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Theatre Review: Trainspotting at Citizens Theatre (2017)

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Published by TSA.

It’s a quiet, soft moment on stage. A group of scanty clad, intoxicated delinquents are slowly being roused from their drunken slumber when the silence finally breaks as Alison (Chloe-Ann Taylor) makes the worst, most unthinkable discovery a mother can make.

Taylor’s profound, shattering wails pierce the eerily still air and reverberate through Citizens Theatre from the stage to the exit doors as the audience watches on, helpless in horror, as Harry Gibson’s colourful and concentrated Trainspotting reaches breaking point. No longer are the lovable Leith scallywags free to enjoy spectacular highs with their only worry being their next score. Now, real life has obliterated their rose-tinted world as Alison’s baby Dawn tragically dies from neglect in a dingy flat littered with bloodied needles, condoms, and unknown doses of unknown drugs made in somebody’s kitchen.

This pivotal moment in Gibson’s massively successful stage adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s cult 1993 novel marks the beginning of the end of an era for Mark ‘Rent Boy’ Renton, Sick Boy, Spud, and Francis ‘Franco’ Begbie. Before this scene, the play’s first act is an ecstatic, care-free, fun-filled, albeit still grim and unsettling, experience which immerses the audience in the hypnotic and explosive highs of addiction. Following baby Dawn’s death, however, the illusion of stunted adolescence is destroyed as responsibilities, deaths, overdoses, heroin withdrawal, and HIV infection inevitably rear their ugly heads.

Directed by in-house director Gareth Nicholls, Trainspotting is back for a second run after its massively critically-acclaimed debut back in September 2016.

Bringing a refreshing production with a renewed sense of gore, squalor, and unnerving but hysterical black hearted comedy, the emotive delight of round two of this play is intensified tenfold following the release of Danny Boyle’s highly anticipated sequel, T2 Trainspotting, in January this year.

With Boyle’s already iconic and beloved sequel fresh in our heads, snippets from individual character monologues lit only by a harsh, fluorescent light and entire scenes towards the end of the action evoke new meaning in light of T2 Trainspotting. One such scene takes place in Leith Central as the protagonists gear up for a mammoth drug deal which will take them to the bright lights and dangerous streets of London. As they wait for the rest of the gang, casual luggage bag filled with heroin in hand, Lorn Macdonald’s complex and dynamic Renton and Martin McCormick as Begbie spot an old drunkard swaying from side to side, trying to keep his polybag carry out in his grasp.

As they shoo him off, McCormick’s petrifying and disturbing Begbie confesses to Renton that the old waster is in fact his father. Renton, speaking to the audience, indulges that when they left Leith Central, Begbie let out decades-worth of pent-up anger directed at his deadbeat dad by savagely attacking an innocent, random passerby.

This moment brings to mind a T2 Trainspotting scene featuring Robert Carlyle’s incomparable Begbie relived in one of Spud’s ‘wee stories’ when Begbie meets his dad in that very same station (a scene cherry-picked from Welsh’s text) and Begbie later confessing to Renton during their mighty, long overdue square-go that he killed a man once, a man who did nothing to him, in a moment when he was thinking of Renton.

It is these moments and others like this interspersed throughout the stage play which create a patented blend of Welsh’s Trainspotting and Porno, as well as Boyle’s massive blockbusters. By creating a discourse between the seductive, gritty aesthetic of Boyle’s vision of Thatcherite Leith morphing into an invigorating New Labour Britain alongside Welsh’s boundless filth, heart, and black comedy, Nicholls’s adaptation ranks highly and takes a well-deserved seat alongside the cult classic’s cinematic and rival theatrical adaptations including the immersive experience, Trainspotting Live.

With a phenomenon cast including the remarkable Angus Miller as the lovable, tragic Tommy and the scheming, twisted Sick Boy, and the immensely talented Gavin Jon Wright who perfectly plays the energetic, baby-faced old man Spud, Trainspotting at Citizens has everything going for it. Every aspect of the show has been painstakingly considered from costume, choreography, and set design to vocabulary, pace, and special effects.

