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Cock (Royal Court - Jerwood Theatre, West End)

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starstarstarstarThe Royal Court's Theatre Upstairs has been turned into a bear pit, with seating in the round on three rows, which makes for a voyeuristic and intense experience for both actors and audience. There are no props, just four actors in pairs, a threesome and a foursome who stand and move and talk. The play centres around John, onstage throughout, and his two relationships and sexual confusion. The dialogue sparkles and there is much psychological depth to the characters, though they are occasionally irritating - sitting in the front row, I had to resist the temptation to stand up and shake one and tell him / her to get over it / move on / get real...... I've admired Ben Willshaw on TV but I missed his much talked about Hamlet and haven't since caught up with him on stage (except in one of Katie Mitchell's pretentious pieces at the NT before I gave up on her, which doesn't count!) so this was a real revelation for me. I can't remember the last time I found a performance so captivating or an actor with so much charisma; he's electrifying - now I can't wait to see him again. There's also a fine cameo from Paul Jesson, an actor I've long admired. This is a highly original and enthralling play. - EtwasZuTun18 Dec 09
starstarstarstarstarVERY, VERY, VERY, VERY, VERY, GOOD. - joesmith27 Nov 09
starstarstarstarstarAbsolutely wonderful: the best play about relationships since Closer. It is also one of the best acted pieces of theatre in London at the moment. This quartet simply never hit a false note in James Macdonald's assured production: Ben Whishaw and Paul Jesson are well established and predictably superb, while as the central character's two lovers, Katherine Parkinson and Andrew Scott are even better: two of this country's finest up-and-coming young actors. This is unmissable, and worth queueing to see. - ajh25 Nov 09
starstarstarstarCracking performances from the cast, in particular, Andrew Scott and the lovely Ben Whishaw. The dialogue fizzed and crackled, as our bums got increasingly sore on the IKEA-style 'boxer ring' seating and, as it developed, it was riveting to watch. And yes, no set, no props - and it needed neither. On the negative side, I could have done without the elderly blimp opposite me, who rustled his Nicorette gum packeting during half the performance, blithely unaware of how distracting it was. Where do these idiots come from? - Andrew B24 Nov 09
starstarstarstarstarStunning performances from the three main protagonists M, Andrew Scott, John, Ben Whishaw and W, Katherine Parkinson, all riveting in their own way. If one were to single a performance it has to be the hypnotic Andrew Scott. I've been lucky enough to have seen him before in The Vertical Hour in NYC, Aristocrats at the NT and Roaring Trade at The Soho and in each case he brought something very special to his performances. He has to be careful though otherwise that off-beat eccentricity he portrays may become somewhat clichéd, but for now one can only revel in it. The whole ensemble worked beautifully together within this somewhat implausible plot, but hey, whatever. Imaginatively staged the designer, Miriam Bluether, has created a mini Greek theatre or is it really a cockpit? Somewhat uncomfortable to sit in it still couldn't impede the 1.45mins of James MacDonald's skillful direction. Mike Bartlett shows himself to be a writer to be reckoned with. 10/10 - rds24 Nov 09
starstarstarstarstarFor the first 5 minutes I found the lack of props/set/even miming actions strange but after that the performances from the actors engaged me so much I didn't even notice.John and W's onstage sexual encounter was one of the hottest things I've seen on stage but it was Andrew Scott's M I found I really couldn't look away from. - Sarah24 Nov 09
starstarstarContractions was Mike Bartlett's last play at the Royal Court - June 2008. - EtwasZuTun21 Nov 09
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