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Imogen Stubbs in Alphabetical Order
Imogen Stubbs in Alphabetical Order

Alphabetical Order (London & tour)

Venue: Hampstead Theatre
Where: Inner London
Date Reviewed:

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Booking Tickets & Show Listings
Alphabetical Order Listing Page
Internal Links
Alphabetical Order starstar - 18th May 2009 reviews
Review Round-up: Order Restored at Hampstead - 24th Apr 2009 roundup


Reader Reviews


ScoreCommentDate
starstarstarstarDuring the first half of the 1980s I worked in national newspapers so a revival of Michael Frayn's play (set in 1975) was of great interest. Although the characterisations were recognisable and Gawn Grainger's dark green jacket was horribly familiar, the first half was no more than lukewarm comedy, notable mainly for Imogen Stubb's homage to the period as she tried to replicate Felicity Kendall's winsome Barbara Good. After the interval the play, and the set, are transformed and Frayn treats the decline of the paper as an allegory for Britain in the 70s. Chloe Newsome's impressively humourless Lesley could be seen as a precursor of a Thatcherite as she attempts to impose order on the chaos (or a Bert Hardy for those who remember his impact on Fleet Street). As someone who shares Lesley's obsession for tidiness and order I found her more sympathetic than probably intended and certainly shared her response to the mess created by her colleagues - my sympathies to the stage crew who have to tidy that up eight times a week. - David Baxter13 May 09
starstarCan’t quite see what all the fuss is about. Saw it tonight and couldn’t really fathom why anyone should think it worthy of revival, and more or less said as much to Christopher Luscombe in the after-show discussion. Being fairly specific in location and despite the fact it deals in human interaction and lack of direction/determination in our lives, it’s not a patch on Abigail’s Party with which it’s pretty contemporaneous, nor in terms of production does it come anywhere near Luscombe’s moving ‘Enjoy’. That may be down to the action and I’m a victim of saw-the-original syndrome and Imogen Stubbs nice as she is doesn’t have the vocal timbre or natural anarchy of Billie Whitelaw, and Chloe Newsome is just too still and scary to give a third dimension to the Barbara Ferris part. Good work though from Jonathan Guy Lewis and interesting casting including Ian Talbot, giving up the day job as artistic director of the Open Air Theatre, to play a bit part. Of course it’s refreshing to hear some Frayn dialogue from the days when he was actually funny and didn’t take himself too seriously (i.e. before the Copenhagen/Democracy watershed). The cast said audience reaction had been surprisingly varied, some nights almost no laughs - rivalling a famous production at the Watermill Newbury where Frayn had told them not a single line attracted a laugh and encouraged him to re-assess Alphabetical Order as a ‘play’ rather than a ‘comedy’. Luscombe’s next project is to be a revival of his production of ‘The Rocky Horror Show’. Hopefully without Christopher Biggins who ‘graced’ its last outing in Blackpool. You read it here first. - JohnnyFox06 May 09
starstarstarSaw this show a couple of days ago and was surprised that it still worked so well. A clever script and excellent direction help to give the play good pace. The performances were great even if Imogen Stubbs' character stretched credibility somewhat. There were plenty of laughs and it was good to see this revival. - Stuart29 Apr 09


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