A remarkable tribute to the entire Trainspotting franchise (book, cinema, and theatre alike) with a refreshing portrayal of a timeless story with social issues, relationships, and characters that transcend time and nationality.

Running at Citizens Theatre until November 11, Trainspotting is an absolutely extraordinary and unmissable show that will make you laugh, cry, and, of course, heave.

Have you seen Trainspotting at Citizens? Let me know what you think in the comment section below.

Interview: Greg Esplin, Co-Director of Trainspotting Live

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Published by Glasgowist.

In 1993, Irvine Welsh’s ground-breaking debut novel Trainspotting was released. The book disgusted some, infuriated others, and kickstarted a phenomenon which is now a beloved franchise.

Now, over twenty years later, the story of Rents, Sick Boy, Spud, and Begbie is still being picked up by every generation and reincarnated into new, exciting adaptations.

Based on Harry Gibson’s stage adaptation, the massively critically acclaimed Trainspotting Live has returned home to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival this month after a hugely successful world tour. Created by In Your Face Theatre Company, specialising in immersive theatre, the show is back where it all began for the festival season.

Artistic director of the company Greg Esplin juggles the day-to-day running of operations with co-directing and starring in the show as lovable good guy Tommy.

I caught up with Greg in the midst this year’s festival madness to find out more about Trainspotting Live and if the show will be coming to Glasgow any time soon.

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SOPHIE: How are you enjoying playing at the Fringe so far?

GREG: Aw, it’s brilliant. It’s our fourth year in a row now. So, it’s good to have a change because we’re in a different venue for once. I absolutely love it. I love taking the show back home.

There’s always a bit of pressure because you tend to think Edinburgh think they own the show which they do a little bit. But the pressure is good in a way – not that we ever take it for granted or become lackadaisical – but it’s nice to be like, ‘Okay guys, let’s not fuck this up’.

S: How did Trainspotting Live come about?

G: We just always wanted to put Trainspotting on stage.

We took Harry Gibson’s play and, if you read it, it’s about two and a half hours long. We essentially just spoke to Irvine Welsh about adapting that into our own little take into a quick, I guess, punch in the gut. A quick 75 minutes. So, it really just came out of asking nicely and having a bit of passion about it.

S: How do you think this performance differs from other stage adaptations?

G: Well, a lot of stage productions, perhaps, and not that this is the wrong thing to do, but they try to put the movie on stage. Whereas we very much wanted to stay closer to the text and to the book and focus on the reality of these characters’ stories and situations, the truth behind it all as opposed to the glamorisation.

It’s definitely not a happy-go-lucky Trainspotting, it’s definitely darker. And there’s nothing wrong with either way, I don’t think, it was just that we, well speaking for myself personally, I absolutely love the book. There’s things in the book that aren’t in the film like Begbie and June, you get to see some of that relationship, and obviously Tommy’s downfall as well.

There’s a lot more behind that than just him going to Renton in the movie and buying some straight away and these are just things we wanted to hit on more rather than just putting the movie on.

S: So, what does your role as Artistic Director of In Your Face Theatre involve?

G: It’s basically the day-to-day running of In Your Face Theatre Company and keeping it afloat. Today, for example, I’m rehearsing with an understudy and we’ve been rehearsing him the last couple of days and then come Tuesday we’ll do a tech with Adam [Adam Spreadbury-Maher], the co-director, he’ll come in and I’ll just be Tommy that day, I won’t be co-director.

It’s important to have a balance and not take on too much. It’s too easy to be like ‘No, this is mine, I’m doing this,’ but actually the more you share something, it becomes a lot easier.

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S: What’s the most enjoyable and challenging aspects of playing Tommy?

G: He’s just a nice guy, isn’t he? I love him. I love playing Tommy. His heart’s always in the right place. His backstory in the book is tough because he has a hard time with his mum and his family but he just loves his mates.

