Review of I Theatre’s Spot the Difference: Spotting Differences and Celebrating Commonalities

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Just like the picture puzzles we are all familiar with from our childhood, “Spot the Difference” proved irresistible to its young audience, leaving them spotting the differences between the characters, and, as a result, themselves, all the way to the closing scene.

The plot is a simple one, actually. Scene One opens with two neighbours searching for a new home – the bubbly and vivacious Soo, and the straight-laced and proper Vik. The former settles into a home “all curvy and swervy and topsy-turvy, my home sweet home”; while the latter determinedly moves into his home made of squares and straight lines, because “straight lines guide you upon a straight path!”

Intro

They are opposites in every way – Soo is like the swirly letters in her name, a carefree and loveable character who delights in the spontaneous and sees beauty in a bit of chaos; Vik values angles and straight lines, and finds great satisfaction in order and tidiness.


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Soovik

Put them together and it’s a sure recipe for disaster, especially when you add the gregarious and larger-than-life “Ziggedy” into the equation, who thinks that life is boring when you look at it from only one perspective, and decides to stir up things between the two just for fun.

Ziggedy

The tension builds to a rousing climax where Vik and Soo find that it takes a combination of both circles and squares, straight lines and curves, to defeat the mischievous Ziggedy, and the play ends with a surprising compromise and a home for their newfound friend.

It was indeed the stark contrasts between the characters which made the production so engaging, and in this regard, Director Isabella Chiam has achieved her goal of letting the characters’ personalities take centre-stage. The casting was excellent and gave rise to clear differences between the characters whom all were able to relate to.

The children in the audience were overheard asking one another which they preferred, “Vik or Soo? I like Soo!” It certainly sparked a healthy ongoing debate throughout the length of the play on who they liked more, and I am sure that for the adults, the contrasts between the two proved all too familiar.

Action

There were so many elements that would appeal to a younger audience; the carnivalesque atmosphere with candy-floss coloured costumes which sparked the imagination, the clever use of familiar props like colourful bean bags, exercise balls and boxes, and a stage set with clean visual lines so that the re-arrangement of the various props on it was almost like the altering of various elements of art on canvas in order to tell the story.

Audience engagement was present throughout, from getting the children to identify the straight lines and curves in the characters’ names, to helping Vik and Soo find and catch the elusive Ziggedy. Parents will also appreciate the themes that come through clearly: diversity and acceptance, tolerance and graciousness, forgiveness and compromise, all great material for further discussion.

It is interesting to see how Vik and Soo have different ways of interacting with their environment, and how neither is wrong, but just different. Indeed food for thought for us grown-ups in the audience!Vik Zig

The characters speak in gentle rhymes, and different genres of music are used effectively by Julian Wong to further accentuate differences in personality – sweet, lilting tunes for Soo and rousing classical music for Vik, while Ziggedy grooves to a Reggae beat.

All Three

It was the perfect combination of circles and squares, straight lines and swirly curls, order and mayhem, and comic elements and serious themes which I really appreciated in Brian Seward’s script. “Spot the Difference” was unique in not just highlighting the differences between the various personalities, but in helping us all to see that once the differences seem to converge, we are all really not that different after all. It is a play definitely worth thinking about.

Get More on Spot the Difference

Spot the Difference is part of the >ACE! Festival 2014, and is running from now to 31 May. Get yourSpot the Difference tickets from SISTIC now!

To extend your little day out at Puss in Boots for your children, download and try out the Spot the Difference Activity Sheets!

More on ACE! Festival 2014
Visit www.acefestival.org for more information.
Go behind the scenes of Puss in Boots – Music from the Heart.


 

My Little Day Out Theatre for All Activity BookMy Little Day Out Theatre for All Activity Book (Volume 1)

Get a set of of 65 activity sheets spanning 12 productions in celebration of I Theatre’s 15th anniversary at Little Day Out Shop.

With each purchase of this special Activity Book, Little Day Out will be making a contribution towards I Theatre’s Theatre for All programme. Buy them now!


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Mark & Sue Lim
Mark & Sue Lim are the parents of two energetic boys who keep them on their toes. As parents, they hope their children will grow up to be joyful and secure individuals who make a difference. Mark, formerly a journalist as well as a policymaker in the youth sector, enjoys his work moulding minds in the fields of education and training. Sue is a full-time stay-at-home mum who also works part-time from home. She has worked as an educator and school counsellor. Mark & Sue are the authors of the blog Parenting on Purpose, which chronicles their parenting journey. If you would also like to contribute to Little Day Out, contact us at [email protected].