppose) a transitory one for the second principal male, Cliff — drive the plot. Meanwhile, the Emcee haunts the boundary between the cabaret and the outside world. In a musical that blends a breakneck treatment of the very worst of humanity with a piece of entertainment, the Emcee keeps the audience wrongfooted, so we can never be certain where the theatre ends. The ordinary lives of the cast unfold, with deliberate artifice, on the stage of the Kit Kat Klub.

    To place the stage in the round, as this production does, is actually brilliant. If you’re going all-in on this show’s blurring of history and artifice, life and showbusiness, tearing down the proscenium and building a low apron is a clever thing to do. To have cut a hydraulic lift into the middle of it, though, feels like an intrusive and anachronistic gimmick, removing the audience once more. It is as though the director felt that the play needs a wisecracking animatronic puppet. The whole point of bringing a stage into the auditorium is to place the audience in its wings.

    The incompleteness of the leading characters, against the wholeness of the supporting ones, creates problems. How do you reconcile the charisma and chaotic energy that the Emcee needs with his lack of inner life? The audience will do some of that work, but you cannot sell them an empty shell. Some kind of trajectory needs to be plotted for the Emcee so he is affected by the encroaching horror. It’s a matter for the production how a congenial host, warmly and glibly welcoming us in the opening number, comes to deliver his broken goodbye. He might turn cold and cruel as he embraces the Nazis, or flee in terror having tried to accommodate a regime that would destroy him (hinted by Joel Grey in Fosse’s rather mercurial film interpretation, who leaves the audience stranded). He might also be brought to life as the rest are: as a small, ordinary man, unravelled by his attempt to reconcile the old and new Berlins, winding his own curtain down when he runs out of things to say.

    I have seen him given life in all three directions: with a monstrous physicality; with an arch and pervy truculence; or as a little man who utterly slips through his own fingers. In the end, though, one needs to find a way. A clown is a human being under make-up.

    Alas, he is not cast well. If only that were the biggest problem.

    The opening scenes establish a seedy but somewhat sophisticated Weimar-era nightclub, with the emphasis on fantasy: the telephones on every table let the cast and audience within the play talk to one another. That, of course, is a plot point, but it also signals a certain style of eroticism that Sally is made for. Her style of seduction is to leave much unseen, unsaid, and unknowable. The play is steeped in this liminality: the phones on the tables foreshadow the slow revelation of sexual proclivities; the show’s full of double-entendres; the suggestions imparted by bodies and props are part of bringing the script to life. These all heighten a sense that you can feel something for these people, but never know them. A clever bit of business during The Pineapple Song then wonderfully subverts that conceit. Unfortunately, while we are occasionally rewarded with glimpses of nuance, the Kit Kat Klub performers are abandoned to the lowest plane. Its chorus fills the stage like drunken students who learned about sex from comic books: writhing bodies, a haphazard wardrobe of diaphanous knitwear, all mouths agape and dangling tongues. If my idea of a good time involved grinding articles of underwear together, I would have passed my evening in front of the tumble dryer.

    Act 1 Scene 1 conspicuously includes a man in the female chorus: there’s no erotic liminality there. The cast member, tall, broad and muscular, towers over their counterparts. We’re compelled, as the audience, to consider this singular-they. So let’s: it’s the early 1930s, anything goes, and nightclub customers are a broad-tasted lot. (Two Ladies, a jovial song about a ménage à trois, is often staged featuring a man in drag. To suggest that the Emcee has a real off-stage lasciviousness might make him seem less sympathetic. Many directors prefer to keep that powder dry.) Symmetry could be restored by including a feminine performer in the male chorus: it would make this an unremarkable trick of staging. Gender-play would help to indicate why the club cannot survive. ‘Roles are just roles. Fancy what you fancy, dress as you want to dress, and believe what you need to believe’ would be a fitting ethos for a nightclub in Weimar Berlin. But nope: this is womanface casting. Emcee must open the show by selling us an injustice. The cast is one woman short and he’s up there, master of hokum, styling it out. ‘Our deception is beautiful. Even our prejudice is beautiful.’

    Sally, played by Eva Noblezada, was magnificent. Poor direction ruined her big number, Cabaret. Here, we see Sally at her ebb. The director hits us over the head with it, having her slurring her lines, careening across the stage as though loaded with anaesthetic. To stop at calling this interpretation ‘plain wrong’ would undersell an act of vandalism. If Sally has a core, it is that she has no core: her life on- and off-stage is pure performance. In this production at least, she never comes close to cracking, so this is the first time we see Sally’s mask slipping, only to reveal more persona.