The most challenging part of playing Tommy in a 75-minute play is that it’s such a quick downfall. That’s quite difficult but I do love playing him because if you were playing Begbie, for example, a lot of people dislike him straight away whereas Tommy is easy to fall in love with.

It’s not that much of a challenge to get the audience to like Tommy. But maybe just switching to the other side when he takes drugs and having to fall to the ground naked 15 times a week, that bit can be quite difficult.

S: When the adaptation first started, did you think it would become as successful as it has?

G: No, not at all. We just did it because we really wanted to put this show on and it was something we absolutely loved. We started it as a bit of a passion project and I guess you never start anything thinking it’s going to become huge.

I think if you’re going into something expecting it to be massive then you’re probably doing it for the wrong reason. We did it because we love the story and we’re all passionate. Passionate about the book, passionate about the movie and I think that’s probably why it’s been so successful because everyone loves what they’re doing.

We just finished a play called The Hard Man about a Glaswegian gangster and it just went so well and I was working with all these guys and Trainspotting was just something we all wanted to do and that was three and a half years ago. We just toured Australia and the whole of the UK and it’s been absolutely humbling. It’s been brilliant.

S: So, will the show be coming to Glasgow?

G: I bloody hope so. I’m from Falkirk so I’m between the two [Edinburgh and Glasgow] and we want it to come to Glasgow. I think next year should be the year. We’re definitely planning another UK tour. So, I’m going to put down a hopeful ‘yes’. Nothing’s totally booked in yet but we’re definitely in talks.

I’d fucking love to bring the show to Glasgow. I think the response from the audience between Glasgow and Edinburgh would be about neck and neck. Glaswegians are great and I’d absolutely love to get the show there.

You can buy tickets for Trainspotting Live here.

Read my review of the show here.

 

Theatre Review: Trainspotting Live at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival

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Published by Glasgowist.

Scurrying into what feels like a dark train tunnel buried underneath the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, wearing fluorescent wristbands as admission, the nervous excitement and eager anticipation in the room is palpable. Based on the 1993 novel by Irvine Welsh and adapted for stage by Harry Gibson, the audience brace themselves for what is promised to be a powerful Franco Begbie right hook from In Your Face Theatre with their production of Trainspotting Live.

Directed by Adam Spreadbury-Maher and Greg Esplin, this smash hit has enjoyed tremendous hype and a glowing review from the big man himself, Irvine Welsh, who labelled it ‘the best way to experience Trainspotting’. Currently touring the UK with a stint at Edinburgh’s world-famous Fringe Festival, this show is drawing crowds from around the country. Understandably, expectations are sky high

The venue is perfect for the company’s immersive theatre experience with what resembles a wide catwalk as the performance area and a brick arch above with the audience surrounding the cast almost uncomfortably close on all sides; no raised stage, no barriers, no personal space, and no-holds-barred.

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Punters go from being wide-eyed, horrified, and hanging off the edge of their seats one minute to doubled over with laughter the next. But no audience member is safe as Chris Dennis’s terrifying Francis Begbie spits beer on the crowd and violently threatens a front row punter with a pool cue, Michael Lockerbie’s charismatic Sick Boy pulls a victim from the audience onto the performance area, and Gavin Ross’s hilarious and emotive Mark Renton bends over naked inches away from an audience member’s face and gives another punter a dab of speed which is willingly taken without a beat of hesitation.

The first half of the play has tears of laughter streaming down our faces with painfully embarrassing blunders and failed sexual conquests cherrypicked from Welsh’s novel, full-frontal literally-in-your-face-helicoptering nudity, and, of course, the worst toilet in Scotland.

For this scene, the gritty steel toilet sits smack bang in the middle of the audience on the left-hand side of the venue as Renton fishes around in the bowl for his precious opium suppositories. Flinging his own mess all over a recoiling, screaming crowd, he even chucks in a dirty condom for good measure with splats onto a disgusted punter’s head. Stunned, enthralled, and thrilled by the play’s side-splitting opening, it soon dawns on the audience that the come down from this high will be considerable. The good times couldn’t last forever.

