If I didn't know this play had been around a long time, I'd have thought it had been written with Kenneth Cranham in mind. He totally inhabits the part of Max and makes it his own with an outstanding performance that covers a whole range of emotions. This play is performed with a real intensity and the acting throughout is excellent. I was particularly impressed with Jenny Jules as Ruth who teases and flirts with the men around her. It is a well judged performance in a very fine production of this Pinter classic - Paul Wallis
15 Mar 08
Controversial when it was first staged in the 1960s, Harold Pinter's The Homecoming retains its power to shock, even though at times you follow an initial gasp at the audacity of the dialogue with a laugh at its humour.
Seemingly telling the simple story of an eldest son who returns to his father's house in London after an absence of nine years, during which he has been in America, the play reveals a complex web of relationships and power structures amongst the members of a family which nowadays would be described as dysfunctional. Prior to the arrival of the eldest son, the household has consisted of his father, his two younger brothers and his uncle and his return – and more especially the fact that he has brought his wife, whom none of the others have ever met, with him – first exposes the potential for conflict which exists between them and then prompts a family unity which expresses itself in a startling and disturbing way.
Max, the father (who is superbly played by Kenneth Cranham) carries a heavy stick but not as an aid to walking; rather it is a symbol of the authority he considers he holds over his family and he appears at times to be on the verge of using it like a club. When he is prompted to anger – a not infrequent occurrence – he is very frightening. Nigel Lindsay's Lenny challenges his father's authority openly, showing contempt for him, but also generates a more subtle air of menace which is ultimately explained when we finally learn how he earns his living. The youngest brother Joey (Danny Dyer), a would-be boxer, is apparently the most submissive member of the family but nonetheless plays a significant part in prompting the final denouement. Sam, the uncle, is usually silent about his evident disapproval of some of the family's behaviour for the sake of peace – or self-protection.
When the returning Teddy (Neil Dudgeon) introduces his wife Ruth (played by Jenny Jules with a cool disdain and an apparent sophistication that far exceeds that of her husband's family) into the house she assumes the dominant position, but apparently only by submitting herself to a role in the household which in most eyes would be unacceptable. Her acquiescence may not be genuine – we have to judge for ourselves – but nonetheless our reactions to her remain unclear, for she is willing to abandon her children and she despatches the genially complaisant Teddy (who is not only resigned to but also unsurprised by what has happened) back to America with the calm injunction "don't be a stranger".
This is a brilliantly written play which, having caught your interest with an enigmatic opening, gradually exerts an ever-increasing grip on you, no matter what your reaction to its moral ambiguities. Moreover, it has been made the subject of an outstanding production by director Michael Attenborough and his company. Catch it if you can!
- Janet Polson
12 Mar 08
I broke my 'no more Pinter' New Year resolution when I got a free ticket to the double-bill and wished I hadn't. I broke it again last night because I can't resist anything with Kenneth Cranham in and I'm glad I did. Whatever you think of the play, the real reason to go to this is 6 terrific performances (Not just a gem from Mr C) and direction and design so fine it would make any play seem good! - Gareth James
12 Mar 08
Interesting but no cigar, the play is just too dated, it will probably shock again one day but only appears too contrived! Revelation for me was Danny Dyer's Joey, great understated performance that kept your attention! - KJM
06 Mar 08
Forty years on and it seems very dated now. Which perhaps isn't surprising. What shocked then certainly doesn't have the same impact now. Pinter's style of absurdist writing, preceeded by The Goons and followed by Monty Python, doesn't stand out from the landscape quite as much as it once did, instead it slips rather neatly in. Sad to go from enfant terrible to grumpy old man, but time can be cruel. I never particularly rated him as a playwright. There is a fundamental dishonesty in his writing which seems to me to have been endorsed in recent years by the once reticent great man himself explaining his work processes. He should have taken Beckett's line and explained nothing instead. BUT! I still enjoyed this production, but with one proviso Kenneth Cranham struggled to find his character Max. However, Nigel Lindsay didn't and towered over the rest of the cast as the seemingly psychotic Lenny. With plenty of laughs to lift the mood this talented cast under Michael Attenborough's brisk direction made the two hours of utter nonsence fly by. I'm off to New York next month and have tickets for the production there with Ian McShane as Max - it will be interesting comparing the two. - rds
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