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David Morrissey & Kira Sternbach
David Morrissey & Kira Sternbach
In a Dark Dark House
Venue: Almeida Theatre
Where: West End
Date Reviewed: 28 November 2008
WOS Rating: starstarstar
Average Reader Rating: starstarstar
Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews

As he makes clear in the introduction to the printed text, Neil LaBute’s latest London premiere is both an excavation of his own childhood and a deliberate homage to both Sam Shepard and Ingmar Bergman. Two brothers return to their childhood and the dark secrets of a violent father and an abusive family friend.

Sounds grim? Yet more dramatic chest-beating as a form of self-therapy? Haven’t we just about had enough family reunions this week from T S Eliot and Steppenwolf? Yes to all three questions, but LaBute loads his dice in a fascinating way and Michael Attenborough’s involving production has two remarkable, unstrained performances from David Morrissey and Steven Mackintosh.

The scene is an adaptable greensward, first the grounds of an institution, bordered with firs and rushes, where Mackintosh’s Drew, a married lawyer with a drink and promiscuity problem, is visited by his older brother, Morrissey’s Terry, a mixed up security guard (though we don’t know that yet). It’s Drew’s last chance to come clean. Terry helps him out.

Next, we’re on the thirteenth green at a novelty putting course, where Terry has tracked down the teenage daughter, Jennifer, of the family friend who abused his brother. They strike a bet, play the hole, then play around. American actress Kira Sternbach is a flirtatious Lolita, cleaning out the putting holes in her red hot pants and flapping blouse. A scene of curious friendship and holiday humour darkens to one pregnant with sexual options and revenge opportunities. Anything could happen.

Finally, the grass becomes that of Drew’s back garden where a welcome home party is in full swing and Terry returns with news of Jennifer’s father. This time, he’s the vulnerable one, and that conversation we’ve been avoiding all our lives with our nearest and dearest comes tumbling out. The switch of strength and dependency is brilliantly handled and you suddenly realise that no one is safe from the fears at the bottom of the garden in the tree house. Was there any such thing as an idyllic childhood?

And if so, could that idyll be an unusual one, where abuse is friendship and perversion a pleasure? LaBute makes it hard for us to see things straight, as usual, and Morrissey finds an unexpected softness in his armoury, while Mackintosh seems to have taken childhood with him into the grown-up jungle. An anecdotal trifle assumes a bleak and tragic dimension.

- Michael Coveney

Related Content

Internal Links
Review Round-up: Warm Welcome for Dark House? - 1st Dec 2008 roundup


Reader Reviews


ScoreCommentDate
starstarTerrible self indulgent script, totally unperformable. The two actors have also been spoiled by doing too much telly and have forgotten how to hold an audience. The girl was fantastic. - joesmith17 Jan 09
starstarstarI struggled to keep awake during, what seemed to me, an interminable first act. Steven Mackintosh and David Morrissey did not convince me that they were brothers in any way, shape or form. Undoubtedly the writing didn't help them. The second act perked us all up with a terrific performance by Kira Sternbach who, Lolita like, tries to seduce Morrisey -something about sins of the father being visited, etc must have been the message here? I can only guess at that because it began to slip away again in the final act as the play reached its denouement. David Morrissey is undoubtably a very fine actor and witnessing his ability to display a range of emotions so vividly makes one hope that it will not be too long before he is enticed back to the stage and in something more commensurate with his undoubted talents. The staging was a triumph though for Lez Brotherston who must have bought up the entire contents of the local garden centre! Perhaps we've all had enough of Mr LaBute for a while? - rds17 Jan 09
starCan't understand why this has got such good reviews. Bad script, bad acting. Very disappointed there wasn't an interval so I could make an escape half-way through. - Anon04 Jan 09
starstarstarThe American accents were very distracting and unconvincing. As well, the brothers were not convincing as playing the role of brothers. - Jennifer14 Dec 08
starstarstarI never leave a Neil LaBute play feeling I've wasted an evening, but I never leave feeling satisfied either - and so it proves again here. Great performances, surreal set, a few intersting ideas and some good dialogue.....but a play that doesn't really go anywhere and takes an uninterrupted 110 minutes not to get there. Sam Shepherd did brotherly relationships a lot better in True West. - Gareth James11 Dec 08
starstarstarstarMuch better than i expected. Good cast, good direction and a very interesting play - Manos07 Dec 08
starstarstarNot bad, not great. Everyone tries very hard but the play seems schematic and David Morrissey's American accent is not convincing. - addicted to theatre03 Dec 08




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