Tristan & Yseult @ The Electric Company Theatre Company – Review
photo credit: Jon Blea
Written by Patrick Chavis
Tristan & Ysuelt is playing now at the Electric Company Theatre in Fullerton – June 2 -24,2026.
This medieval love story receives an original, rocking, modern update to the Emma Rice & Kneehigh Theatre script, which appeared in Orange County in 2015 at South Coast Repertory. Electric Company boldly stages the play from a moving truck, with live, digital, and even vinyl backing that makes the story feel like you’re watching someone’s personal playlist unfold before your very eyes.
Story:
Herky and Jerky, like the heart, the concept can sometimes overwhelm the text, which has surprising gems.
Whitehands (2025 OCR Best One Person Show Actress, Callie Prendiville Johnson) narrates. Her club of the unloved are dressed in form-fitting jumpsuits (brought to us by 2025 OCR Best Costume Designer, Haven Hanson), which ties in not only the theatre company aesthetic to the show but the theme of the story, as well. Whitehands tells the tragic story of a love triangle between King Mark of Cornwall (2025 OCR Best Musical Actor, Wesley Chavez), Princess Yseult of Ireland (Emily Porr), and a French Knight, Tristan (Gabriel Liron). In this tale full of deceit, magic, and romance.
If you have a very small attention span, this play might be right up your alley because of its relentless pacing, to a point where the lines don’t fully land, particularly in Act 1. However, this is fully remedied in Act 2. This is a product of a show that’s trying to do a lot. The dancing and audience interaction are quite fun, like the call-in response to the audience. Some audiences are more receptive than others. I would say there was a mild, receptive audience on the night I attended. Music is incorporated from three different sources: the live 3-piece band (Mike Manzer, Rob Bethancourt & Justin Juknelis), the vinyl records playing, and the prerecorded music. There’s an intention to the chaos, largely, but it doesn’t always benefit the story.
Acting/Choreography:
What definitely benefited the story in a surprising fashion was a fascinating performance from Bobby Gonzalez as Lady Brangian. This is another perfect example of never judging a book by its cover. Typically, a character like this is portrayed in older plays when a man is dressed as a woman. It’s meant to be played off comically. This is still the case in this play. Brangian is obviously written for comedic relief, but arguably not fully. I’m going to be vague on purpose. I don’t like spoilers. Gonzalez’s monologue, after a pretty crucial scene, is so unexpected, so vulnerable, that it really had me adjust in real time how I see that character in particular and how I see the character as that archetype. It was an extraordinary showing from Gonzalez.
Photo Credit: Dave Smithson
The Love Spotters from the Club of the Unloved dance, sing, and battle throughout the show, providing much-needed action to fill the gaps between the play’s more dramatic moments. Emily Taylor’s choreography is lively and performed well by this crew.
I am not a dialect expert, but to these American ears, Emily Porrs’ Irish accent as Ysuelt was clear and not overemphasized, as can happen. In a script that asks so much of a character and with so little time, I couldn’t imagine it performed better under the circumstances. Wesley Chavez walks the tightrope of playing King Mark with great care. He balanced the character’s great ego and gentle heart.
Final thoughts:
Besides the tendency to get lost in the hoopla, there’s something very moving about this piece. Yes, pun intended!
WOW!! This was a great production and I loved seeing it with my family LOL It was super funny and…