Said Alice

'Said Alice' introduces a cast of surreal and sinister characters parodied from Lewis Carroll’s classic novel

★★★
archive review (edinburgh) | Read in About 2 minutes
33330 large
100487 original
Published 09 Aug 2008

Not for the first time have parallels been drawn between the fantasy world created by Lewis Carroll in Alice and Wonderland and the hallucinatory effects of mind-altering drugs. And it is down this warren that Z Theatre company's production goes.

Said Alice is a lively production which uses some creative techniques to adapt—or rather pervert—the classic children’s book. Alice is a 17-year-old who is offered a mysterious pill by her friend, Cat, on a night out. After taking it, she is compelled to chase the elusive "white rabbit" through the course of a night which involves binge drinking, gambling, and a one-night-stand. Along the way, she meets a cast of surreal and sinister parodies from Carroll’s novel, including a wild-eyed tramp called Hatter, a Dormouse offering space-cakes, and a transvestite Queen of Hearts.

While the characters in Said Alice are fairly amusing distortions of their namesakes from the fairytale, a few of the scenes appear to simply consist of people jumping around aimlessly on stage. The only genuinely original element of the show is in its clever use of a black and white film to show the reality of Alice’s night out in stark contrast to her experiences in the fantasy realm.

Said Alice is not ground-breaking, but it is entertaining and well-acted. The Fringe is, after all, about giving new actors and small theatre groups an opportunity to experiment with their ideas – and this is exactly what Said Alice offers.