    When times are terrible, her instinct is to abandon her friends and retreat to the theatre. In the midst of this, the song’s innuendo is no longer about sex but self-destruction, played for laughs that never come. The score already implies dislocation through the surprising placement of its key change, and the merest glimmer of make-up applied too hastily or a stolen glance off-stage would have been sufficient to communicate the encroachment of her outer world. Otherwise, she must be composed to be believable.

    This review reads like a catalogue of things that the director either misunderstands or destroys on purpose, and it is, but we’ve not even crested the foothills. Let’s turn our attention to the word ‘Jewish’ or ‘Jew’. It’s used sparingly in the book, and it devastates whenever it’s dropped. It’s the sour counterpart to the sweet little German melody that becomes the Nazis’ signature tune. This one word rends the happiness of Schneider and Schultz; it unmasks the ugliness of the principal Nazi when he is at his most relatable; it reveals his allies; it defines the instant when the Emcee sells himself out. There are a hundred ways to deliver the word. It can be whispered, thrown away, sneered, or played straight but with a loaded pause afterwards. It can be dragged out as though the listener is very stupid, and needs to understand that it is the beginning, middle, and end of a one-word argument. And so on.

    The most sinister use of the word is given to the Emcee, as a punchline to the song If You Could See Her, about which Joel Grey writes better than I can. The most powerful versions of this number tend to be in student productions, and with good reason. The gorilla costume needs to look a bit low-rent, the dance routine slightly wooden, and the ensemble not quite on top of its tempo changes. It should leave an impression that the Emcee has breezed through an old wardrobe and knocked something together, putting it on after a couple of rehearsals. Unfortunately, in this production, the gorilla suit is lavish, the performer inside inhabits it far too well, and the music and choreography have more polish than they should. The Emcee seems to have been singing it all his life. But finally, he finds a way to rob the killer line of its sting. If we were the Emcee, how should we deliver it? With the zeal of a fresh convert? Between clenched teeth with the hint of a shudder? As a carnival barker, heading straight for the basest emotions of his clientele? Any of these. Just don’t waste it.

    In fact, every instance of ‘Jew’ or ‘Jewish’ within the play is ruined by an accelerated, jump-scare shout, so it’s both isolated from its place in the text and hard to discern as a word. This treatment is so universal that is seems as though the actors can hardly bear to taste it in their mouths. This failure to engage is a cold shower of shame. It is notable that the generation on stage tonight, in the main, is the first not to know anybody who was an adult in the 1930s, let alone a Holocaust survivor. Furthermore, Jewish people are less than half of one percent of the UK’s population today, and are seldom seen outside a dwindling handful of cities. We must forgive people for working against a certain ignorance and, given the Internet, antipathy towards Jewish people. But you really don’t need to be Jewish to know how alien Jews must sometimes appear to others, or indeed how disembodying it is to be Jewish and watching a production like tonight’s. To simulate Kristallnacht, as this show does, by having a clown stamp on a balloon while a loudspeaker augments the pop, must either be done incredibly well or seem like a travesty. If my description makes it seem bathetic, it’s because it was.

    As Nazism triumphs, the club’s stage crowds with clones of David Bowie in his Thin White Duke era: all blond wigs, dark suits, and fashion-model swagger. The implication is that the colour and magic of the cabaret is drained under an unstoppable tide of khaki and brown. Fosse, at this point, used eyeline, costume, music, and cinematography to make his cabaret misfire in a dozen clever ways. But the Nazis in this show have their own clue about stagecraft, and how to steal a show. What is supposedly intended as anti-theatre, as they gather on stage and stand there in silence, is instead a masterclass in the power of stillness and unity. No mechanical gimmicks or flapping knickers required. Their audition at the Kit Kat Klub knocks the stockings off its incumbents, and one is tempted to let them keep the job. Adolf’s acolytes could hardly have more contempt for culture than the bunch we’d already endured.

    Cabaret is supposed to leave you frightened: there are a hundred ways a malign regime can seduce you with order and melody, or else get its boots and teeth into you. As a work, it pushes the lesson that apathy and desperation will always serve the ends of evil. At the risk of taking liberties, this excuses my outrage: I left the theatre with a heart and head full of defiance, rather than empty and bored. But I hope that this is the only time I’ll ever file out of a show about that place and time that accounts for the Nazis so well, and their victims so abjectly.

  • ADC 25 Open Mic talk

    I edited this brutally after overrunning last year (‘Let Words Die’), thinking that losing my voice might mean taking it slowly. I ended up underrunning by a minute. Which meant throwing away a fairly nice one-liner. Anyway, stuff in italics, like this, is stuff I want to include in the transcript even if I didn’t actually say it out loud. Self-indulgence? It’s my blog.

