Thursday, February 28, 2008

The Tempest, The Rose Theatre, Kingston

Rating: **/5
Thursday, 28 February 2008.

OK, give them credit for reexamining Shakespeare's The Tempest from an Islamic perspective. Interesting enough. Asian company Tara Arts has brought its radical new production to the Rose Theatre in Kingston, but I'm not sure it ought to have left the rehearsal hall.

Director Jatinder Verma has obviously put a lot of thought into this production, but what she gives us is not a considered result. Instead, she's experimented with a sparse -- underwhelming -- set and dangling ropes that, misused, make up the bulk of the properties. 

Some of the cast, including Robert Mountford as Prospero, shine in parts, but much of the company seems out of the loop, especially Caroline Kilpatrick as the fairy Ariel.

This Tempest, innately a play plagued by ambivalence and rocky patches, needs a unity of vision that it lacks in its current inception. Hopefully as the production tours it will improve, but I wouldn't hold out hope.

The Vortex, The Apollo Theatre, London

Rating: ***/5
Saturday, 23 February 2008.

Noel Coward's breakthrough play, The Vortex, is back in London, this time starring TV's Felicity Kendal in the central role of Florence Lancaster in a fairly by-the-books revival by Peter Hall. Though she hams it up at times, Kendal has a ferocious onstage demeanor and a raspy voice that helps her spit lines with an admirable sharpness.

The play centers around Florence, ever a failure in her adulterous love affairs, and her son Nicky Lancaster, newly addicted to cocaine. The two resent each other throughout, coming at the end of the play to a half-hearted promise of mutual redemption.

Dan Stevens as Nicky and Cressida Trew as Bunty Mainwaring, the object of his affection, bring youth and charm to the production, and Daniel Pirrie is churlishly charming as Tom Veryan, Florence's younger lover.

The first act contains all the nail-biting as we wait for the inevitable; the second act is the picking up of the pieces.

The sets are drab: unobtrusive and merely serviceable.

In the end, I found the production reasonably accomplished considering the triviality of it all. Weighty subjects are tossed around lightly -- one of Coward's biggest gifts. But the resolution, all treacle and no tenacity, is lacking in earnestness -- Coward's fault.

Forgive the actors; the lines are set in stone.

Blasted, Queens Hotel, Leeds

Rating: ***/5
Friday, 22 February 2008.

Stepping into the lobby of the Queens Hotel in Leeds last week, I and the rest of the audience of twelve who'd gathered together for a common purpose felt a strange combination of excitement and fear. We'd been forewarned to expect "scenes of nudity, violence, sexual violence, and defecation." But surely it can't be that extreme. We're here to see a play after all -- even if it is the infamous Blasted by Sarah Kane.

I inquire as to where we're meant to go. There's no signage anywhere, no indication that we're at a theatrical performance. "Room 807," I'm told by the porter on duty. "Just up the elevator, turn left, and then turn left again."

I and my fellow audience members reach the room, expecting to be greeted with detailed instructions. Instead, we drop our coats and bags off haphazardly in one of the suite's two main rooms. A phone rings moments later, and an attendant relays directions to us, supposedly from the hotel concierge. We're to wear a mask resembling a bedsheet, she tells us. And if we experience distress during the performance, we're to raise our hands.

Minutes later, actors burst into the hotel room, launching into Sarah Kane's landmark drama of cruelty. When Blasted, Kane's first play, opened at the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs in January 1995, it caused quite a ripple within the theatre community. Never before had such brutal violence, frank language, sexuality, and militaristic brutality come together to such potent effect. The unofficial movement she started, In-Yer-Face Theatre, would be carried on by Mark Ravenhill, Jez Butterworth, and others after her suicide in February 1999.

But it was Blasted that started it all, and this production, executed by young Leeds production company nineteen;twentynine understands the potency of Kane's drama. Directed by Felix Mortimer and featuring a rotating cast of actors for the week's four performances per day, the tone of the production is spot-on: the naturalistic hotel lighting, the blue glow from the bathroom, the sounds of gunfire rattling away in the background during the play's two devastating final scenes, the use of a flashlight for minimalist lighting later in the proceedings. It's all terribly well done.

The cast that I saw, Martin Wickham as Ian, Steph De Whalley as Cate, and Ash Layton as the Soldier, were all well-suited for their parts. Wickham magnificently captures the cruelty of a man stringing along a not-quite-all-there Cate, ultimately harming her beyond repair. And Ash Layton, displaying an angular grimace that could kill, shakes things up in the play's second and third parts in the role of the soldier. 

