Tuesday, 22 November 2016

One Night in Miami ...

by Kemp Powers

seen at the Donmar Warehouse on 17 November 2016

The play, directed by Kwame Kwei-Armah and designed by Robert Jones, features Sope Dirisu as Cassius Clay, David Ajala as Jim Brown, Arinzé Kene as Sam Cooke, Francois Battiste as Malcom X, Dwane Walcott as Kareem and Josh Williams as Jamaal. It takes place in a hotel in Miami on the evening after Cassius Clay won the world heavyweight title from Sonny Liston and on the eve of his announcement that he would henceforth be known as Muhammed Ali.

The hotel room is bland and anonymous, and rendered more austere though needing to accommodate the teetotal and rather prim Malcolm X; it is clearly far from the celebrations associated with the fight and Clay's victory - but as Malcolm points out Clay would not be welcome as a guest in the more upmarket Miami hotels no matter what he had just achieved. 

Monday, 21 November 2016

No Man's Land

by Harold Pinter

seen at Wyndhams Theatre on 16 November 2016

Sean Matthias directs this revival of Pinter's 1975 play with Ian McKellan as Spooner, Patrick Stewart as Hirst, Owen Teale as Briggs and Damien Molony as Foster; the set is designed by Stephen Brimson Lewis.

Hirst has invited Spooner - a shambling down-at-heels writer - back to his house in Hampstead, an eerily grand affair featuring a room with a curved wall of rather cold blue panels, with a well-stocked bar. Hirst, also apparently a writer, seems bemused by Spooner's meandering speeches, though some of his responses are extremely sharp, even if only by way of a look of mock alarm or distaste. Each drinks heavily as Spooner attempts to discover the nature of the household and Hirst gives little away; suddenly two retainers appear, the brutish Briggs and the cocky and almost camp Foster. They might be dangerous for Spooner - they might even have some hold over Hirst: they are blankly watchful when Hirst collapses and crawls out of the room.

Tuesday, 15 November 2016

Blue Heart

by Caryl Churchill

seen at the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond on 14 November 2016

Blue Heart, directed by David Mercatali, consists of two short plays, Heart's Desire and Blue Kettle. Each is daringly experimental, yet each reveals the tensions and deceptions lurking behind ordinary and plausible situations.

In Heart's Desire Brian (Andy de la Tour), his wife Alice (Amelda Brown), his (or her) sister Maisie (Amanda Boxer) and his son Lewis (Alex Beckett) are awaiting the return of his daughter Susy (Mona Goodwin) from Australia. The scene plays out the final few minutes before the door rings to herald Susy's arrival, but disconcertingly the dialogue begins again and again with variations that reveal often wildly divergent outcomes. Sometimes there are outbursts of anger and rage, sometimes not, but the calmer versions are only gradually developed after the outbursts cause a blackout and a return to the beginning, or perhaps to the last point at which civility was apparent. It is a terrific ensemble piece as the three older adults in particular have to repeat themselves meticulously over twenty times. Occasionally, to add further technical difficulty, the familiar parts of the scene are speeded up as if fast-forwarding a tape (the play dates from 1997) - movements are jerky and the dialogue is reduced to odd words.

Monday, 14 November 2016

Travesties

by Tom Stoppard

seen at the Menier Chocolate Factory on 12 November 2016

This revival of Stoppard's coruscating 1974 play inspired by the coincidental presence of James Joyce, Tristan Tzara and Vladimir Ilyich Lenin in Zurich in 1917 is directed by Patrick Marber and features Tom Hollander as Henry Carr, Amy Morgan as his sister Gwendolen, Tim Wallers as his servant Bennett, Peter McDonald as Joyce, Clare Foster as his amanuensis Cecily, Forbes Masson as Lenin, Sarah Quist as his wife Nadya, and Freddie Fox as Tzara.

Joyce really was the business manager of an amateur theatrical group which presented The Importance of Being Earnest; Carr (a member of the British diplomatic staff in Zurich) really did take part in the play and there was a squabble between them about finances. From this situation, together with the fact that Lenin departed from Zurich in late 1917 with the connivance of Germany to make his way to the Russia to instigate the Bolshevik revolution, and the fact that Tristan Tzara, the notorious Dadaist, was also in the city, Stoppard constructed a play in which Carr reminisces about his interactions with all three men - though it is clear that his memories are highly questionable.