HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE SEARCH REVIEWS REVIEW ARCHIVES ADVERTISING AT CURTAINUP FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California New Jersey DC Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for Us |
A CurtainUp London Review
Gethsemane
Gethsemane is maybe a comedy — it certainly has plenty of Hareism wry observations whether it's musing on designer food or the British tendency to equivocate — and is centred on the world of politics, party fund raising and dirty deals. As the last in a trilogy which started with The Permanent Way (factual) Stuff Happens (partially transcribed), Gethsemane is fictional. The brilliant Howard Davies directs and the casting is pitch perfect, drawing on strong performers from other recent National Theatre productions. The allusion to Christ's weeping tears of blood in the Garden of Gethsemane as he decides to fulfil his destiny at the crucifixion is interpreted here as being about deciding to continue on a path which will be painful. Gethsemane is centred on the potential scandal in a Labour Cabinet under Prime Minister Alec Beasley (Anthony Calf) but surrounding his female Home Secretary, Meredith Guest (Tamsin Greig), to do with a cover up concerning drug taking and her daughter Suzette (Jessica Raine). There have also been some historical sleaze allegations to do with Mr Drysdale's (who we never meet) business transactions. Political wheeler dealer and popular music millionaire, Otto Fallon (Stanley Townsend) is these days fundraising for the Labour Party and it is his appearance on the Board of Governors of Suzette's school which leads to articles in the press as to how Suzette was not expelled for taking drugs. What threatens the position of the Home Secretary is not the original scandal per se but the orchestrated cover up for this Teflon coated Prime Minister. Hare draws a fascinating picture of the party machinery from Guest's capable and cool assistant Monique Toussaint (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) who often knows more than the minister so that the minister can say she didn't know, through Mike Drysdale (Daniel Ryan), brilliant civil servant and newly in the employ of Otto, to Anthony Calf's Prime Minister who gives Otto so much suspect leeway in the pursuit of rich donors. The message seems to be that staying in power is more important than what policies can be implemented. Mike Drysdale's wife Lori (Nicola Walker) has dropped out of teaching (as it happens at Suzette's previous school, a state comprehensive) and is working as a busker but is pulled in as someone who can communicate well with Suzette. The Drysdales are both people of honour, out of their depth in this nasty political pond. There is also Geoff Benzine (Adam James) a brilliant Oxford historian who has become a journalist of the sleaziest newspaper, who has slept with near 16 year old Suzette and who in the face of threats to expose his sexual indiscretion to his partner has to decide whether to go ahead and publish. Another Gethsemane? En famille, Meredith and Suzette scream at each other across the generation divide, the mother feeling her daughter is deliberately fouling up her career and the daughter angry at the lack of attention from her mother. A dinner out sees Suzette refusing to eat the sea bass and her mother's fury at the expensive waste of yes, sea bass. Their scenes are tense and expertly played. Meredith in turn asks the Prime Minister why Otto means more to him than the government in this hierarchy of perceived betrayal. The performances are faultless from the confidence of Stanley Townsend's Otto to the detachment of Calf's Prime Minister or Nicola Walker's concerned but adrift ex-teacher worried that this government is involved in two wars. Tamsin Greig's Meredith is ambitious and threatens the PM in the scene where he warns her that he may have to ask for her resignation, "I won't go quietly, Alec" she says. In a phenomenal performance as the impossible teenager, Jessica Raine's Suzette rages with her own mother but finds companionship with Lori Drysdale. The play is full of the cleverly quotable: "Little girls with skirts shorter than their attention span" or in describing Mike's interaction with his minister, "the lettuce is eating the rabbit" or, in a lovely cameo as Otto's assistant, Pip Carter as Frank Pegg, with witty observations of the drinking and dining middle classes, a wine "fruity but not screaming fruit" In between scenes, time release photography gives us the impression of the red streaks of brake lights or the balletic moves of the building cranes in this well designed production with Otto's offices simple and elegant with a single sculpture and a leather chair which one cannot be sure whether it is to sit on or a piece of art to look at. The Prime Minister interviews Meredith in a room with a drum kit, an allusion to Tony Blair's electric guitar habit, and a portable gym leaving her only the gym to sit on. Gethsemane is a cynical but witty look at the lack of idealism in British politics today. It's worth seeing for the ensemble performances and bon mots.
|
|