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This young dynamic cast, oozing raw talent and charm, take the audience on a painted journey of hilarity, stunted adolescence, and recreational drug use gradually slipping into the grim realities of heroin addiction.

As things take a turn for the worst, Tommy contracts HIV, baby Dawn dies, and Renton overdoses, the adaptation’s low moments are traumatic. With a combination of the cast’s portrayal of genuine pain and despair and the intimacy of the setting, we feel very much part of this performance, part of these characters stories. The audience flinch and squirm in their seats as Erin Marshall’s brilliantly hysterical Alison lets out a piercing, bloodcurdling scream and punters visibly tear up as Sick Boy cradles his dead baby Dawn.

Tommy’s death, too, is hard for the audience to recover from as we watch Greg Esplin’s morally-upstanding, lovable good guy deteriorate with no hope of a cure as he slowly slips away in a graphic, heart-breaking scene which leaves a stinging wound.

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As the lights fade out to the pounding sound of Underworld’s Born Slippy, evoking the memory of Danny Boyle’s phenomenal generation-defining 1996 film, the audience erupts and gives the cast a well-deserved standing ovation.

Blending the electricity of the film with the grotesque poetry of the novel, the play is a fast-paced, in-depth series of hilarious, heartfelt and heart-breaking stories true to Welsh’s text. With bloody violence, sex, hard drug use, profanity, and nudity, this performance is a thoroughly enjoyable, ecstatic assault on the senses which inspires us to beg the cast to hit us one last time. Just one more hit.

As the show ends, we slowly toddle out of the venue and back into daylight, delightfully dazed and delicate after an intense sensory thrashing. Definitely not a show for the squeamish or the fainthearted, this performance is Trainspotting in its most faithful, unapologetic form. It hasn’t been cut with bicarb or baby formula, it’s pure from the source.

Trainspotting Live is a concentrated hit of the passion and aesthetic style of Boyle’s film mixed in a spoon with the gore, horror, and hilarity of Welsh’s novel, shoved down the barrel of a dirty needle and flushed into our veins.

Choose Trainspotting Live. Believe the hype.

You can buy tickets for Trainspotting Live here.

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What do you think of Trainspotting? Let me know in the comment section below.

Why the T2 Trainspotting Ending is Genius

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As Vladimir Nabokov once said: ‘Genius is finding the invisible link between things.’

With the DVD of T2 Trainspotting being released this month, allowing hardcore fans and phenomenon newbies alike to relish in 30+ minutes of unseen footage and cast interviews, the ending to the long-awaited sequel is a hot topic of conversation.

Loosely based on Porno, Irvine Welsh’s sequel to his 1993 novel Trainspotting, director Danny Boyle and original screenwriter John Hodge worked their magic again by fine-combing the novel to cherry-pick scenes for T2 Trainspotting; one such scene being Renton and Simon’s already iconic 1690 scam in an Orange Hall. Mixing choice scenes from Welsh’s sequel with a brand-new plot focussing on nostalgia, masculinity and getting older, Hodge wrote an inventive script which was an instant hit with Boyle and the original cast, Ewan McGregor, Ewen Bremner, Robert Carlyle and Jonny Lee Miller.

Although McGregor’s character, Mark Renton, is the lead protagonist of Welsh’s novel and the articulate antihero narrator of Boyle’s hugely successful 1996 film adaptation, the character focalisation shifts slightly in T2 Trainspotting to Bremner’s character, Danny ‘Spud’ Murphy.

A baby-faced old man in a serious long-term relationship with heroin, the initial worry for Spud is that he won’t survive a sequel and those fears are almost realised when the audience sees Spud preparing to take his own life – the first scene in the franchise to be narrated by a character other than Renton. And while Renton has his resourcefulness and a new life in Amsterdam, Simon has a network of scams and a (failing) pub to run, and Begbie has burglaries to commit and unfinished business to take care of, Spud has nothing – nothing except his stories.

