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Here Comes a Chopper: Newbury theatre group a cut above




New Era Players is a small and very successful amateur theatre club in Wash Common. Their performances each year offer a wide variety of theatrical styles. They say ‘One of our important aims is to produce plays that are a challenge to both ourselves and our audiences, as well as putting on more traditional productions.’ And rise to the challenge they certainly do with their current run of Ionesco’s absurdist theatre Here Comes A Chopper. Review below.

New Era Players: Here Comes a Chopper

at the New Era Theatre, Wash Common

from Thursday, March 13 to Saturday 15 and Tuesday 18 to Saturday 22

Review by TONY TRIGWELL-JONES

New Era Here Comes The Chopper Pic: David Zeke
New Era Here Comes The Chopper Pic: David Zeke

“ON this earth there are pestilences and there are victims, and it’s up to us, so far as possible, not to join forces with the pestilences,” says the itinerant Tarrou, in Albert Camus’ The Plague. Written 23 years later, Eugene Ionesco’s The Killing Game (or Here Comes a Chopper) is a play about a town in the grip of its own “scourge”. Like Camus’ Oran, the true scourge of this small city are the obsessions of its populace, its rulers and the underclass, its brutality and ignorance.

Here Comes a Chopper is among Ionesco’s less frequently produced plays, making it a bold choice for Newbury’s New Era Players, who present the darkly satirical piece with a macabre revelry.

Structured as a series of skits and sketches, the play has no clear continuous protagonists, providing significant challenges for director Lisa Harrington and her excellent cast, who manage to keep their audience transfixed from one absurd set piece to another.

An ensemble in the truest sense, the cast of 12 succeed in presenting what appear to be hundreds of characters across the two acts, as we follow the townsfolk through several months of lockdown. There are naysayers and government calls for calm, the nonsensical application of statistics in the search for meaning, there’s paranoia, fear, unreasonable reason, and eventually all-out anarchy.

New Era Here Comes The Chopper Pic: David Zeke
New Era Here Comes The Chopper Pic: David Zeke

Presented five years after our own ‘plague’ of Covid, the similarities are obvious, which of course serves to only give the satirical content more relevance and bite. However, the cast do well to let those moments land with levity, avoiding the urge to heavy-handedly point out the parallels.

The slapstick is well balanced with a handful of genuinely touching moments, beautifully performed by more experienced members of the cast. This adds much needed emotional weight to the piece, and it is testament to the cast, that we are so emotionally invested.

On the surface, Here Comes a Chopper appears to be a ridiculous comedy about a town of simpletons, but New Era have expertly found the heart and soul of this absurdist work, exposing human frailty, ignorance and corruption where we should be finding connection and compassion.

Ionesco was deeply affected by his experiences in France during the Second World War. He was friends with Breton and the Surrealists, as was Camus – though I could not find a record of the two ever being friends. Around the time of writing this play, America had been caught up in Vietnam, Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon and Martin Luther King was assassinated. So much of what was happening in the world must have seemed absurd, like we were “idiots being governed by imbeciles.”

New Era Here Comes The Chopper Pic: David Zeke
New Era Here Comes The Chopper Pic: David Zeke

Therefore, it is timely that this brilliant ensemble have revived the play, at our own time of apparent global madness, to show us that “joy was here,” and perhaps if come to our senses and go to the theatre, we may rediscover it there, if nowhere else!

The play runs until Saturday, but the venue is quite small, so advance booking is advised.



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