- Make a list of reasons why you should see Every Brilliant Thing.
- Thank Duncan Macmillan for writing Sleeve Notes, his book of lists.
- Thank actor Jonny Donahue for helping Macmillan to turn it into a one-man show at the Edinburgh Fringe and in London and New York.
- Put yourself in the shoes of the seven-year-old schoolboy who writes a list of every brilliant thing, every small miracle, to make his suicidal mum realise life is worth living.
- Ice cream.
- Water fights.
- Staying up past your bedtime and being allowed to watch TV.
- The colour yellow.
- Things with stripes.
- Rollercoasters.
- People falling over.
- Often ordinary things, but brilliant in their own way.
- Mum keeps trying to take her life, and so he keeps adding to the list.
- You should do the same. Make a list, I mean.
- Especially if you are feeling listless.
- Start now.
- Well, not until you have read this review.
- Thank Theatre@41 supporter Cate Birch for recommending Every Brilliant Thing to chair Alan Park.
- Thank Alan for reading it.
- Thank Alan, professional actor to boot, for deciding he should perform it himself.
- Thank Duncan Macmillan for saying yes to York’s new company Shared Space Theatre making it their debut production.
- Thank Alan for asking Maggie Smales – responsible for York Shakespeare Project’s best ever production, the all-female Henry V – to direct him.
- Thank brainbox Alan for having the mental powers to remember the script for his lead role in Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing and Every Brilliant Thing in quick succession.
- Thank his Maths teacher of bygone years for Alan being good with numbers. So many numbers, one for every brilliant thing on a list now running to 1,000,000.
- Alan doesn’t have to remember all that list but he does have to remember what goes with each number that features in the show.
- And remember a running order that is not as easy as 123 to remember.
- Because it is not in numerical order.
- And sometimes a number is repeated.
- And repeated.
- Again.
- Much later.
- It all adds up to a breathtaking and sometimes breathless display of skills in breaking down theatre’s fourth wall.
- Result: The audience immediately feels part of the hour-long show.
- Whether reading out a brilliant thing from the list on a number cue.
- Or having fun when gently enticed by Alan into playing a role.
- Such as?
- A teacher with a sock puppet of a dog, requiring Alan’s recruit to remove a shoe and sock to play the part.
- Or the boy’s father, but then switching with Alan for him to play the father and you, the son, en route to hospital, asking “Why” in response to everything he says.
- Why?
- Because that’s what children do.
- Why?
- Don’t ask.
- Later play the father again, this time in a wedding breakfast speech…revealing a Texan accent.
- Prompting Alan’s character – he has no name – to comment on suddenly discovering unexpected American roots.
- Describe a woman with an orange top and blonde hair from Macmillan’s story…and promptly ask a woman in the front row in orange, with blonde hair, to play that character.
- Make eye contact with another female member of the audience.
- She happens to be an actress, serendipitously. A rather good one.
- Flo Poskitt.
- One half of Fladam.
- York’s musical comedy double act with Adam Sowter.
- Catch them in Green Fingers at next week’s TakeOver Festival at York Theatre Royal.
- May 27, 3pm.
- Box office: 01904 623568.
- Or yortheatreroyal.co.uk.
- She willingly plays a woman called Sam with whom Alan’s character bonds over a love of books.
- They fall in love.
- They marry…after Flo’s Sam goes down on one unsteady knee to propose to him in an equally unsteady voice.
- Prompting a comment from Alan.
- He’s good at that.
- The impromptu stuff.
- Off the cuff.
- On the mark.
- It all helps that we are seated in two rows in the round, with no-one allowed upstairs under Macmillan’s strict rules of democracy to create a shared experience.
- There are a few empty chairs.
- But that’s good.
- Because Alan is only too happy to occupy any empty chair, next to whoever, and spring from chair to chair.
- Because, as George Osborne once said: “We are all in this together.”
- Although not in Chancellor George’s case, we weren’t.
- But definitely in Every Brilliant Thing.
- The list keeps growing.
- Music.
- Lots of music.
- The way Ray Charles sings “You” in Drown In My Own Tears.
- But not jazz.
- Instrumental jazz, to be precise.
- Music that “sounds like it’s falling down the stairs”.
- Music to signify you should stay out of dad’s way at that moment.
- The marriage ends. Wham bam, exit Sam.
- The list stops.
- Suddenly.
- Well past 800,000.
- Only to start again years later.
- Like suddenly revisiting an old diary and feeling inspired to begin Dear Diarying all over again.
- Alan’s character has a serious point to make.
- Suicide. Don’t do it. There has to be something to live for, he says. Hence the list. Hence this show.
- And if the play has troubled you, Alan will be on hand afterwards to talk about its themes.
- This week’s production happens to coincide with Mental Health Awareness Week.
- More details at mentalhealth.org.uk.
- Every Brilliant Thing does address depression, suicide, death (beginning with the family pet), but it is uplifting, joyous, funny too.
- A difficult balancing act.
- But negotiated skilfully by Macmillan and Donahue, and now Park and Smales. Never glib. Often profound. Comforting. Thought provoking.
- Life changing?
- You decide.
- There are still three opportunities to see Every Brilliant Thing.
- Tonight at 7.30pm.
- Tomorrow at 2.30pm and 7.30pm.
- At the venue that won Best Entertainment Venue at Thursday night’s YorkMix Choice Awards 2023.
- Congratulations, Alan and all the team at Theatre@41.
- Another reason to…
- Add Every Brilliant Thing to your list of what to do this weekend. Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.