Michael Coveney
By Michael Coveney
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Moonlight Becomes You & Yawns
Date: 13 April 2011

Moonlight at the Donmar Warehouse last night was attended by Harold Pinter's widow, Lady Antonia Fraser, who repeats in the programme note the distortion she perpetrated in her memoir, Must You Go?

She says that in reviewing the first performance at the Almeida in 1993 I called for "hard-edged political plays" when in fact I merely hankered after the cutting political edge in Pinter's (then) recent much shorter plays. The disjointed reverie of Moonlight was a disappointment.

It still is, though the added layer of poignancy in 1993 prompted by the fact this was a comeback for both Pinter (his previous full-length play had been Betrayal in 1978) and Ian Holm as Andy, has been replaced by another, that of Pinter facing his own mortality.

Holm had been away from the theatre for ten years with stage fright. This Holm-coming - and he was tremendous as the bilious old bed-bound bastard - led directly to his famous King Lear at the National. 

David Bradley is very good, too, like an old knackered horse, evidently consumed with the smell of his own disintegration. But the play is no better than it was, really, though perfectly enjoyable in small doses.

Lady Antonia sailed like a stately galleon into the Donmar, flanked by her sister, Rachel Billington, and Rachel's husband, film-maker Kevin Billington, and supported, metaphorically at least, by Michael Billington (no relation).

Although Bijan Sheibani's production is fairly fluent, I noticed actors tripping over the luminous stage bordering, and the lighting by Jon Clark was a bit hit and miss, too. The phone conversation between Deborah Findlay and her sons was heavily miked for an echo effect that sounded far too rough and ready. And the dead daughter - now unequivocally described as "a ghost" - stood on the table when she went walkabout in the exotic jungle.

John Lahr always thought that Moonlight was Pinter's best play since The Homecoming. Not sure about that. I much prefer No Man's Land, Old Times and Betrayal. But even lesser Pinter is infinitely preferable to the scrappy non-writing you get in a modern British film like Archipelago.

This new movie, written and directed by Joanna Hogg, has been acclaimed as some sort of new British masterpiece of mood and atmosphere among the spoilt middle-classes on a bleak holiday in the Scilly Islands.

There's a lot of moonlight in this, too, but even more moonshine. The Pinteresque family tensions are never clarified, which is a different thing from saying they are understated, or implied, or even hammered home, as they are in Pinter.

Dad has stayed home. Mum is in a state of anxiety. Sister is bad-tempered. Son is going away for a year's voluntary work in Africa, so this is his send-off. There's a nice middle-class girl to cook and clean for them for a fortnight in a rented cottage. Will she sleep with son? Will she heck. They just stare at each other for nearly two hours like sheep with bellyache. 

As they all mooch around and go on a picnic, Hogg shoots the landscape, the wind in  the trees, the distant horizons. But unlike Antonioni, whom she's apeing, she doesn't convert this attempt at cinematic pantheism into any sort of rhythm or expressive beauty. And Tresco is not Sicily. It's boring. The acting is flat and non-existent, the script woeful. There's even an art teacher played by a non-actor, and boy, does that show.

It's good, though, to see Kate Fahy as Mum making a little something out of nothing. And Tom Hiddleston (not to be confused with Tom Huddleston, the giant-like Tottenham footballer) makes you think as you drift away into terminal boredom how ideal a Hamlet he might make. He's tall, graceful, handsome, beautifully poised and spoken: an unfashionable antidote to the hoodie-ness of Rory Kinnear, certainly.

No man is an island,  so perhaps Archipelago is suggesting the opposite, that on a bunch of separate islands, everyone does live in his or her personal cocoon. But by the time I'd worked that out, I'd lost the will to live and Moonlight, honestly, came along as a real tonic.
 
 

- by Michael Coveney


Any opinions expressed above do not represent the view of Whatsonstage.com nor any of its staff or contributors beyond the bylined author.



Related Content

Booking Tickets & Show Listings
Moonlight Listing Page
Other Posts By Michael Coveney
Roll out the banners - 18th Apr 2012 blog
Critics in full cry at empty Cri - 4th May 2012 blog
Hampstead's false economy - 3rd May 2012 blog
Kent flies high with Dutchman - 2nd May 2012 blog
RSC welcome more protests - 27th Apr 2012 blog
Disappearing directors - 24th Apr 2012 blog
Shakespeare's global birthday bash - 23rd Apr 2012 blog
Spinning a yarn, or telling the truth? - 19th Apr 2012 blog
Michael Coveney: Oliviers 2012 Blog - Rice adds class - 16th Apr 2012 blog
More awards & May poles - 13th Apr 2012 blog
 More...
 
Internal Links
Running Round Hidden London - 18th Apr 2011 blog
Review Round-up: Did Pinter's Moonlight Shine? - 13th Apr 2011 roundup
1st Night Photos: Stars Bask in Donmar Moonlight - 13th Apr 2011 photos
Moonlight starstarstar - 13th Apr 2011 reviews
Opening: Donmar Moonlight, Blue Eyes, NT Road - 11th Apr 2011 news
Cast: Top Girls, Moonlight, Electra & War Horse - 17th Mar 2011 news
Casting Announced for Donmar Bee & Moonlight - 19th Nov 2010 news
Cast: Bradley in Moonlight, Get Santa, .45 & Bea - 20th Oct 2010 news
- 1st Jan 1970
Donmar Premieres Bee Musical, Revisits Schiller - 3rd Sep 2010 news



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