It's a clever concept, a site-specific Blasted, the kind of gleeful gimmick frequent theatergoers dream of. It could even be argued that the voyeuristic perspective of eavesdropping on these thoroughly flawed characters within their own environs seems absolutely fitting in showing an audience the full extent of their cruelty. But it's also sadly a result of the translation from stage to suite that someone forgot the elements of magical realism that Kane's included in the text.

This isn't just the tale of two ex-lovers in a hotel suite for the night. It's about the bursting in of modern warfare on private lives, embodied by the soldier's arrival, and the comparison that this draws between Ian's transgressions upon individuals and soldiers' upon humanity. Kane's writing gets a bit heavy-handed at times, but this is theatre intended to shock, and shock it does. Perhaps, however, a level of distance is required for the piece to have its fullest impact. Can we properly process this shift from reality to a more heightened form when we're so close to the actors and the action?

By the end of the play, the audience is plainly in shock. We're left peering with rapt anticipation into the bathroom, where the final moments of the play are unwisely placed outside the vantage points of most of the audience members.

There's obviously not much that could have been done in regards to setting. After all, the room can't be altered for a mere one-week run. But concessions could have been made for the presence of an audience. The removal of one of two out-of-place flatscreen TVs would have created more seating space for those audience members who really needed it. And more sensitivity to the physical inclusion of the piece's spectators would have created a more productive interaction between actor and audience. Along the way, the audience has been fighting for proper perspectives on the action, which uneasily shifts between the suite's two awkwardly divided rooms. Perhaps the hotel setting is ultimately just too cumbersome to contain such an ambitious project.

This is ultimately a production that delivers a mixed bag of results. On one hand, there's something to be said for a play so brutal being played out within feet -- or even inches -- of you. And the experience is certainly an unforgettable one, with acting and environmental elements that are accomplished. The anticlimax of the ending's awkward setting and the racing-back-and-forth nature of the experience, however, got in the way of what would have been more satisfying, if still inherently flawed, production from an enthusiastic company that shows promise for the future of daring regional English theatre.

Artefacts, The Bush Theatre, London

Rating: ****/5
Wednesday, 20 February 2008.

Mike Bartlett is one of England's newest playwriting talents. After the success of last year's My Child at the Royal Court, he's back with a new play at the Gate Theatre, Artefacts

Kelly is your typical London girl, a bit flaky and chronically addicted to her mobile phone. One day, she learns her father is Iraqi. He comes to visit her all of a sudden, bringing with him a strange artefact that will change her life in this transcontinental story that shifts between London and Baghdad. 

Bartlett is brave to tackle subjects he's probably never experienced first hand, and his use of Iraqi folklore and Arabic language within the play are extraordinary, bringing us momentarily closer to the experience of these Iraqi people and at the same time allowing us the necessary sense of estrangement.

Lizzy Watts as chatty Kelly and Peter Polycarpou as his sober father Ibrahim give excellent lead performances. 

The play is presented in the centre of a theatre-in-the-square setting, the space covered in Persian carpets spliced together and covered with glistening rubble. 

One hopes that the play, as it progressed, concluded with a message other than one that's almost apathetic toward our consumer culture, one where Kelly had taken more from this experience, but still it's a play that keeps its audience on its toes and provokes a conversation across cultural borders.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

The Sea, Theatre Royal Haymarket, London

Rating: *****/5
Saturday, 16 February, 2008.

In The Sea I found an unusual pearl of a play. Written by Edward Bond, author of the 1960s Royal Court play Saved that caused so much controversy, The Sea is a tragicomedy richly layered in its writing and enhanced by grand performances.

Set on a coastal town in East Anglia, Mrs. Rafi (a snippy Dame Eileen Atkins) rules the town and its social scene, pitted against Hatch (David Haig) and his cronies, who believe aliens are taking over the town after a minor shipwreck leaves one of the town's sailors dead on the shores. The intrigue that follows, including a romance sparked between Rafi's niece Rose, formerly betrothed to the sailor, and his surviving friend Willy, is awash in mystery and philosophical musing. Interludes with Evens, a hermit living on the shoals, are full of rich dialogue. And David Burke as Evens is spot-on in his drunken earnestness.

It sounds like a weird premise for a play, but the quick pace of things combined with game performances makes things seem almost plausible. Plus, of course, plausibility isn't Bond's foremost aim.

Excellent projected waves keep the scenes hurtling into one another, the shoreline coasting forward and back allowing for smooth transitions between interiors and sparse outdoors scenes. 