    Sometimes the appropriate tone to set with the last words of a conference is one of comfort and conciliation. This year, with everybody in this industry seemingly in various degrees of difficulty, seems like the correct moment to uplift, inspire, and bring together. So instead, here’s a collection of abusive in-jokes.

    The hottest new thing in audio

    Hello. Welcome to the Audio Damnation Conference.

    So many new faces! You may be wondering who I am. So let me remind you that I built this conference, the flying badgers with razor-sharp claws that roam its corridors, the burning hellscape that it stands in, indeed, the whole of Hell itself. But, in my humbler capacity as conference Chair, it’s my pleasure to say that none of this would have been possible without … me.

    Sure, we inhabit a cruel and jumbled Renaissance-inspired satire of the lives we led on Earth, but that doesn’t stop us getting together every year to remove the red hot needles from our eyes, put our Windows 8 development machines on standby, and talk about our craft.

    Big shout out to the newbies from Ultraleap. You may be wondering what you’re doing in Hell, still breathing, and asking yourselves how such a simple acquisition can produce a result like this. Treat me as your guide to what I like to call our Music Tribe. Talk about Ultraleaping out of the fucking frying pan.

    While I’m thanking myself, well done — to me again — for securing our sponsors, Suno. If your punishment involves plugging your own output forever back into your input, their product will be very familiar to you. As, indeed, will yours.

    On to our second sponsor. They don’t have much to do with audio, but they gatecrash any music played online with such inane ambition that, even in our infernal realm, we can but applaud. Give it up for Grammarly. Good work, guys! Today, any dickhead can be a writer. I, for one, should know.

    Now I’m excited to present a feature announcement: we’ve solved the tabs versus spaces argument by disabling both keys on your computers, along with the return button. The bug this fixes is my having to adjudicate the same argument every time you guys commit whitespace. So you won’t be needing your precious monospaced fonts, and that change has now been made to the code editor too.

    Have fun with Times New Roman.

    Before I introduce the line-up, I’ve got this that I have to read from the conference facility. ‘You’ll notice that the pavement outside is being dug up. The tear in spacetime that separates our Circle from the Circle of Private Equity is being repaired. You are commanded to keep away.’

    This hardly needs saying, but we’re not concerned about your personal safety. It’s because you people screwed the finance bros so hard last time they came to visit, they’re now coming after me.

    On to tonight’s schedule. If you stay in this room after the welcome, there’s a trio of talks about the audio business.

    ‘Draining the blood of your coders without conceding power or nurturing trust’: that’s by Roland Lamb of ROLI. Then we’ve got ‘All In This Together: Acquiring your suppliers by becoming extremely indebted to them’, which is by … Roland Lamb of ROLI. Finally ‘Walk towards the camera in slo-mo, flicking a single hair nonchalantly off your jacket collar while, behind you, the mushroom cloud swells to engulf the whole screen’, delivered by … Yes, yes, three talks in a row by Roland Lamb, each more nauseatingly self-regarding than the last. I should explain: this world was built for your punishment, Sonny Jim. And in this Hell, he gets away with it.

    Next door in Room 3, we have ‘Two megabytes of unreadable preprocessor macros written by a guy who never trusted the standard libraries’. That’s not a talk title, apparently: you’re just responsible for it now.

    Then we’ve got ‘A sprawling toolchain that one of your products depends on, only ever run on the Engineering Director’s old laptop, and he’s just rage quit without giving us the password’. That’s not a talk title, apparently: you’re just responsible for it now.

    Lastly, we have ‘An underperforming audio interface brand’. That’s not a talk title either.

    The third track is a succession of short talks about hard maths, delivered by smart, bright-eyed people half your age who are having far more fun than you ever did, finding you curiously amusing in the half-light before they stride into well-paid jobs in other industries.

    But before all that, I hope you’re literally glued to your seats for our keynote speaker: a senior academic who once got airplay on Radio 3. It’s entitled ‘Two hours about my approach to music composition, without stopping to play a note, mention the word ‘music’, or acknowledge anyone except myself’.

    I don’t know what sort of code you committed while you were alive, friends, and I don’t want to. But this bloody well serves you right.

  • Monsters die too

    About 14% of the Class of 96. Used without permission, but hey, look, there’s the attribution logo at the bottom, and I’m in it.

    The Reading School reunion went about as well as I’d hoped, which is why I haven’t rushed to blog about it. I do so now because there’s a bunch of unrelated ideas backed up that need me to engage with them. The economy in this industry has gone a bit crap for a while (reasons: tariffs temporarily removing a big territory; Spotify and its ilk eviscerating recording industry revenue and diverting what little is left; the private-equity takeover in pro audio that’s transformed investment budgets into debt service; the cost-of-living crisis reducing people’s discretionary spend). These are quite the storm, so I might be erring on the side of introspection while either it blows over or it doesn’t.

