Member Login | FREE TICKETS GALORE - JOIN THE THEATRE CLUB JUST £30
QUICK LINKS
NEWS  |  GOSSIP  |  REVIEWS  |  REVIEW ROUND-UPS  |  INTERVIEWS  |  FEATURES  |  PHOTOS  |  REGIONS

Look Back in Anger (Bath)
Look Back in Anger (Bath)
Venue: Theatre Royal
Where: Bath
Date Reviewed: 23 August 2006
WOS Rating: starstarstar
Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews

1956 - The Suez debacle and Look Back in Anger. The two events are indelibly intertwined. But one has all but disappeared from the public memory; the other has become iconic. So it’s not surprising that Peter Gill’s production bringing Peter Hall’s 2006 Bath season to a close should have been so eagerly anticipated. Despite all the celebrations surrounding the Royal Court’s 50th anniversary celebrations - and a special evening given over to Osborne - this is the only major production Look Back in Anger will have had this year.

Despite this, and all the legacy baggage it carries, the burning question remains: how does the play stand up? Indeed, does it stand up at all now as any kind of play-for-today? Peter Hall himself has thrown some doubt upon it by stating that Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, the 50th anniversary of which he marked with his own production last year (revived this year), is probably the greater classic.

Gill’s great achievement is to give Look Back a fresh emphasis. While Osborne’s harangues against class and privilege are still relevant for UK plc today, Gill, our greatest social realist director, provides new symbolism for them.

William Dudley’s wonderfully grungy brown, wall-papered garret room sets the scene, framed within a skeleton outline of a larger, Victorian dwelling complete with chimney stack and rampant lion statue. The place wreaks of claustrophobia, and run-down imperial decay within which Richard Coyle’s Jimmy rants and rages at Mary Stockley’s ironing board-chained Alison while Richard Harrington’s third party intimate, Cliff, looks on.

And that is Gill’s brilliance. For this Look Back emerges as not only a cry against a dying empire and passive indifference, but as a piercing enquiry into the damage of witnessing and sexual ambivalence. Gill‘s revival, ironically, looks back to the inheritance of Noel Coward and Design for Living, of emotional possession, and male-female conflict.

If Coyle’s Jimmy holds the floor, it is Harrington’s Cliff, caught in shadowy spotlight against a haunting jazz riff, who captures an atmosphere of aching loss and turmoil. Coyle’s Jimmy carries none of the self-lacerating charisma Michael Sheen brought to the role at the National a few years ago. But he’s not afraid to show his self-pity or misogyny.

Stockley grows in painful self-awareness and Rachael Stirling, sounding more than ever like her mother Diana Rigg, even to speech inflections, plays Helena, the girl friend with a vampish calculation quite at odds with her church-going character; theatrically riveting. Ronald Pickup gives heartfelt support as Alison’s ex-India army, ex-pat father.

But it is Harrington’s night. Watch him and weep.

- Carole Woddis





Write a Review
Give us your opinion on this production, give it a score (1 is low) and a comment
Score:
Comment:
Name:
Required, will appear on website
Email:
Required, will not appear on website
Confirm: Please type in
Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
Q Why join yet another mailing list?
A Because, if you visit the theatre more than once or twice a year, we could save you hundreds of pounds.






Tickets For Tonight


Special Offers

Theatre and Meal Deals

Click here for all meal deals


Friends Email: Your Email: Comment:
© Whatsonstage 1996-2009
SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

Tickets
Buy London Theatre Tickets
Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

Content
Theatre News
Theatre Reviews
Interviews & Features
Theatre Videos
Opera News & Reviews
Off-West End News & Reviews
Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
Whatsonstage.com Awards

Meet the Editorial Team

Community
Discussion board
Community calendar
Theatre jobs
Theatre blogs

Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
Join the Club
Log in
Current Club benefits
How to get free theatre tickets

Group Outings
What's On Stage Magazine

Mailing Lists
Newsletter - weekly theatre news
Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

Information Services
What's On - national theatre listings database

A-Z of London Theatres
A-Z of London Theatre Shows

London Theatre Show openings & closings
FAQ
Work for us - current vacancies

Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Tickets Discounts.

Products
Whatsonstage.com
What's On Stage Magazine
Theatregoers' Choice Awards
Theatre Club

Marketing Services:
Website design
Email marketing & CRM services

Content feeds

Testimonials
Contact us
Advertise with us

Book by Phone:
London Theatre Tickets: 0845 372 1950
For Outings or Club queries: 020 7317 9100