Lizzie Roper in Peccadillo Circus
Devised and performed by Lizzie Roper – Directed by Leisa
Rea
Available by request for UK and international venues
“Like
Creature Comforts, only with less plasticine and more sex.” Alan
Davies
Following a sell-out West End run at Trafalgar Studios, Lizzie's award-nominated show is touring, including a return visit to the Edinburgh festival.
Revealing the dirtiest secrets of real people in their own words, Lizzie
Roper delves into the nation’s views on sex. To create this unique,
solo ‘documentary comedy’, Lizzie has interviewed people
with very different sex lives, including an online sex addict, a non-orgasmic
woman, a dominatrix and a Jungian analyst in her 70s.
To reduce hours
of recorded interviews into an hour-long show, Lizzie edits the audio
down, weaving the most interesting seven accounts together
into a compelling, insightful, poignant and above all, funny take on
Britain’s sex life. Lizzie listens to this edited account through
earphones on stage, and repeats the interviewee’s comments word-for-word,
replicating their vocal patterns exactly, to create a compelling, live
experience for the audience
After performing her solo show Through My Keyhole at the
Gilded Balloon in 2003, with a sell out transfer to the Soho Theatre,
Lizzie has
starred in the Assembly Rooms hits The Odd Couple (2005) and One
Flew Over The
Cuckoo’s Nest (2004, and two West End seasons).
Peccadillo Circus
was directed by Leisa Rea whose credits include Lizzie’s first
one woman show Through My Keyhole (Gilded Balloon, Soho Theatre),
Dogman (Riverside Studios, Southport Comedy Festival, Gilded Balloon)
and The
Yarnbards (Pleasance, Leicester Comedy Festival). Leisa also creates
characters for the acclaimed Congress of Oddities, who are being developed
by Celador.
Reviews & interviews
Evening Standard - 4 stars - by Bruce Dessau
This was certainly a novel way to spend Valentine's Night, listening to character comic Lizzie Roper recounting people's sexual foibles.
Using replayed interviews relayed to her live via an iPod and earpiece, Roper meticulously recreates confessions onstage, switching between voxpops as if turning on a verbal sixpence.
The public recontextualisings make each anecdote instantly comical. Think of an 18-rated Alan Bennett. The laughs overflow as we hear about the nerd who performs naked for women - "dressed as Santa Claus, but not very dressed" - or the lady who is aroused by thinking about wellies.
But as the stories build and the characters reappear there is pathos, too, as in the memory of a youthful visit to a prostitute: "The room was dark and she still looked dirty." Elsewhere it becomes apparent that the Jungian analyst is not quite the full shilling she seems.
Roper's performance requires immense concentration and she pulls it off effortlessly. The result is a piece of verbatim theatre that is frankly funny if frequently very filthy - some of the unusual acts described lend new meaning to the term "oral history".
The Herald - 5 stars - by Colin Somerville
Performance comedy
of the highest order in this hour of aural voyeurism from Lizzie Roper,
seamlessly possessed by characters stained by their
sexual experiences. The show, she explains, is based on a series of
interviews conducted with various individuals about their sex lives,
converted into
soundbites and hotwired into her head. She then delivers a virtuoso
performance, her characters including a plummy Jungian analyst and
a bouncer in a fetish
club.
This is frank, fearless and filthy stuff, with the lovely
Lizzie flitting from one character portrait to another in the crack
of a whip,
teasing
out a foible here, a fetish there. From a strange erotic encounter
with an elf to an internet- dating addict with a disturbing
vocal resemblance
to Griff Rhys Jones – "We're lonely, not horny" – all
human life is here. With knobs on.
What makes it work so well is
Roper's superb control of accent, intonation and body language,
bringing every scenario to lurid life.
Wiping away
at this grubby surface for long enough gets to some home truths
about sexuality and sex lives. "Having unprotected sex because
it just feels so much better may not be an excuse," she says,
in the guise of a thrusting American lady. "But it is a reason."
There
is so much material here, all of it so deftly handled, that you
may have to go back two or three times to ensure you caught
all of it.
Which would be no hardship.
Edinburgh Evening News - 5 stars
LIZZIE ROPER just graduated.
She used to be funny and clever. Now, having bypassed smart, she's gone
straight to extremely intelligent
for her
latest show, Peccadillo Circus. Oh yeah, and she's filthier
than ever.
The lights went down on the eager beavers in the audience,
most of whom looked like they had seen her before and knew what to
expect. Roper
appeared, projected on to the back wall in a film which explained
what she was going
to do.
