HOME PAGE SITE GUIDE SEARCH REVIEWS FEATURES NEWS Etcetera and Short Term Listings LISTINGS Broadway Off-Broadway NYC Restaurants BOOKS and CDs OTHER PLACES Berkshires London California DC Philadelphia Elsewhere QUOTES On TKTS PLAYWRIGHTS' ALBUMS LETTERS TO EDITOR FILM LINKS MISCELLANEOUS Free Updates Masthead Writing for Us |
A CurtainUp
Review
Losing Louis
By Brian Clover
A single bedroom is the setting for two parallel narratives involving lawyer Louis: in the first one he is shown creating (in more than one sense of the word) the problems his sons are still struggling to deal with fifty years later. This young Louis is quite a guy. He cheerfully impregnates Bella, best friend of his pregnant wife Bobbie, in Bobbie's own bed. Bobbie herself is equally pliant, performing oral sex on Louis rather than dashing off for the medical attention she so urgently needs. Having promised Bella he'll leave Bobbie for her -- while vowing never to leave her! -- Louis then cheats on his mistress with his wife. He then helps Bella marry another man, who is tricked into believing he's the father of her child. What a loveable rogue! Throughout all this, not to mention the deaths and borderline child-abuse, the only emotion Louis expresses is -- No, not guilt, remorse, shame, despair or contrition -- but irritation that the patsy bringing up his son is not a co-religionist. None the less, at his funeral fifty years later everyone remembers Louis with warmth. Their only regret, apart from one son's oedipal equivalent of a bad cold, is that they didn't know him better. This is all presented without obvious irony and the message seems to be an oddly misogynistic: "Well, he made women suffer but that's a small price to pay for two successful sons! (Even if one is a bit grumpy.)" So there is a problem with the tone of Losing Louis: it's an uneasy hybrid of dark family tragedy and light suburban banter. We're never sure if we're in the icy wastes of Strindbergia or cosy sit-com suburbia. It is possible to blend the two genres, but this play doesn't pull it off. The first half is plodding exposition and the alert theatre-goer might enjoy the evening more by turning up for the livelier second act, they would only miss an extensive rear view of Ms Bellingham through a glass door. Mendes da Costa tries to distract us from the fact that he doesn't really understand his own characters. Take out the sex, and saucy gags from the black-humour joke book, and you have a piece of stage-craft that could actually have been written in the 1950's. However Robin Lefevre's direction moves the play on with some competence, and the audience seemed to enjoy it. Steadman and Bellingham are reliably magnificent. They strut and prowl and puncture the stage with their stiletto heels like suburban tigresses. You may consider it worth the visit just to see them (not to mention Liz Ascroft's set and the pert 50's dresses and underwear) but in fact the women are not given too much to do since the writer is obsessed with his menfolk. And since these are frankly rather dull, despite the efforts of an able cast, Losing Louis lumbers to an inconclusive halt rather than a conclusion. The closing scene depicts the men bonding over a long-overdue discussion of sexual minutiae. While this might have been liberating for them I suspect it had the opposite effect on the audience. Losing Louis never achieves the lift-off into the stratosphere of farce it promises. Nor does it bring Louis himself to life. From what we see of him I'm afraid Louis doesn't seem much of a loss.
|
Mendes at the Donmar Our Review Peter Ackroyd's History of London: The Biography London Sketchbook Retold by Tina Packer of Shakespeare & Co. Click image to buy. Our Review 6, 500 Comparative Phrases including 800 Shakespearean Metaphors by CurtainUp's editor. Click image to buy. Go here for details and larger image. |