 

Being by no means perfect, Spud has, nevertheless, always been the moral compass of the franchise; the only friend who Renton loved and felt obliged to compensate after his devastating betrayal at the end of Trainspotting because Spud had ‘never hurt anybody’. As the sequel continually poses the question of what will happen to this lovable goof, Hodge’s ingenious twist gives Spud a new lease of (or should I say, ‘lust for’?) life. After spending his time between sauna refurbishments scribbling down stories from his early-twenties, Spud eventually combines them to create makeshift novel to be read by his new friend Veronica and the love of his life and mother of his son, Gail.

The ending of T2 Trainspotting does well to make the audience emotional by revisiting each character and the note they end on, but there is something particularly emotive and special about Gail, portrayed by the brilliant Shirley Henderson, rearranging Spud’s papers after reading and saying, ‘I thought of a title’ – a moment that made even Ewan McGregor get tear up. Combined with the numerous self-reflexive moments alluding to the first film and Welsh’s novels, the lightbulb suddenly clicks on when the audience realises the reason behind Hodge’s ingenious meta references throughout as he implies that Spud represents Irvine Welsh himself.

Talking to The Telegraph in 2015, Welsh said: ‘The game changer was getting seriously addicted to heroin in my early 20s. I didn’t have any money to lose, so for about a year I got into the dark world of scams and multiple giro claims, petty shoplifting and theft. I was constantly borrowing from people and running up debts, and that changes people’s perceptions of you.’

Just as Welsh took heroin, committed benefit fraud and theft, Spud, too, is a heroin addict who forges signatures and was even imprisoned for shoplifting. And as Renton and Simon joke about who in their right mind is going to read Spud’s stories, we smile to ourselves knowing that the whole world will.

Defying Sick Boy’s unifying theory of life which dictates that everyone who has ‘it’ ultimately loses it, the cast and crew of T2 Trainspotting definitely still have it. The conclusion makes the franchise’s down-and-out underdog a star by giving him a creative outlet that could transform his life, refuses to reward Renton for his controversial and arguably amoral behaviour despite the device of first-person narrative largely focussing on him, and brings these characters and relationships full circle.

Whether this analogy, this ‘invisible link’ between Welsh and Spud, was intended by Welsh when writing Spud or completely invented by Hodge when writing the screenplay, T2 Trainspotting’s conclusion is nevertheless a beautiful and truly satisfying ending; the ending that the fans deserved and one that pays tribute to the man who started it all.

 

What did you think of the T2 Trainspotting ending? Let me know in the comment section below.

Review: T2 Trainspotting

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Published by Glasgowist.

Trainspotting is the film of the 1990s, the film of a generation. A phenomenon that perfectly captured a decade in time, making the world laugh, cry, cringe, and recoil in horror, disgust, and delight. Mark Renton, Simon ‘Sick Boy’ Williamson, Danny ‘Spud’ Murphy, and Francis ‘Franco’ Begbie are characters almost every Scot can name and describe in what is undoubtedly the biggest and most loved film ever to come out of Scotland. The tale of prolonged adolescence, friendship, heroin addiction, and ‘life’ itself has resonance around the globe. With masses of devoted fans, new and old, still standing 20 years later, T2 Trainspotting is probably one of, if not the, most highly-anticipated British film sequels of this lifetime. And the film event of the year is finally here.

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Sick Boy’s ‘Unifying Theory of Life’ is certainly proven true in T2 Trainspotting. Our favourite Leith scamps had it – whatever ‘it’ was – and they’ve lost it. Now that the magic and indestructability of youth has dissipated, Renton, Simon, Spud, and Begbie, now middle-aged, have little to show for the last 20 years. Caught in a bleak cycle of regret, misplacement, bad choices, a search for something to replace addiction, and fruitless efforts to ‘choose life’, they search for fond nostalgia – reduced to being, as Simon remarks, ‘tourists in their own youth’.