She had interviewed people from all walks of life, getting
them to anonymously reveal things about themselves - their fantasies,
their
fetishes - and,
with the help of an MP3 player, she would be repeating their
words verbatim, illustrated and interpreted with actions.
It
wasn't as simple as it sounds, but Roper breezed onstage and made it
look easy. Enjoying a stream of hysterical, pithy
- sometimes
downright
smutty - dialogue, the audience also got Roper's signature
rubbery facial contortions, and her excellent ear for accents
into the
bargain.
The show examined, surprisingly closely, how members
of the public from around the world (including an Edinburgh
accountant)
felt
about sex
and sexuality, and it wasn't as predictable as it might
have seemed. Judging
by the way members of the audience shifted in their seats,
some of them found it all hit a little close to home.
Seven
or eight interviewees were used throughout the show and, while Roper
had edited their remarks, it seemed mostly
to cut
out unnecessary
gaps.
There was nothing risqué removed, yet nor was
it simply a stream of rudeness. Occasionally the abandon
with which people described their
pleasures was punctuated with unexpected disappointment
or even pain. Not many can express so much pathos
with
such a healthy dose of humour.
Roper not only managed to get the audience laughing,
sometimes even at themselves, she also got them happily
staring
into an often uncomfortable
mirror. Brilliant.
Broadway Baby - 5 stars
A hilarious tour de force
about the extraordinary sex lives of ordinary people.
Lizzie Roper is
a very funny stand up and talented actress. This year, however,
she’s
brought a very different show to the Festival, and the result
is a riveting and hysterical sixty minutes.
For
months she researched the sex of lives of men and women, straight
and gay, gaining
their
trust
and cajoling
them
into committing
to tape every detail of their sex lives.
She honed the final choice down to
six remarkable characters, and listens
to their stories through an ear piece
on stage, perfectly replicating live every
nuance, breath, laugh and word of their
recording. The
result is extraordinary,
the
technique
rendering
Roper’s performances as much more
real and immediate than a simply learned
script.
This is
Creature Comforts
meets Kinsey.
And one wonders if Kinsey ever
extracted such remarkable information. I
thought I was pretty
unshockable,
but the things people
get up to is mind boggling. Perhaps more
interesting is the effect
their
experiences
have had on the way they see the world.
I particularly liked the ex – psychiatrist
who has heard so many weird and twisted
confessions from clients down the years that when she watches
Crimestoppers she thinks she knows all
the rapists and perverts who committed the
crimes.
Roper
slips seamlessly between segments of her
six characters, her remarkable vocal and acting
skills
instantly letting
the audience know who is talking.
And boy is she aided by her subjects words
as they provide material it would be almost impossible
to
make up. The
sad but candid
older man who
seeks women on the internet informs us dryly,
and without irony, that the Germans didn’t
want the Americans to know Hitler was into
watersports with his niece in case they
used the information
to blacken his name!
One minor cavil is that
because she has to stay utterly faithful not
only to the sense of her
subjects’ words but the exact rhythm and
timing, she is sometimes unable to pause for
laughter to subside. And there’s
plenty of laughter as well as poignancy. This
must be one of the most original shows on the
fringe, and if you miss it you’ll
miss something very special.
ThreeWeeks - 5 stars
In totally effortless fashion,
Lizzie Roper acts out recordings of the general public's
sexual
secrets with
devastatingly
funny results.
Equipped
with a wide range of convincing accents,
this is unrelenting, versatile comedy, performed
with expert
timing and comic
professionalism. Celebrities and fellow
comedians alike are flocking to witness
this
rip-roaring
insight into sexual reality. Some might
inevitably blush throughout the show,
but they cannot deny the comic flawlessness
of a comedienne who has her audience
in the palm
of her
hand every time
she steps
on stage.
This is
definitely a comedy climax not to be
missed, so saunter over to the Gilded Balloon
and join in
this side-splitting
orgy
of fun
and frolics
The
Stage - Listed as a ‘Must
See’ Show
Nominated for Best Solo
Show, The Stage Awards for Acting Excellence
2006
This is an example of a show that will
suffer from being badly placed in
the Festival
Fringe brochure.
Listed
as a comedy
performance, Peccadillo Circus is
actually a piece of theatre and a very
good one at that.
Roper has interviewed
a broad cross-section of people about their sex lives, chopped
up the interviews,
edited them
together and
placed them
on an MP3 player that she wears
around her neck, listening to it through
her earpieces
That she is effectively listening to
her lines should not in anyway
diminish this
as a theatrical
experience.
She
repeats what is
being said, every
word, nuance, pause and stammer,
allowing the people speaking to use her body
like a spiritual
medium.
While she speaks their
words, she contorts into a caricature
of them,
every inch
of her trying
to convey something
about the person
talking.
