Theatre review: The Jungle Book, Williamson Park, Lancaster

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Amid lush greenery, on a warm sunny evening here, it doesn’t require too much imagination to believe you’re in the land of The Jungle Book

Even a milk float rolls in to pump authentic animal noises into the sound system and when a radio-controlled crocodile cruises the surface of the lake all is in place for the Dukes’ Theatre’s latest promenade play in Lancaster’s Williamson Park.

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Back in 1995, when they last adapted Rudyard Kipling’s story for outdoor performance, there was a cast of 12 and three musicians. In a sign of the times there’s now just five performers (Lisa Howard, Pushpinder Chani, Jason Patel, Helen Longworth and Purvi Parmar) but to their credit they quick-change costumes and characters at a dizzying pace.

Their speed is matched by writer Andrew Pollard’s adaptation of the story of Mowgli and his animal friends and enemies. In just four 25-minute scenes he distils the essence of the tale, without being able to delve to any great depth.

The cast of Jungle Book in Lancaster’s Williamson Park. Picture: Gabi Dawkins & Jess TurtonThe cast of Jungle Book in Lancaster’s Williamson Park. Picture: Gabi Dawkins & Jess Turton
The cast of Jungle Book in Lancaster’s Williamson Park. Picture: Gabi Dawkins & Jess Turton

Not that you would find many younger members of its audience complaining. They are served a carnival of animal capers and confrontations, much of it bordering on pantomime antics.

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Composer Ziad Jabero delivers a suite of original songs, but you could trade one or two of them for a little more clarity to the characters, and certainly a lot more concentration on their movement – and the audience’s sightlines.

Shepherding 400+ theatregoers around is nevertheless done with the mastery learned in more than 30 years of these always-entertaining performances.

Several thousand more infant imaginations will be fired up here – until August 28.

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