A crossroads for each character sees them all returning home to Edinburgh with debts to pay, unfinished business to take care of, and a lot of baggage. With new and old faces popping up, Renton (Ewan McGregor) is home, escaping from a life in Amsterdam that has crumbled around him. 46-years-old and lost like a lone child in a supermarket, he goes back to the only place that resembles home in the hope of righting wrongs and starting again. He chose life, but it turns out life is harder than he thought it would be.

Another lost soul is Simon (Jonny Lee Miller). Desperately clinging on to his playboy charm, youth, and looks, and trying to convince himself that he’s still cool and business savvy, he, too, is struggling with what to do with his life. As much as Renton and Simon could kill each other at times, they also can’t live without each other. And together they resort to their old life of seedy, money-making scams and dodgy dealings that could see them getting into more trouble than they ever expected.

Spud (Ewen Bremner), resembling a baby-faced old man now more than ever, is utterly adorable and hilarious in his heart-warming fondness for his long-lost friends, his childlike sentimentality and sensitivity, and his inherent goodness. Arguably the only character out of the four who is truly good at the core, Spud’s story takes a heart-breaking and seemingly hopeless turn. Still a Leith junkie – popping pills, sniffing powder, and injecting heroin – Spud is still very much stuck in a cycle of behaviour, dreaming of the days when youth offered a vessel through which he could plunge into oblivious and forget about the real world. For fans of Irvine Welsh’s Porno (2002), which T2 Trainspotting is very loosely based on, you can expect to see the same new literary side of Spud that features in the novel, but with a dramatic and very clever twist towards the end.

As for the man, the myth, the legend, Francis Begbie (Robert Carlyle), he’s out of prison. But when I say ‘out’, I mean he’s escaped. As terrifying as ever, Begbie is on a rampage to track down the man he’s been plotting his revenge against for the last two, cold decades in an Edinburgh prison. And his opportunity has finally come.

The showdown between Rents and Franco, the ultimate square-go 20 years in the making, is everything we could’ve hoped for. With Spud and Simon on hand to intervene, an adrenaline-fuelled dual takes place, filled with fist-clenching, literal mouth-gaping moments. It is at this point, too, that we see the film’s tense, most shocking moment as a life quite literally hangs in the balance.

With a soundtrack – dare I say it – better than the last, a greater depth of emotion and sentiment, T2 Trainspotting is not Trainspotting. As Diane (Kelly Macdonald) predicted, the world has changed, music has changed, even drugs have changed. T2 Trainspotting is a whole other film, a whole new animal. The film stands alone as a reflection and a fitting tribute to its predecessor that grows old but doesn’t quite grow up with its legion of adoring fans. Dealing with issues of masculinity, adulthood, parenthood, and getting old, T2 Trainspotting offers audiences a detailed background of this dysfunctional family dynamic that is steeped in history, loyalty, betrayal, and, somewhere underneath it all, love. With moments of memorial for lost friends and a look back at darker times, T2 Trainspotting contains several flashbacks and parallels to the original in a film that is somewhat self-aware of the incomparable legacy it is part of.

The performances delivered by the original cast are superb, with Ewen Bremner, in particular, serving up an exceptional portrayal of everyone’s favourite catboy. In a story of bitterness, ghosts of the past, and new hope in a new plot with tears, surprises, and massive laughs, filmgoers and diehard Trainspotting fans alike are in for a treat. Director Danny Boyle hasn’t tried to create a cheap, copycat version of the original – something everyone will be thankful for. He’s done something completely different. T2 Trainspotting is truly original, unmissable, and deserving of following in the footsteps of Danny Boyle’s original phenomenon that is rightly adored the world over.

★★★★★

What did you think of T2 Trainspotting? Let me know in the comment section below.

Preview: Trainspotting at Citizens Theatre, Glasgow

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Published by Glasgowist.

With the highly anticipated release of Trainspotting 2, expected to arrive at cinemas in February 2017, Glasgow’s Citizens Theatre is revisiting the original Trainspotting stage production, adapted from Irvine Welsh’s 1993 novel.