    Anyway, the monsters are dead. This is true literally. The only truly rotten adult in my school career (not mentioned in the previous post) died a couple of years ago. He was, it was quietly confirmed, the subject of a police investigation at the time of his death, but you can’t punish a dead man. Sad rule of thumb: anybody whose job involves wearing a clerical collar, a PE kit, or a military uniform around children might have a vocation that involves an extraordinary level of character and self-sacrifice. Or they might have a motive that involves gaining power and trust over vulnerable people. Much easier to get away with it if you can impose a solo detention: persuade the child that he deserves what you’re doing, so the cheque gets drawn on his shame and not yours.

    It couldn’t happen in quite the same way today because we’re a lot more careful about that kind of thing. There are rules; chaperones; safeguarding teams. And I promise that’s the end of the miserable part. The monsters are also figuratively dead, which is nicer, and what I’d hoped to find.

    A fellow attendee put it more simply than I do: sixteen-year-old boys are dickheads. It’s a cliche that happy people don’t bully. (Again, too brief: I’ve encountered a bit of Cluster B, and want to adjust this to ‘Healthy and happy’ because sociopaths, on the whole, seem rather pleased with themselves.) We’ve all turned out a little more confident and a lot more self-aware, mostly as a result of inhabiting ourselves for a bit longer. People do change, profoundly, as they conform to their environment.

    Taking turns to talk about how awful the place was to us, in the company of our former tormentors, was cathartic and entertaining. It didn’t (as I feared it might) seem like selling out. The alternative — to hold on to a past that has receded entirely into the realms of recollection — would be less honest. As for adults, I talked to the teacher who sent me the cease-and-desist about the website. He wouldn’t let me apologise. If pushed, I’m unsure how complete and sincere such an apology might have been, but contrition doesn’t require a contract lawyer to draw up small print.

    While digging in my archives before the reunion, I found some [mercifully] unpublished writing from my early years at university where I agonised about a teacher under whom I did quite well but who never seemed to soften his hostility towards me. I’d completely forgotten about that aspect of him. I caught him last week, just as he enters retirement, and immediately realised that he’s just neurodivergent. The standoffish-bordering-dismissive manner was what happens when a pupil looking for reassurance meets a thick wall of social awkwardness. I’m still terrible at reading people, but must have been worse, and in need of some nourishment that he couldn’t provide.

    With a writer’s hat on, it’s rare to be able to experience real life in this way: as one character witnessing an event, but fully inhabiting two narrators of different ages, needs, and powers, both equally correct. It’s a good device in fiction, and I’d be the millionth person to use it this week.

    But, as I must write honestly, there are two structural problems with the school reunion. The first is that dialogue needs action. People sitting around working and talking until they outgrow their demons is quite a lot of life, but it makes a dull book. Chekhov would throw in jokes, a Russian doctor, people thinking they’re seagulls, and an orchard being cut down. There’d still be too much dialogue, but everybody would agree he’s a genius.

    Children you could point to at the age of fourteen and go ‘Hedge Fund Manager’ did, indeed, become hedge fund managers, but were just as miserable in the company of other teenagers as I was. Without wanting ever to be like them, I admired the self-assurance, the perfectly-worn school uniform, the calibrated sense of aloofness and found it (still find it) a little intimidating. But what comes across as self-assurance was probably just an inability to be anything else: a need to possess, without shame, a persona they were stuck with. So the same amount of misery was dealt to them as to everybody else. And then university happened: people reset, stayed on the rails with varying degrees of success (those who crashed and burned weren’t well-represented last weekend, and we missed them), and turned their skills and training to their advantage. The dynamics of the adult world, fortunately, are more forgiving: failure usually comes with a greater degree of dignity and a kinder, less fixated audience. School life, on the whole, was fuelled by envy and a delicate intellectual/tribal hierarchy, which was awful but is a great machine for drama.

    The second problem is that real life seldom meets the need for a structured closure. The best I can do to wrap this up is to temper my title idly in the flame of experience. Age compensates for some of what it’s about to take away. Time doesn’t heal so much as broaden your perspective. Most monsters are shrunk to death.

    Anyway, you should go to these things. Even if you don’t make any friends. Even if you’re the one with the lowest salary, the smallest family, and the weirdest job. Meet the kid who’s now running a legal practice, and realise that he, like you, is just styling out his compromises as though they’re gifts he chose.

    What defines success from a launchpad like Reading School is just making the best of character and happenstance and not knowing how else to survive.