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Andrew Buchan
Andrew Buchan
The Man Who Had All the Luck
Venue: Donmar Warehouse
Where: West End
Date Reviewed: 6 March 2008
WOS Rating: starstarstarstar
Average Reader Rating: starstarstar
Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews

Arthur Miller’s fascinating early play The Man Who Had All the Luck lasted for only four performances on Broadway in 1944 but survives as a key play in the history of American drama, a play of post-War aspiration in a land of dreams and possibility.

Sean Holmes’s riveting and super-charged revival for the Donmar Warehouse is the third in Britain; Iain Glen starred in Paul Unwin’s glowingly picturesque Bristol Old Vic British premiere in 1980 and Michael Grandage presented David Hunt’s production at the end of his Sheffield Crucible tenure in 2001.

The story of David Beeves, a garage hand in a small mid-Western town who succeeds effortlessly as an agriculturalist, shop and quarry owner and mink farmer, has a rambling, novelistic feel to it, as Miller was still wavering between theatre and fiction.

This lends the play an uncertain, dream-like and fragmentary quality that now seems psychologically modern, even experimental. Everything goes David’s way to such an extent he begins to anticipate disaster. Although Miller revised the play’s ending in 1986 – David now committed suicide – the Donmar sticks to the original version.

There are some drastic narrative upheavals in the last two acts, but Holmes’s cast rides them like bronco bucks, especially Michelle Terry who is really outstanding as David’s wife Hester, whose baby nearly precipitates a domestic catastrophe but who pulls back from leaving home to start over again with almost impossible fervour and devotion.

Paul Wills’s impressive design of boards and beams – beautifully lit by Paule Constable – fully conveys the small town atmosphere of various domestic and garage locations. Once Hester’s cantankerous father (Roy Sampson) is fortuitously run over by the wealthy mink farmer (James Hayes), David meets a repair deadline in the garage thanks to the chance arrival of a passing Austrian (Shaun Dingwall) in the middle of the night. How weird is all that?

A magnificent vintage saloon car with a cream chassis and chocolate mudguards flies in as unexpectedly as the latest plot development. While Andrew Buchan’s likeably passive and good-natured David takes everything as it comes, his crusty old Dad (Nigel Cooke) dreams of the day when his second son Amos (Felix Scott) becomes a baseball star.

Here we see signs of Miller the author of All My Sons and Death of a Salesman, and the electricity really starts to flow when a talent scout (Gary Lilburn) drops by to shatter a few dreams and drive old Dad back on the road in search of his job as a ship’s cook.

Mark Lewis Jones as an expansive, drunken neighbour, Aidan Kelly as a bitter war veteran with a secret, and Sandra Voe as sweet old Aunt Belle, flesh out other areas of domestic tension. The playing is altogether urgent and persuasive and bodes well not only for the Donmar run but also for the tour next month to Salford, Liverpool and Truro.

- Michael Coveney


Reader Reviews


ScoreCommentDate
starstarI am not at all surprised to see two and three star ratings here. As usual the Donmar provided us with a great set so it was a big disappointment to discover what had been put into it didn't work. Dodgy accents apart there was some dodgy acting too. Not only did I feel distinctly uncaring towards the characters, but I also could not believe in any of them either. Superficially it had all the ingredients to make it work, but never quite took off - unlike an aerial car in the first act! To be fair I don't think Miller helped either. With uncharacteristically stodgy direction this was, for me, a unique experience at the Donmar - lets hope it stays that way. - rds05 Apr 08
starstarstarstarWhen I first saw this play at the Young Vic almost 20 years ago, I thought it was an interesting curiosity, worth a visit as part of my wish to see all Miller's plays, but not a great play. Well, this production turns that theory on its head. Last night I found much more depth in the play, well developed characters, and dramatic unpredictability; a much more mature work than I remembered and better than anything Miller produced after Broken Glass. Andrew Buchan is an excellent David, well supported in particular by Felix Scott as younger brother Amos, Aidan Kelly's Shory and Michelle Terry, who's Hester grows as the evening progresses. My only gripe is Mark Lewis Jones' accent which is all over the plaxce, but mostly in Swansea! Much more than a collector's item. - Gareth James01 Apr 08
starstarMediocre production of a play best left gathering dust. The direction is plodding and too many of the performances under-powered with a selection of dodgy accents.Must do better! - joesmith30 Mar 08
starstarstarMiller was fascinated by a young man who appeared to have everything but who then committed suicide. This is a good theme but the play never seems to get to grips with it or the notions of fate, destiny, chance, so you emerge from the theatre feeling unsatisfied. The girl's father accuses David of being a hollow man but we see no evidence of this, nor is their much to support the statements that he is losing his mind at the end of the play. It's as if Miller was not sure what point he was making. The production and acting are as beautiful as they always are at the Donmar. - kilburncat25 Mar 08




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