Theatre review: The Attic, Festival Theatre Studio, Edinburgh
The Attic, Festival Theatre Studio, Edinburgh ***
To say that The Attic is a show that lacks narrative is to put it kindly. As on its first outing in 2012, some of its efforts to fill out 45-minutes are so feeble that even a two-year-old might eye them with scepticism; and there’s something distinctly old-fashioned about the whole scenario, with the slightly dotty granny more like one of today’s great-grandparents than a brisk modern gran.
Yet the atmosphere created by Karen Tennant’s design, Craig Fleming’s lighting and David Paul Jones’s gorgeous and shapely piano score, which he plays live throughout, is absolutely irresistible, conjuring up that special zone of fun, play, and magic that children often enter with their grandparents.
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Hide AdAnd when, at the end, the show dissolves into a jolly participatory tea-party involving knitted cup-cakes and silly hats, the joy of the toddlers in the audience is as unconfined as their dance moves, as Gowan Calder’s affable granny invites them to join in a last celebratory tea-dance.
Further performances on 20 and 21 January