Deeply pretentious, unmoving and unfunny. David Haid goes OTT, and only Eileen Atkins redeems it in the acting stakes. The two "comedy" set pieces: the rehearsal and the funeral sequences fall flat as a pancake and would shame an am dram production. Really not surprised at all that it's closing early and I fully endorse the WOS review. - Quentin
05 Apr 08
Why does Jonathan Kent, surely one of the finest directors the UK has produced, feel the need to lecture us on the dubious merits of Edward Bond, as in the forward to the program where he says - "It is shameful that, since the early 1990s, his plays have recieved their first productions in France - and are performed all over Europe. In some cases they still remain unperformed here in Britain."? Well maybe Mr Kent it is because he isn't that good? I have always thought the Europeans have a distinctly different mind set when it comes to humour than we in these islands. Certainly the French who made an artist from a man whose basic skill was to fart like a musical instrument. Give a European a farter and they are in seventh heaven. It is Ironic, I know, that a country which gave the world The Goons, Monty Python and The League of Gentlemen does not take readily to the absurd in straight theatre. Perhaps it is our inate mistrusting and suspicious nature or perhaps we just don't find it very funny when there's a message attached? Yes, The Sea had it's moments, David Haig for example did what David Haig does very well - hysteria! Unfortunately, it was just like the performance he gave in The Country Wife at this same theatre just a few weeks ago. Eileen Atkins was suitably imperious and objectionable as the dreadful Mrs Rafi and Marcia Warren, bless, was as dotty as she always is. But so what! If, as Mr Kent implies, we lack the foresight of our European neighbours in not seeing the brilliance of Mr Bond's work then we will, no doubt, come round to him one day, but in the meantime just produce the work, don't lecture us on our lack of vision and let us make our own minds up! Better luck next time? - rds
30 Mar 08
This is thoroughly recommended - especially for outstanding performances from Eileen Atkins, David Haig and Marcia Warren. - BLH
27 Mar 08
This is thoroughly recommended - especially for outstanding performances from Eileen Atkins, David Haig and Marcia Warren. - BLH
27 Mar 08
Given Edward Bonds' reputation as the father of "in yer face" drama, The Sea is a bit of a mystery. It's the sort of play Oscar Wilde might have written if he had been an anarchist. Paul Brown's design is exceptional and the sound and lighting are suitably atmospheric. Not all of the acting is up to the expected standard but the two lead roles are a gift. David Haig shouts and ferments as only he can but Eileen Atkins is wonderful as Lady Bracknell, sorry Mrs. Rafi, a fading grandee who can see that her place in society is waning with the tide. Worth seeing for Dame Eileen's performance but I'm afraid the point of The Sea eluded me. - David Baxter
14 Feb 08
Brilliant new slant on a sadly overlooked play.Great direction, design and most of all acting. What's not funny about the amazing performances of Haig, Atkins and the beautiful Marcia Warren? - Joe smith
07 Feb 08
It was a mediocre production with some brilliant preformances (Atkins, Warren)and a disappointing David Haig - Eve
28 Jan 08
I really want to add my comment as a corrective to the official review. This is a very good production of a very interesting and challenging play. Was Michael Coveney expecting belly laughs? Or what? He has missed the point entirely. There is aplenty of funny stuff if that's what you want but oh, the depths, the metaphor, the entangled imagery and the super performances offer so much more. - Lynette
27 Jan 08
I agreeely entirely with the WOS review. This is a poor revival where scene after scene fails to take off. Apart from the always wonderful Eileen Atkins, the production is not worth seeing. - fred
27 Jan 08
"Singularly Unfunny"? How extraordinary - if I didn't know better, I'd think Mr Coveney had not watched the same fine piece of work I had! Ah well, to each their own! - Adrian St John
25 Jan 08
I've never seen or read any Bond, so I wasn't sure what to expect when I came to the WOS outing to this play on 21 Jan. And if I'm honest, I'm fairly sure I missed a lot of what went on, with so much packed into the dense text. But what I did understand was fabulous, and the presentation flawless. I'm biased, in my eyes Eileen Atkins can do no wrong, and she didn't disappoint me this time with her monstrous, but not entirely inhumane, Mrs Rafi. I wish I'd paid more attention to the speech when she explained why she had no choice but to behave like a dragon, as this was expected of someone in her social position. David Haig was superb; that scene where he was cutting the cloth made me scream with laughter, but I also wanted to cry for his character, as his madness took hold and his livelihood went down the toilet. I suspect a lesser actor would have played that scene purely for laughs, and it is a measure of the calibre of Haig's acting that it was also so moving. I've got to read the text, probably several times, and then I'm definitely going back to get the most out of it. And next time I think I may want to give it five stars! - LDE
25 Jan 08
Like the reviewer below, I had no prior knowledge of this play, other than that Eileen Atkins and David Haig led the cast (which was reason enough for me to attend) I was immediately drawn into this quirky little town, and the characters inhabiting it, rather like an episode of "Cranford" on acid. I found it exceptionally funny, much more so than I expected going in, and I wasn't the only one - on a Saturday matinee, the Haymarket was almost packed to the Gallery and laughter regularly erupted from most corners, David Haig receiving a well-deserved round of applause at his greatest moment. The cast are uniformly excellent (with particular praise deserved for Russell Tovey and David Burke, as well as the two leads) and the design, including the rolling projection of the sea itself, exemplary. I am fairly unfamiliar with Edward Bond's other works, and I am aware this was his only comedy, but on the strength of this production I will be seeking out his plays in the future. A worthy revival, and an interesting, funny and thought-provoking evening at the theatre. The Haymarket Company is to be commended for aiming beyond the popularity stakes. - KJC
24 Jan 08
The production is good, with three terrific scenes (the opening, the rejection of the curtains and the scattering of the ashes) and Eileen Atkins and David Haig give great performances…..but what is the point of the play and is it with reviving? I’m afraid I don’t get it! - Gareth James
21 Jan 08
I went to the Haymarket last night with minimal fore-knowledge about this play and came away having discovered a near-masterpiece, albeit a flawed one. The comedy is hilarious, the issues are thought provoking and the metaphysical ideas are tantalising.
After 2½ hours of entertainment, during which I thought I had the measure of the plays subtext, the very final moment made me sit bolt upright and re-evaluate everything we had just watched. Now I need to see it again - and to examine the playscript carefully. At first it felt like a political companion piece to An Inspector Calls with its end-of-an-era, eve-of-war Edwardian setting, but now I realise that its substance goes far deeper than that. (I think the biggest clue to the play's true theme is the choice of Orpheus and Eurydice for Mrs Rafi's church hall drama night.)
There is so much to reflect upon in the play and so much to relish in the delights of this beautifully gauged production by Jonathan Kent and Paul Brown. The acting is mostly superb, with David Haig, Eileen Atkins and Marcia Warren all outstanding in their comic roles. Only an excessively wordy second half, an uncharacteristically under-characterised performance from David Burke and a frankly inadequate one from the young man playing Willy, prevent my awarding this five stars. - Job
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