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Natasha Wood - Rolling With Laughter


By Bill Dunlop - Posted on 02 August 2007

4
Venue: 
Pleasance Dome
Company: 
Park Ravine Productions
Running time: 
60mins
Production: 
Natasha Wood and Beverly Sanders (writers)
Performers: 
Natasha Wood

The audience for 'Natasha Wood, Rolling With Laughter' owe a considerable debt to Wood's parents, who clearly equipped her with a large share of her mother's 'Double D for determination' , ensuring that although her incurable genetic disease Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA), confines her to a wheelchair, it can't curtail her obvious appetite for enjoyment and experience.Her one-woman show proves a unique experience, of which the enjoyment seems as much Wood's as the audience's.

From her Nottingham childhood, a twin offspring with her brother Julian (similarly affected), helping her parents with their market trading in ladies underwear, Wood's sheer and simple lust for life shines through her rapid-fire tales of family holidays, battling her way into drama college, falling in love and working for the BBC. Taking us through the ups and downs of these decades of living, Natasha Wood's irrepressible good humour. pluck and quiet grit keep the audience fully engaged throughout the light and shade of this impressively empowering piece of theatre.

Apparently inspired by email diaries home to friends and family, from the United States, where Wood now largely lives and works, 'Rolling With Laughter' covers large parts of her life, and includes the most believable non-appearing dog this reviewer has encountered. Wood plays all the other characters in this piece, including bureaucratic social workers, New York cab drivers, her parents and former husband - a considerable tour de force of characterisation which would make this show worthwhile for these vignettes alone. Wood's inimitable take on those around her enriches their portrayal through her sharp, sparky sense of their underlying humour.

It's hard (and a little unfair) to find fault with 'Rolling With Laughter', and any minor glitches of an opening night will assuredly be ironed out by the time this review is published. For those with an hour to spare during the busy traffic of the Fringe, 'Rolling With Laughter' is unquestionably worth both the time and money.

Time 18.15

Dates August 1-12, 14-16, 17-19, 21-27