Twenty two years after the first theatrical production of the story that defined Scotland’s 80s heroin epidemic for the 90s pre-New Labour generation was held at the Citizens, main stage director-in-residence Gareth Nicholls is putting his own arthouse twist onto the new production. It promises to deliver a fresh take on the cult classic that has been adopted by legions of rebellious teenagers and unsure 20-somethings since it first burst onto the scene in a blaze of vivid imagery and powerful invective.

Trainspotting follows the group of delinquent Leithers Mark Renton, Simon ‘Sick Boy’ Williamson, and Danny ‘Spud’ Murphy, alongside their psychopathic so-called mate Francis ‘Franco’ Begbie. In what has become a modern Scottish folk tale, the group turn to hard drugs, scamming, and violence during a time of chronic unemployment and cultural boredom.

The new Citizens production promises to be more faithful to Welsh’s original text than Danny Boyle’s hugely successful film version from 1996.

Adapted for the stage by Harry Gibson and starring Lorn Macdonald as Renton, Angus Miller as Sickboy and Tommy, Chloe-Ann Tylor as Alison, Lizzie, and Dianne, Gavin Jon Wright as Spud, and Owen Whitelaw as Begbie and Mother Superior, this exciting new production is set to wow audiences and intensify the hype for the upcoming Trainspotting revival.

So, if you would like to have one last nostalgic look at Renton’s Converse lowering into the worst toilet in Scotland or Begbie’s blade slicing into powerless victims before Ewan McGregor, Ewen Bremner, Johnny Lee Miller, and Robert Carlyle return in the Boyle’s sequel, nab a ticket for this sure-to-be sell-out show.

Choose Trainspotting at the Citizens Theatre from 14th September to 8th October. Tickets are available here.

Look out for my review of this show coming soon!

Essential Listening: Trainspotting Soundtrack

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Published by The Strathclyde Telegraph.

While the majority of motion picture soundtracks are too often composed of mere instrumentals and album fillers used to bridge the gaps and silences in a film, the Trainspotting soundtrack, however, is a sequence of landmarks in time through the music scene and tracks the trends and sub-cultures of the late 1980s to mid-1990s. The soundtrack’s evolution also signifies the developing character of Mark Renton and his journey through addiction with his group of friends in Edinburgh. From the synth-pop, New Romantics, and rock of the ‘80s, to the grunge, Britpop, and dance eruption of the 90s, the Trainspotting soundtrack is a cherry-picked collective of anthemic tracks that disorientate, unnerve, thrill, and electrify the viewer.

As the iconic opening sequence bursts onto the screen with Renton and Spud chased down Princes Street, the punchy beat of ‘Lust for Life’ by Iggy Pop bounces, matching the pace of the heroin addicts’ Converse trainers springing on and off the pavement with seemingly superhuman speed. The use of ‘Lust for Life’ in the opening seconds of Trainspotting immediately lets the viewer know that this isn’t going to be a warm, fuzzy, or relaxing film to watch, but that it is a film which is going to grip, shock, entertain and disturb them; essentially, it is a film that isn’t going to give you a minute’s peace.

 

The next track provides another telling detail of Trainspotting: it is a pretty trippy film. As Renton enters ‘the worst toilet in Scotland’ for a scene that makes just about everyone dry heave, a seemingly surprising choice of song is used: ‘Suite No. 2’ from the opera ‘Carmen’ by Georges Bizet. Throwing a beautiful piece of classical music in with a hallucinogenic underwater toilet sequence amongst an otherwise punk dominated soundtrack, at first, seems a little disorientating. But this choice of track, which builds to a theatrical crescendo, only adds to the indie, black humour and kitschy irony of Trainspotting as Renton finally finds those precious lost suppositories.