Beneath the existential ruin of this little-known 1973 play, there's also a sparkling wit, and this cast does well to bring it out while keeping the seriousness that Bond intended. All in all, a spot-on production recommended to all with a love of serious drama.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Speed-the-Plow, The Old Vic, London

Rating: ****/5
Saturday, 9 February 2008 (in previews).

David Mamet's plays hardly seem a natural fit for the London stage. His characters speak the language of American capitalism -- everything terse and tense, full of acidic sentences spat and interrupted and punctuated with profanity. But what's important to consider when evaluating the place of Mamet on this side of the pond is that maybe his plays don't merely encompass the jargon of American capitalism after all, but rather the universality of greed.

It is ex-pat American film actor and controversial artistic director of the Old Vic Kevin Spacey who has wisely revived Mamet's quick-witted and sharply observant Speed-the-Plow, taking on the role of Charlie Fox opposite fellow American Jeff Goldblum and allowing London audiences a fresh chance to evaluate this hypothesis for themselves.

It was Harold Pinter who originally championed Mamet's work to the National Theatre, where Speed-the-Plow had its London debut in 1989. Indeed Mamet seems to have much in common with Pinter's pared-down style. Speed-the-Plow is representative of drama at its most distilled: three characters, minimal scenery, and overlapping dialogue that cuts like a knife and is perfectly fitting for the wheeling-dealing nature of the film industry. Dripping with 1980s greed, it's a play that investigates the Hollywood studio system past its prime and its obsession with the proverbial bottom line. Bobby Gould, played by Jeff Goldblum, has recently become an upper-level studio exec, when colleague Charlie Fox, played by Spacey, brings him the opportunity of a lifetime -- a major film star willing to cross over from another studio to make a high-profile prison pic.

And it's when Spacey and Goldblum go head-to-head that the play feels most alive. These are two men who've known each other for years, Fox always a few steps behind Gould. All nervous energy, Spacey conveys the raw ambition of his character expertly. As his sits on the office couch, rubbing his hands, tongue waggling, the tension is palpable. And he's matched by lanky Jeff Goldblum, whose manic pacing practically transcends to dance as he puts a face to the images of weaselly studio execs of American film lore.

Where the plot thickens, and also where the production loses its steam, is with the entry of Gould's temporary secretary Karen, played by Laura Michelle Kelly. Karen, on a visit to Gould's house that's part of an office scheme, props up a novel about radiation and the apocalypse by an "Eastern sissy writer" recently submitted to Bobby for what he dubs a "courtesy read." This subsequently causes Gould a mental shake-up as he reexamines his age-old set of methods. It's up to Karen to spawn this shift. She must simultaneously emit the naivety of a fresh-faced secretary and the calculation of a woman with greater ambitions. Kelly manages to fulfill the former but is sorely lacking in the latter category. More hapless victim than vixen, Kelly's apathetic delivery of her portion of Mamet's script causes the play to sag in its middle section.

But things pick up again when Gould and Fox are up to their old tricks in the third and final scene and Karen is once again relegated to a supporting role, making it all the more obvious that male characters are Mamet's forte. Spacey and Goldblum seem to have Mamet in their blood, and their performances are unmissable. It's because of them that this production is undoubtedly deserving of attention. At a slight ninety minutes, any pacing problems therein are minor ones. Still, one wishes casting director Jim Carnahan, a consistent practitioner of celebrity casting, could have found someone with a bit more bite for the role of Karen.

Fast-paced direction from Matthew Warchus keeps the dialogue moving at a breakneck speed nonetheless, and bell-shaped office and bedroom sets from Rob Howell obliquely mimic the shape of the Old Vic auditorium, as if holding a mirror up to the audience. 

And that's exactly what this production does, allow us to see in ourselves the greed that, Mamet projects, is thrusting us collectively closer and closer to the apocalypse, whether it be literal or metaphorical. The title Speed-the-Plow, many may be wondering, comes from a traditional English song extolling the virtues of industry. "Industry produces wealth, God speed the plow" is the full original phrasing, a fittingly cross-cultural source material for a play that speaks to Britons and Americans alike. After all, Spacey and Goldblum have brought a bit of Hollywood to London with crackling lead performances, and, as one of Mamet's forerunners wrote in another capitalistic masterpiece, "attention must be paid."

Absurd Person Singular, The Garrick Theatre, London

Rating: ****/5
Thursday, 7 February 2008.