Her characterisation is very
good - she becomes the elderly
lady,
the internet
swinger, the
dominatrix. Although she
does struggle
with the
camp Californian, never quite
convincing the audience of
their sex.
This is Creature Comforts
live and not to be missed
Chortle - 4 stars
As a character act, Lizzie Roper's always
had a lusty, bawdy charm, offering
creations that tend to be extravagant
caricatures rather than subtle
personas. Her comedy's
been in the grotesque excess,
rather than in well-observed
writing.
Well, this year she's
turned the performance dial down
from 11
and delegated away
the writing completely.
The
words
are taken
verbatim
from the genuine
conversations she had with real
people about sex, in all its complex
variations.
From a lascivious young
Irishwoman, to a 76-year-old Jungian analyst,
from a
S&M fetishist to a screaming
American queen, they all spoke
frankly to Roper who now,
like a cipher, repeats them-
mimicking
every accent, every intonation,
every verbal tic or nervous
laugh.
Hearing such authentic,
if one-sided, conversation
highlights just
how phoney so much scripted
dialogue is, and how
naturally funny
people are during an unguarded
chat. It's not necessarily
what they say,
but
how
they say it, that gets the
laughs here.
The subject matter means
Roper is pretty much a one-woman late-night
Five documentary,
covering
a range of tastes,
persuasions and
fetishes. Her
motive is not, however, to be
voyeuristic
or judgmental, but to try to
mount some small challenge
to the
repressed British
attitude
about
sex.
But on hearing some of the more
outlandish tales, especially
from the outrageous
gay man, you
might understand why
reticence can
be a virtue.
All Roper's subjects,
though, are marvellously open, and it's
often
the casual way
they discuss their
encounters that gets
a laugh.
They might
as well be talking about
great bus journeys they've had,
such is the matter-of-fact
manner employed- and
that's why it's funny.
Our
psychoanalyst is a delight, a spirited woman who's clearly
seen it all and
unfazed by anything
the world's
got left
to throw at
her. Roper's
portrayal is hugely sympathetic
to
this open, characterful
woman- who possibly had a little too much
sherry before being interviewed.
You suspect
this is how
Roper sees
herself in 40 years time
But
she also captures perfectly the spirit of less instantly
likeable characters, such as
the quiet
internet geek
who meets -or grooms? - desperate
women on Craig's List and who
talks with all the excitement
of EL Wisty
when he's describing
his
sex life. A 'comedy'
version of this character
would make him creepy and lascivious,
but in Roper's skilful hands,
his lonely vulnerability
and delicate
humanity shines through.
For
a faultless
performance, a subtle
execution
of an inspired
idea
and
a real insight
into the way people think,
talk and fuck, Peccadillo
Circus comes highly recommended.
The Guardian (Interview by Brian Logan) - The
secret life of the lippy dominatrix
Verbatim theatre, we know
about. But verbatim stand-up?
Lizzie
Roper is
a comic and
actor who starred last
year in All the
Right People
Come Here,
a docu-play about Wimbledon
tennis by the theatre group
Recorded
Delivery. The company
makes shows
by taping
interviews with
the public and,
earphones in ears, repeating
them to
an audience live on stage.
Now, in pioneering fashion,
Roper
has cribbed
the idea
for
her
Fringe comedy show, an investigation
into people's sex
lives called
Peccadillo Circus.
"
I fell in love with the technique," she says. It's easy to see why. "As
an actor, you're constantly
looking for a naturalistic delivery. But when you do a verbatim piece,
you realise how appalling people's grammar actually
is." The "recorded
delivery" technique celebrates
the idiosyncrasy of colloquial
speech. "No matter who
was interviewed and put on
stage," says
Roper, "if their every
vocal tic was represented,
it would
be hilariously funny."
The
more so when the subject
under discussion is sex. Roper's
show
features testimony
from coprophiliacs, swingers
and a lippy dominatrix:
("He
said he didn't come in here
to be humiliated, and I'm
thinking, 'Read the flyer!'")
Research wasn't plain sailing,
says Roper. "I
put an advert online asking
to speak to people, and
I got loads
of men
saying, 'I'll come
on your tits.'
But eventually you whittle
out the rapists."
Roper
finally interviewed 14 people,
of whom six have
made
it to the
stage. "These
are people you might sit next
to on the bus and wouldn't
know anything about," she
says. "Now you're going
to discover their amazing
secrets." She's so excited
about docu-comedy, she says, "I
now carry a tape recorder
with me at all times. This
way of working has made
me rejoice and see the comedy
in everything. It's fascinating:
what's more interesting
than real people?"
|