Fringe Review: Hold On Let Go ***
Two engaging actors who share bread and memories
“There’s a lot of metaphors in there” said one audience member as they left the theatre. They’re right.
There is much to commend it.
The two actors are genuinely engaging and welcoming.
They hand out home made cordial in the queue, chat and use your answers within the show, and they then bake the most delicious sourdough bread which they share.
It has a musical score by Paul Smith, lead singer of Maximo Park, and a set that offers scope to clamber all over the stage, from floor to ceiling.
Hold On, Let Go looks at memories - big, small, inconsequential - and the role they have in our lives.
Some may be fleeting, others lifelong, but do they all have the same weight? IS it okay to forget some of them?
The play features two friends - Alex is mid 50s, Luca mid 20s - who engage in a very conversational piece about how they share, and preserve memories, interspersed with more of the same from the radio playing in the background.
It felt a bit vague at times, despite the warmth of the cast, and just lacked the emotional impact of the company’s excellent 2017 show Putting The Band Back Together.
Shame, because all the ingredients are there …
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