The holiday season is long gone, but -- lo and behold -- there's still reason to celebrate. Alan Ayckbourn is back in the west end with a revival of Absurd Person Singular, and it's riotous holiday fun.

Though most certainly a comedy, Absurd Person Singular is ultimately something more than that. Sure, there's a laugh a minute. But underneath the laughter is a swift kick in the pants that's sure to keep you in line.

The play focuses on three couples: Jane and Sidney, who are on their way up, Geoffrey and Eva, who are somewhere on the middle of the ladder, and bank manager Ronald and his wife Marion. As we watch them interact in their kitchens on a series of Christmas Eves, we watch the dynamics shift as new money comes into its own.

Jane Horrocks steals the show at times as rubber-gloves-wearing hausfrau Jane, and Lia Williams comes in a close second as suicidal Eva, but the ensemble work is what's truly worth applauding.
 
It's been a while since Ayckbourn has graced the west end, but he has reason to applaud this new production of one of his seminal works. The director -- Alan Strachan -- has taken an extremely sensitive approach, attempting not only to play for laughs but to play for some degree of emotional truth. And it pays off. Haul out your stockings again, because Absurd Person Singular may have to be a last minute stuffer.

The Importance of Being Earnest, The Vaudeville Theatre, London

Rating: ***/5
Thursday, 7 February 2008.

Those expecting a revolutionary new production of The Importance of Being Earnest ought to stop reading now, because it ain't happening. 

Oscar Wilde's comedy of manners, featuring some of the most frequently quoted lines of dialogue in the history of drama, is a piece that's performed perhaps all too frequently on English stages. And there is a list the size of a phonebook of grand dames who've taken time out of their film and TV schedules to tread the boards as Lady Bracknell, so what makes this production a cut above the rest?

Not much.

Penelope Keith, most known for her role on Britcom To the Manor Born, turns in a perfectly decent performance here as Lady Bracknell, subverting the tradition of hamming it up for her big line ("A handbag?") and providing the right comedic center for the ensemble cast.

The play, which has sometimes been seen as an allegory for repressed 19th century sexuality, is played entirely "straight," as it were, its references to "Bunburying" (see the play to find out) left as ambiguous as could be. Those who are looking for subtexts will find them, but director Peter Gill will leave it up to you, thank you very much.

Special mention ought to go to Rebecca Night, who is sweetly subversive as ingenue Cecily Cardew, and to Harry Hadden-Patton, with a perky upturned nose that's perfect for the role of John Worthing -- or is his name really John?

Though Daisy Haggard hams it up as Gwendolen Fairfax and mars a bit of the ensemble dynamic, for the most part the cast serves the play well and the play goes on without a hitch.

I hadn't seen Earnest before, so, to me, this production was worth seeing. A chance to see Wilde on stage -- though frequent enough -- is almost always rewarding at least for its comedy. And this troupe does a fine job with the material they're given. So, if you're not yet tired of Earnest, this one's an earnest bet. But otherwise, browse the boards -- maybe there's another writer waiting in the wings to succeed Wilde in wit and timing. You never know, eh?

The Hour We Knew Nothing Of Each Other, The National Theatre (Lyttelton), London

Rating: ***/5
Wednesday, 6 February 2008.

The Hour We Knew Nothing Of Each Other could hardly be defined as a play. By its very nature, it resists pigeonholes like "play" and "plot" with a staunch, experimental skew that's difficult for many mainstream theatergoers to accept.

Its "playwright," possibly better referred to as a "creator" or "formulator," is none other than Peter Handke. Revolutionizing experimental theatre with his 1966 piece, Offending the Audience, Handke's plays are more commonly critical -- rather than popular -- successes.

The inspiration from The Hour... comes from a specific afternoon of observation in Handke's life. His description of the experience, was for me, a key factor in my deriving a deeper understanding of the piece, and so I quote Handke below:

"The trigger for the play was an afternoon several years ago. I'd spent the entire day on a little square in Muggia near Trieste. I sat on the terrace of a cafe and watched life pass by. I got into a state of real observation, perhaps this was helped along a bit by the wine. Every little thing became significant (without being symbolic). The tiniest procedures seemed significant of the world. After three or four hours, a hearse drew up in front of a house, men entered and came out with a coffin, onlookers assembled and then dispersed, the hearse drove away. After that the hustle and bustle continued -- the milling of tourists, natives and workers. Those who came after this occurrence didn't know what had gone on before. But for me, who had seen it, everything that happened after the incident with the hearse seemed somewhat coloured by it. None of the people milling on the square knew anything of each other -- hence the title. But we, the onlookers see them as sculptures who sculpt each other through what goes on before and after. Only through what comes after does that which has gone on before gain contours; and what went on before sculpts what is to come.

