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A CurtainUp London Review
The Playboy of the Western World
Scott Pask’s design is beautiful: a solid looking stone bothy with a huge smoking chimney, fireplace and a bar to serve the customers of this one room drinking den. As the stage revolves we see washing is hung on the outside to dry. The costumes too are attractive, Victorian prints with bustles, finished off with workmen’s boots for men and women alike, other girls going barefoot. Ruth Negga plays Pegeen Mike, the daughter of the innkeeper left in charge when the men of the village go to an all night wake. Kevin Trainor is Shawn Keogh her unattractive, but comic would be fiancé until Christopher or Christy Mahon (Robert Sheehan) stumbles into the house, on the run from presumably having killed his father. Interesting like the notoriety of some celebrity culture today, it is his reputation as the murderer of his father which excites the girls of the community who flock to see him. In particular he attracts the attention of the wily Window Quin (Niamh Cusack) who would love to have him for herself but it is Pegeen Mike who finds mutual attraction with the young man. We are told that in 1907 the actor playing Christy fluffed his line saying he would marry only Pegeen Mike even if offered "a drift of Mayo girls standing in their shifts". This was the reason for Lady Gregory, after attending the first performance, sending a telegram to Yeats saying, "Audience broke up in disorder at the word shift". The actor was meant to say chosen girls not Mayo girls and the residents of Mayo were offended. The play opens, and again after the interval, with folksong, some bearded men in headscarves making up the female chorus singing first a ballad in Gaelic and later in English. After the interval the men stagger back from the wake and we see at the window, reappearing, the figure of Old Mahon (Gary Lydon) looking for his son and assailant. This production is full of pace and the race is staged with the revolve and the onlookers standing outside craning their necks to see who will win. The performances are characterful. I might argue that Niamh Cusack’s canny Widow Quin is a tad too glamorous but so too is Christy with his gangly, long limbs, curly hair and wide open eyes although the actor does his utmost to dumb down for this performance. However the widow’s bride price demands for a ton of dung at Michaelmas shriek expediency and make her less romantic than practical. Niamh Cusack adopts a controlling masculine stance for the widow, leaning backwards and striding across the stage in her heavy boots, with penetrating round dark eyes and the interesting eyebrows of her father, the great Irish actor director Cyril Cusack. I enjoy her performances even more as she reaches middle age. "I’m slow at learning, " says Christy hunched over and bashful and squirming. I love the original stage directions which have him hungrily gnawing at a turnip. You would need to be hungry! The three main performances are admirable, especially Ruth Negga’s intelligent and beautiful Pegeen, who you cannot fail to respect. Somehow in Irish plays the women characters are so much more interesting than the male ones. This is a play to be studied first and seen later, all the more to enjoy this fine production. Links to other CurtainUp reviews of The Playboy of the Western World at the Cottlesoe in 2001 at the Pearl Theater Off-Broadway in 2009 Golden Boy of the Blue Ridge-- musical based on Synge's book- 2009
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