Other classic hits are included such as ‘Temptation’ by Heaven 17, featuring during the club scene, which hypnotically melds into ‘Atomic’ by Sleeper, as Renton spots Diane for the first time and falls in love, to ‘Sing’ by Blur and ‘Perfect Day’ by Lou Reed. Whilst these all flawlessly set the tone for the film’s gritty first act, the soundtrack – much like Renton’s character – has a turning point. As Renton realises he had to ‘find something new’, ‘Think About the Way’ by Ice MC signifies Renton’s move to the Big Smoke with a fast-paced montage of buzzing 1996 London; this illustrates Renton’s fresh start as well as the changing nature of Britain and the move from the depraved, Thatcherite ‘80s to the new Labour of the ‘90s.

Saving, perhaps, the best for last is ‘Born Slippy’ by Underworld, the sound that arguably defines Trainspotting. Accompanied by Renton’s closing monologue about really ‘choosing life’ this time, the euphoric techno anthem provides the perfect drug-infused final hit for an astounding soundtrack that will pound in your ears for days afterwards.

What do you think of the Trainspotting soundtrack? Are you looking forward to the sequal? Let me know in the comment section below.

Essential Film Review: Trainspotting

Published by the Strathclyde Telegraph.

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‘Choose life. Choose a job. Choose a career.’ Choose watching Trainspotting religiously until you can rhyme off their entire iconic opening monologue on command.

Adapted from Irvine Welsh’s novel of the same name, written in the dialect of Leith, Edinburgh, Trainspotting is a cult classic film that has been picked up by every generation of teenager since its release in 1996; encouraging viewers to have a long and sobering think about their own life choices as they watch in horror, trembling with the ‘jake shakes’ on hungover Sunday mornings.

Since Welsh’s novel is more of a plethora of loosely connected episodes involving a group of drug addicts and degenerates in late ‘80s-early ‘90s Edinburgh – as opposed to a fleshed-out, ‘beginning, middle and end’ story – director Danny Boyle had his work cut out as he essentially constructed the plot for Trainspotting; picking the most prominent of the various narrators from the novel Mark Renton (played by Ewan McGregor) as the film’s protagonist and heroin-addict anti-hero.

Alongside some of the film’s best features including: the superb soundtrack which perfectly encapsulates ‘90s drug and rave subculture with hits from Faithless, Underworld and Iggy Pop; and some of Scotland’s greatest acting talent including Robert Carlyle as the pint-sized psycho Francis ‘Franco’ Begbie and Kelly Macdonald as the articulate, too-grown-up-for-her-age Diane – what also makes Trainspotting great is the narration.

A technique that Boyle borrowed from legendary director Martin Scorsese in GoodFellas, Trainspotting is narrated throughout by Renton, an intelligent and articulate Edinburgh scamp who, in the midst of mass unemployment and cultural boredom, turned to drugs and asked: “And the reasons? There are no reasons. Who needs reasons when you’ve got heroin?”

While you’d expect heavy narration in a movie to be a bit of an adaptation-hangover from the novel, Boyle expertly strikes a balance of just enough voice over to inform the viewer, deepen characterisation and keep things interesting but not too much that it draws attention away from the hilarious and, paradoxically, harrowing plots and sub-plots of the film.

Unsurprisingly, with horrific scenes including the death of neglected baby Dawn and explicit, graphic scenes of intravenous drug use, Trainspotting received a lot of stick upon its release, and continues to today, for its shocking, violent and disturbing content. But while critics will slam Trainspotting and brand it as a ‘pro-drug movie’, on the contrary, many believe that Trainspotting is in fact one of the best anti-drug films ever made as its brutal, frightening and gritty portrayal of what it’s like to be a heroin addict certainly isn’t shown through rose-tinted spectacles. Trainspotting may be gruesome but, due to the subject matter, that’s the way it has to be.

Throughout all the drugs, crime, sex, violence and debauchery, Trainspotting is a raw, unapologetic, generational film with outstanding performances, an iconic colourful vocabulary and cultural resonance that has been imprinted onto Scotland’s national identity and pop culture. Despite what the critics and prudes may say, Trainspotting is definitely an essential film.


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