And this quote from Handke serves to accurately describe, essentially, what The Hour... comprises. The sparse setting of the town square by Hildegard Bechtler, effectively lit by Jean Kalman, serves as an intersection point for 450 characters played by 27 actors with no dialogue. Some are everyday people; others are characters from myth or the past. And each is shaped by what has come before and shapes what is yet to come. 

Does all of this seem a bit artsy fartsy? Well, it is. And it's not a theatrical exercise that will appeal to all. Because of the quick, witty direction from James Macdonald, I came out of the experience having felt I'd grasped this spirit of connection and intersection that Handke set forth, but the piece's ending left me ultimately dissatisfied. 

If you're up for a night of avant-garde theatre in London and willing to look outside the box, try out The Hour We Knew Nothing Of Each Other and decide for yourself whether it's a load of bunk or the embodiment of a worthwhile musing on humanity.


The Homecoming, The Almeida Theatre, London


Danny Dyer, Nigel Lindsay, Kenneth Cranham, and Anthony O'Donnell in the Almeida production of Harold Pinter's The Homecoming.

Rating: ***/5
Friday, 1 February 2008.

Okay, I admit it. I don't know very much Pinter. So it's no wonder that I went into the production of one of Harold Pinter's most noted works, The Homecoming, with a relatively blank slate. 

I knew there was a production on in New York at the same time, starring Raul Esparza and Eve Best, but not much more than that.

So faced with this naturalistic production of a play about as far from naturalism in its dialogue as it's possible for a domestic drama to be, needless to say, I was confused. 

Set in North London, Teddy brings his new wife, Ruth, back to meet his family, including his father Max, played with vigor by Kenneth Cranham. They meet her with mixed and varied reactions. Ultimately, the thing's supposed to work out to some sort of daughter/mother/whore allegory, by which the character of Ruth is supposed to represent and reflect upon different manifestations of womanhood throughout humanity.

Maybe it was just me, but I didn't really get it.

I was out to drinks when a woman who did her PhD on Pinter and tried to explain his methods to me. "It's not meant to be analyzed," she said. "Just watch it, and make whatever of it you can at the time." 

I couldn't make much of it at the time; maybe others will. Fascinating? Yes. Satisfying? No. See for yourself.

Othello, The Donmar Warehouse, London

Ewan McGregor (standing) and Chiwetel Ejiofor in the Donmar Warehouse's astounding production of Othello.

Rating: *****/5
Tuesday, 29 January 2008.

Let's face it. Everyone wants to see Ewan McGregor. Some of them will pay hundreds -- even thousands -- of pounds sterling to get through the door. What everyone wants to know is simple. Is it worth it?

Yes. Resoundingly yes.

The plays is one of Shakespeare's finest. It has a simple plot and fewer characters than many of the Bard's more elaborate works. The plot is basically this: Iago, being the megalomaniac that he is, turns the Moor Othello against his wife, Desdemona.

Traditionally Iago is the character receiving the most attention in the play. His maniacal schemes are what keep the audience guessing throughout. And McGregor is certainly fine in the role, showing us his wicked plotting primarily through the twinkle in his eye. 

But it's Chiwetel Ejiofor as Othello that towers over the rest of a very fine cast in giving a most memorable performance. Speaking in a grand African timbre and taking fine physical command of the stage, in the furrow of his brow we read the millions of sorrows he's gathered throughout his life like strung pearls to be retold to his love.

As Desdemona, Kelly Reilly disappoints. She's more wispy than one would want, and outmatched by Michelle Fairely in the role of her servant, Emilia, whose raspy voice commands in a way that Reilly can't. In a fine scene they have together, the intimate stage of the Donmar Warehouse is put to its most effective use. As Emilia disrobes Desdemona, preparing her for bed, Desdemona sings her premonitory willow song to haunting effect.

The production design overall is well done, by Donmar regular Christopher Oram. He's wisely turned the Donmar into a "space" rather than choosing to evoke too much sense of specific place. The wet stones that make up the walls and floor of the playing space dry up throughout the production, leaving us ever more transfixed. And brilliant lighting design pierces at all the right moments, particularly effective shining through decorative windows.

It's nice to see a production where the results match a star's promise. Sure, audiences will go wanting rapturously to catch a glimpse of Ewan McGregor, but, luckily, they'll be met with a production that has a galaxy, rather than just a star, to offer.