Reviews

Five Finger Exercise (The Print Room)

Peter Shaffer’s award-winning play is revived at The Print Room

Peter Shaffer is known, mostly, for his grand epic dramas Amadeus, Equus and The Royal Hunt of the Sun, but he cut his teeth in the tradition of the domestic well-made play of the 1950s, a tradition then most closely enshrined in the works of Rattigan, whose fascination for the inequalities and brutalities of love fuelled his greatest plays. Shaffer's Five Finger Exercise, first performed in 1958, has all the emotional turmoil of The Deep Blue Sea with a liberal dose of Osborne-style anger. It's very much a play of its time.

In the newly converted Coronet cinema we sit at dress circle level with a stage raised up to meet us. Thus, the well-furnished, elegant country house is suggested by black scaffolding and wooden planks, an arrangement which proves surprisingly effective in letting us in on the unhappiness and disappointments that are devouring the Harrington family. We see through the walls to the eavesdropping on the stairs, and the smiling expressions being assumed for the benefit of the young German tutor, Walter, who has come to live with them in this post-war world.

At the centre of the jagged family circle is the matriarch, Louise (Lucy Cohu) – all bust and bustle and well-bred sniping – who has married beneath her. Her husband Stanley (Jason Merrells), is a stolid furniture manufacturer who is unable to understand either his wife or his tormented son; he has the bluster and hurt male pride of a plain man caged in an environment not of his own choosing.

At nineteen, Clive (Tom Morley), has just started life at Cambridge, having been cossetted all his life by his mother as her "Jou-jou" and is full of anguish at his parents' warring with each other as well his own sense of identity. The only light amongst all this shade is embodied by Pamela (Terenia Edwards), who bounces around with all the brash innocence of a fifteen-year-old on her way to a riding lesson. Fifteen-year-olds were clearly much younger in the 1950s than they are now, but you sense that there's a big awakening just around the corner.

Walter, too, (Lorne MacFadyen) has his demons, but in finding himself a new family he holds a mirror up to their true natures. This could be seen as a formulaic device, but the play sidesteps such labelling by the sheer intelligence and psychological insight of the writing. This was Shaffer's first success, and it's easy to see why. There's an even-handedness in the way he treats each character with sympathy, but he doesn't draw back from exposing the raw pain festering under their supposedly comfortable middle-class existence.

Jamie Glover's production is almost note perfect, and the cast are uniformly excellent. If the playacting between brother and sister doesn't entirely convince, there are many telling moments – particularly when Louise is hoping that Walter finds her sexually alluring only for him to dash all her hopes of renewal by asking if she thinks it's possible to "find a new mother". This is wonderfully and tenderly played by Cohu and MacFadyen, and brought gasps from the press night audience.

This is a richly deserved revival. And the venue is a marvel of revival too.

Five Finger Exercise runs at The Print Room until 13 February.