Jane Horrocks & Scarlett Johnson
Venue:
Royal Court - Jerwood Theatre Where: West End
Date Reviewed:
28 May 2009 WOS Rating: Average Reader Rating: Reader Reviews: View and add to our user reviews The Wallace Shawn season at the Royal Court has been a triumph. Dominic Cooke ’s programme is further vindicated by his own revival of a play - starring Jane Horrocks and Lorraine Ashbourne , both superb - that in 1985 sealed a fruitful collaboration between this theatre, and its then director Max Stafford-Clark , and Joe Papp’s Public in New York. Aunt Dan is the friend of Lemon’s parents who made a deep impression on her when young. Now Lemon, a sickly spinster addicted to fruit and vegetable juices, welcomes us to the theatre as punters in search of a “special treat”. She is obviously related to Shawn’s own alter ego in the new play, Grasses of a Thousand Colours , in the Theatre Upstairs.
Related in the sense of telling us something in a strange, informal manner, as if entranced by her own memory. The play boils down to a discussion of how the unconventional views of Aunt Dan filtered into Lemon’s life, producing in her a philosophical fascination with Nazism – “at least they were trying to create a certain way of life for themselves” – and a profound scepticism about the cult of compassion in modern manners.
What’s great about Shawn is that he can propose these ideas in the voice of a character you may dislike, yet he touches on a nerve in the liberal conscience without sounding loud or stupid; he’s a stylistic master of dramatic casuistry. The central passages of the two-hour play – mostly comprising long monologues – concern Henry Kissinger, the US Defence Secretary during the Vietnam War, and Aunt Dan’s interest in him.
You don’t have to remember Kissinger to get the point about unpopular, even murderous policies, being the price we happily pay for our own well-being, our own cultural security. And when we dive into Aunt Dan’s private life, in a couple of disturbing, sexually explicit sketch implants, we see private colonialism in grisly action to complement the public.
Horrocks is perfect in this role, combining a confidential bedside manner with childish innocence, and she’s technically brilliant, while Ashbourne’s Dan is far fruitier and more sensual than Linda Hunt ’s sinister little freak in the original. Good cameos, too, from Paul Chahidi as Lemon’s brutishly Anglophile father, Mary Roscoe as her liberally incoherent mother and Scarlett Johnson as a sexy, vengeful lesbian.
- Michael Coveney
Related Content
Reader Reviews
Score Comment Date Gareth James sums it all up perfectly, but I might add it was also interminable, hence, no doubt, why so many patrons decided to up sticks and leave, rather noisily in many cases, throughout the performance. A duff piece to follow some very good ones of late at the RC. I wouldn't have minded so much if it wasn't for the fact the RC had already tried the thing out before, but then I suppose that was 24 years ago! - rds 05 Jun 09 This grabbed my attention quickly, then lost it almost as quickly. In effect, it's an 'illustrated monologue' (illustrated by acted out scenes) where the monologue and the 'illustrations' don't seem to me to relate to one another and where the 'illustrations' are mere voyeuristic sketches that don't really hang together. There's something pretentious and distasteful about it all. The performances, direction and production values are all excellent but, based on this and The Fever, I am wondering why the Royal Court put on this retrospective Wallace Shawn season at all; he seems completely irrelevant and appallingly over-rated to me. Where's the relevant edgy new writing this theatre is famous for? Answer - it's at The Bush and The Tricycle (both with considerable smaller Arts Council grants). Dominic Cooke's Royal Court is proving a huge disappointment. - Gareth James 02 Jun 09
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