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Sean Gallagher & Ben Allen star (photo: Helen Warner)
Sean Gallagher & Ben Allen star (photo: Helen Warner)

Canary (tour)

Venue: Liverpool Playhouse
Where: Liverpool
Date Reviewed:

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Everyman/Playhouse 2010 season on sale - 8th Jan 2010 News
Canary preview cancelled - 16th Apr 2010 Features
Cast: Soap Actors and Veteran Wilcox in Canary - 8th Mar 2010 News


Reader Reviews


ScoreCommentDate
starstarstarstarI remember the promise shown by Jonathan Harvey's first major play, Beautiful Thing, 17 years ago at the Bush and have always wondered why he never fulfilled it (though he has written a lot of episodes of Coronation Street!). There have been 7 or 8 OK works, but it has taken until now to truly fulfill that promise in the theatre. SPOILER ALERT - This is the story of a senior policeman who lives a lie until he is outed by his dead son's friend, now a famous TV personality. Not only has he denied his own sexuality, but also his son's death from AIDS. Harvey's real achievement though is to use this story to present us with a surprisingly lucid 50-year gay social history from Mary Whitehouse's Festival of light to the return of unsafe sex today with Whitehouse, Margaret Thatcher and Norman Fowler as characters! It takes a while to get into the non-linear structure, but when you do it becomes a compelling ride. The staging is simple but the 8 actors who play all the roles are superbly versatile (Paula Wilcox makes a convincing Thatcher and Philip Voss an appropriately everagesque Mary Whitehouse!). It reminded me of Angels in America, but less than half the length with as much depth. There's a roundedness to it which means that when it ends you feel a great sense of satisfaction with both the storytelling and the presentation of the issues. A real return to form for Harvey and a very rewarding evening of theatre, but why are there empty seats on a Friday night for work of this quality? - Gareth James29 May 10
starstarDisappointing. Too clunky & preachy: a gay play too far with little new to say. A shame, because Beautiful Thing was a masterpiece. - Job28 May 10
starstarstarstarWow! This is a terific production. The plot is quite difficult to comprehend first time through because of the time swings back and forth from 1981 to 2010. Some of the content is rather heavy handed in pushing the story to the audience.The play however works beautifully in the more intimate scenes of the relationships with the boys. Somewhere in this complex production which covers extensively all aspects of gay liberation is a great play. For me, some of the surrealistic scenes and Mary Whitehouse incidents over-egged the pudding. Half an hour could be cut from the play leaving a more concise drama helping to make some scenes more comprehensible. Accepting it as it is you are treated to a great evening of theatre, amusing, shocking and enlightening. Why carp then? Perhaps because hidden in this show is something greater than on offer here. A bit of cutting and clarity here and there would make a world of difference. The performances are first rate.Philip Trainor, Philip Voss and Paula Wilcox exceptional. I hope that as it runs the author and director keep working on this show and after Hampstead it finds a home at a small venue like the Trafalgar Studios in trhe West End. It deserve to. - Stuart29 Apr 10


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