Kiss Me Kate - WAOS, Oct 2012, Michael Gray review
- Nikki Mundell-Poole
- Jun 11, 2019
- 2 min read

It starts and ends with a dead stage – something Witham Public Hall does well – making a satisfying frame for this ingenious meshing of backstage drama and Shakespearean comedy.
In the imaginatively choreographed opening, the stage is gradually invaded by life, colour and youth for Another Opening, Another Show. We meet the characters, in the Shrew and out of it, who will keep us entertained for the next three hours; notably the actor manager, a great actor and a gentleman and his leading lady and ertswhile wife, Miss Vanessi, cursed with the worst temper in showbiz, excellent performances, both dramatically and vocally, from this pairing, and very easy to believe in their past careers understudying in operetta. Superb too was Lois – a wonderful sense of comedy in the scene where she's wooed by the chorus boys [lively, snappy choreography here], and in her clothes rail exit for Always True to You in my Fashion.
Not everyone reached these heights, it's true, but a word for the two Gangsters, doing their front-cloth Brush Up with a selection of showbiz hats, and Paul, confidently leading the company in an energetic Too Darn Hot.
The chorus worked well together, giving a real back-stage feel to the corridor, and obviously enjoying being Shrew extras.
Nikki Mundell-Poole's production was crammed with such delights – some well-delivered Shakespeare, too – the sparring lovers separated only by a thin [and wobbly] connecting door, the picture frame, the tap routine for Bianca, the use of the Hall's architecture for Where Is The Life, the leapfrog, the destination placards.
And the cheesiness of provincial Shakespeare is gently suggested, with one number looking like a number three tour of The Gondoliers. All expertly Directed by Nikki Mundell-Poole


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