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The extraordinary depth and breadth of London theatre hit me again this month, as it does periodically. I go to the theatre four or five times a week on average and I never know, from night to night, what treat is in store. My late husband, also a critic, used to swear that people like us, theatregoers who are enthusiastic about sitting in the dark every night with a notebook on our laps, are brain-damaged. Nobody else, he claimed, would deliberately expose themselves to so much psychic pain, albeit that of others, so frequently. And, as for objectivity, how can we possibly carry so much memory and mental baggage into the playhouses without having our judgment at least partly skewed by having seen too much. When even a regular theatregoer says to me about a production of Hamlet, "She was the best Ophelia I've ever seen," I think, but don't say, "How many have you seen? Four? Five? I've probably seen 40."
But every month, when I sit down to write this column, I'm stunned by how much I've seen just in the past 30 days, and how wonderful, for the most part, it all is. Interesting, isn't it, that the cinema presentations of theatrical events don't detract from the live experience. We've learned to be sophisticated about the differences and to understand that, although they're related, they're two completely separate things. Here in London, I can visit the Met in New York in real time, enjoy the opera along with friends over there — indeed I sometimes see people I know in the audience during intermission — all while sitting in the Curzon Cinema in Chelsea, with big red buses chugging past outside. What luxury. And this doesn't in any way lessen the joy of sitting, the next night, in the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden, watching live and listening to the sixth revival of David McVicar's blissful production of Le nozze di Figaro, which has lost not a scrap of its fizz for all that I first saw it in 2008.
Talking of revivals, if you'd asked me whether there should be a revival of Richard Adler and Jerry Ross's 1954 The Pajama Game, I'd have giggled and told you to think again. I would have told you that, although it had a sizzling score replete with songs that have become classics — "Hey, There," "Hernando's Hideaway," "Steam Heat" — the plot, about a factory where the manager and the union organizer fall in love from opposing sides of a labor argument, would simply not fly in our more sophisticated times. And, in fact, I would have been right; or half-right, at least. The story was probably just as silly in 1954, although it won the Best Musical Tony and today's labor relations are conducted on quite a different level, but somehow none of that matters in the face of a star-making performance from American Michael Xavier; a manic and very funny one from Peter Polycarpou, as a time-and-motion-study man; and Stephen Mear's exuberant choreography, which seems to be an extra character in itself. Despite my initial reservations, The Pajama Game, transferred from Chichester, is an unlikely West End hit.
On a much, much smaller scale, the revival of Maltby and Shire's song cycle, Closer Than Ever, directed at tiny Jermyn Street Theatre by Richard Maltby himself, reminded me of why it has always been one of my favorite scores. Four good singers, two men, two women, Graham Bickley, Sophie-Louise Dann, Arvid Larsen and Issy van Randwyck, sing grown-up songs, the stories of people you recognize, of people who could be, and indeed may be, you and me. There is no moon/june/spoon here, but much good music played by Nathan Martin, making a piano with bass obligato sound like an entire orchestra, and wonderful lyrics. I was enchanted by this show when I first saw it in New York in the '80s because the songs appeared to be about me. And, yes, some of the references are a bit dated now, I don't know how many of us still go to find our inner selves in Ashrams anymore, but the human emotions are real and they reach out over the years to hit the spot still. Not to be missed.
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Patricia Hodge |
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Photo by Catherine Ashmore |
American playwright David Henry Hwang is the leading character in Yellow Face, his fascinating study of attitudes towards race in contemporary society, currently playing in The Shed at the National. This is a fine play, although it takes a while to get going and saves its best barbs for the second half of the second half so you're hanging around for a while, trying to work out whether it's a documentary in theatrical terms or a play at all. Let me tell you, it's definitely a play and the small cast, each playing multiple characters, even switching identities and genders from time to time, makes it not only clear and sometimes sad, but also very funny.
Moira Buffini's Handbagged is a gem, a wonderfully funny look at the characters, situations, and relationships of Queen Elizabeth II and Margaret Thatcher. Four actors play the two icons and two men play all the men in their lives and some of the other women too. This is a clever and insightful picture of two unique roles — female monarch and female Prime Minister — and how their being women affected how they played them. Handbagged is about power, and how to use it when you're the first of your species. They were inevitably going to dislike one another, each seeing the other as symbolic of a world they could never enter. What's it like being the first woman Prime Minister? And aren't monarchs usually men? Here's why each had to forge her own path and here's a fine trespass into the corridors, or at least the kitchens, of power.
Privacy by James Graham is the best new play I've seen for many months, a disconcerting and genuinely scary look at what we reveal about ourselves through the multifarious platforms of Facebook, Twitter, our computers, our cellphones, our tablets and all the rest. What can other people find out about us? Just about everything. Snowden's revelations are just an icechip on the iceberg of information. You are encouraged to bring your cellphones and use them during the play. When you do…..
(Ruth Leon is a London and New York City arts writer and critic whose work has been seen in Playbill magazine and other publications.) Check out Playbill.com's London listings. Seek out more of Playbill.com's international coverage, including London correspondent Mark Shenton's daily news reporting from the U.K.