Friday, June 16, 2006

NEVER SURRENDER CENTAUR CENTAUR CENTAUR REVIEW COPIED HERE MORE OR LESS AS IT WAS INTENDED

Which is to say that besides nice write-ups in the Hour and the Mirror, there is one glowing review from French newspaper La Presse which I decided to present here as translated by the ever-literal Babelfish website. Pleasant to read, and its spirit is relatively intact (although it is fun to imagine "The Hand" is not a translation of "the Main" [aka St. Laurent] street but rather a criminal network of evil ninjas).


TO LOSE THE HEAD WITH THE FRINGE FESTIVAL

Sylvie St-Jacques The Press

It is known that the season of the festivals is launched, when the walkers of the downtown area, cream-frozen with the hand, seem all reached of the same deficit of attention. Question of taking again its spirits between two spectacles of Francos, a beer pre-aperitif jug and the agitations of the match Portugal-Angola, some stopovers in Fringe are essential. While on the Hand, the Portuguese exubérance was with the rise, the pros of the lypsinc of the trio Never Surrender proved to the public of Mainline Theater which a parody of Jump of Van Halen was quite as favourable with is delirious as a goal of Pedro Pauleta. Twisting, quétaine, ridiculous, useless, brilliant... The epithets miss to us to summarize Centaur! Centaur! Centaur!, last "part" of these three anglophone puppets which saw too many bad videos clip in their youth. Since it is needed, let us summarize. The action proceeds during the European round of Never Surrender, which achieves its mission of spreading the joy and the taste


for the reading. In Sweden, the valorous trio faces unpleasant Centaur which wants to prevent the population from reading. For these jolly fellows, this absurd history is only pretext to carry out its interpretations in "lypsinc" greater success of Queen or Billy Ocean. Keep besides with the spirit that all the dialogues of Centaur! Centaur! Centaur! are preregistered. Personally, I had still badly with the jaws the following day. You will be warned. At the exit of the spectacle of Never Surrender, the Hand was occupied by enthusiastic supporters of Portugal, which deployed the flags and the blows of horn to mean their happiness.


So there you have it. You'll have bad with the jaws, but it'll mean your happiness. Go see the play.