All Blood Runs Red

Morgan Bailey in All Blood Runs Red at Leeds Playhouse Image credit:- Ed Waring

Written and devised by Morgan Bailey, Pete Brooks, Simon Wainwright and Andrew Quick

Directed by Tyrone Higgins

Leeds Playhouse

There are some theatre companies whose name conjure up a certain magic and impel you to go see everything they do. One of these is the innovative Imitating The Dog whose work is always seeped in great storytelling using visually creative and innovative methods. This latest production tells a series of interlinked stories with a recurrent theme around how stories get told and what makes some stories get whitewashed from history…can we reclaim them and what might they tell us about ourselves.

All Blood Runs Red takes its name from a plane flown in WW1 by one of the first ever African American fighter pilots who flew in the French Flying Corps at a time when his native airforce still refused people of colour. Eugene Bullard emerges from history as an extremely colourful character. He fled his native Georgia at a time when lynchings were common, he travelled to Paris via Scotland learning some German en route. He was a drummer in the golden jazz years knowing people like Josephine Baker,he ran a club, was a circus performer and then a spy in WW2. In later years he returned to America and was involved in the Civil Rights movement and finally worked as a lift attendant in the Rockefeller building. This indicates a remarkable life worthy of a Hollywood blockbuster. Yet the whole essence of this production highlights how easily history can whitewash and marginalise remarkable people based on the colour of their skin.

Morgan Bailey in All Blood Runs Red at Leeds Playhouse. Image credit:- Ed Waring.

This is not a linear story of the life of Eugene Bullard. Instead vignettes from his life are interspersed with the lived experience of the Deviser/Performer Morgan Bailey who peppers the production with recollections of how he discovered who Eugene was. On a French film set in Paris, Bailey was playing the role of a young black G.I. in WW2 when he first encountered a book about Eugene Bullard. This production includes Bailey reflecting on his own personal experience of feeling his  cultural history and sense of self being whitewashed on set. Woven through the stories of these two men born a hundred years apart is the description of a Parisian  lunch where Bailey first suggests telling Bullard’s story with members of Imitating The Dog.

This interplay may frustrate those who may desire a more fully fleshed out history of this fascinating man, however the whole point of the production is to play with the narrative and explore the ways in which stories are told. This is a theatre company that is all about finding new ways to look at stories and bring them alive. Their trademark blend of live theatre mixed with live film-making, digital creativity and sound design brings theatre alive in a unique and challenging manner. This multi faceted and layered production honours a man who emerges from history as someone who defies categorisation and whose life was as rich and varied as this vivid and beautifully constructed production.

LEEDS PLAYHOUSE 14/15th February 2025

On Tour

FRANKENSTEIN

Nedum Okonyia and Georgia-Mae Myers in Frankenstein at Leeds Playhouse
Photo: Ed Waring

Inspired by the writing of Mary Shelley

Co Directed by Andrew Quick, Peter Brooks and Simon Wainwright

An Imitating The Dog and Leeds Playhouse Co Production

Quarry, Leeds Playhouse

Frankenstein was written over two hundred years ago by the nineteen year old Mary Shelley. The themes of the book have resonated through the centuries as we humans continue to grapple with the concepts of birth, life and death and what it essentially means to exist. Inspired to compete with her husband Shelley, the poet Byron and John Polidori to write a horror story, she wove together a story of a creature formed from the gruesome parts of cadavers stitched together and sparked into life by the principle of galvanism. The full tragedy is that this creature willed into life is destined never to be loved by his creator Frankenstein. This new rendition by Imitating The Dog splices together this Gothic romantic masterpiece with a story  where a young couple grapple with coming to terms with a pregnancy and its implications in an uncertain world.

Georgia-Mae Myers and Nedum Okonyia in Frankenstein at Leeds Playhouse
Photo: Ed Waring

This latest production by Imitating The Dog is a creative departure from their work of recent years as they abandon their trademark use of live camera projections used so effectively in work such as Night of the Living DeadRemix, Dracula:The Untold Story and Macbeth. This new work blends story telling with digital technology and movement. The result is visually glorious as Video Designers Davi Callanan and Alan Cox make every use of the strikingly simple set design by Hayley Grindle. The staging comes alive as violent weather patterns erupt across the stage, snowy blizzards and terrifying thunderstorms encompass the characters and beautifully compliment the radio broadcasting of the original text. There are other gems as set props illuminate with video images such as embryos, sonograms and birds that are reminiscent of a Damien Hirst installation or a Victorian laboratory.

The overall impact is highly effective as it allows the drama of Frankenstein, the claustrophobia of Walton’s ship and the beauty of the  polar landscape to come alive. Composer  James Hamilton has created a glorious score that weaves through the piece and creates a perfect alchemy with the rest of the staging. The score also brings additional powerful to the taut, muscular performances of the two leads. The choreography by Casper Dillen has an urgency and desperation that channels that of Victor Frankenstein and his Creature while also illustrating the push/pull of the young couple deciding what to do regarding the pregnancy.

Georgia-Mae Myers and Nedum Okonyia give their all to this production. Utterly invested in the characters they bring to life from the book and in the modern day embodiment of a couple wrestling with a momentous decision in an uncertain world. It is frustrating that the naturalistic dialogue employed for the modern setting seems to get lost when in translation when up against the writing of Mary Shelley. On occasion some of the parallels drawn, such as between the Creature and the shouty man outside the couple’s flat can seem heavy-handed and unnecessary. The couple come alive during the movement sequences but perhaps would have benefited from stronger dialogue to give them more depth so that ultimately an audience could care and invest in them as much as with the characters in the book.

There is much to enjoy in this production and the themes of Frankenstein will remain relevant as it continues to astound as to how Shelley’s vision of a man sewn together from discarded body parts and galvanised into life could ever be fully realised in anything but our imagination. Yet two hundred years on we think nothing of using defibrillators to breathe fresh life after a heart stops beating and use organ, body and skin implants to give loved ones hope and a new lease of life. Imitating The Dog have used their unique set of components and galvanised their own vision of Frankenstein and it seems to be a pretty successful rebirth!

Leeds Playhouse  15 – 24 February 2024

FRANKENSTEIN Tour dates