Review Round-up: Hodge Helms Donmar Dimetos
Share
Review Round-up: Hodge Helms Donmar Dimetos
Date: 2 April 2009

Jonathan Pryce (pictured) made his Donmar Warehouse debut last week in Athol Fugard's rarely-seen 1975 drama Dimetos, directed by Douglas Hodge, who recently hung up his wig and stilettos following an Olivier award-winning turn in La Cage aux Folles.

A departure from Fugard's overtly political plays, Dimetos is a moving story about love, guilt, retribution and faith in a modern world of moral decay. Exhausted with life in the city as a highly skilled engineer, Dimetos (Pryce) escapes to a remote coastal village with his niece and housekeeper in search of a simpler existence. Five years on, a stranger from the metropolis arrives to tempt him back with devastating consequences.

Starring alongside Pryce are Anne Reid, Alex Lanipekun and Holliday Grainger, who makes her professional theatre debut. Design is by Bunny Christie with lighting by Ben Ormerod.

Critical reaction was decidedly mixed, though most tended to agree with their forebears who, in the words of soon-to-be-fomer Evening Standard critic Nicholas de Jongh, were caught by “spasms of incomprehension” when the play first premiered over 30 years ago. But despite some reservations regarding the play's heavily allegorical nature, there was high praise for Pryce's “powerhouse performance” in the title role and at least one out-and-out rave, from the Daily Telegraph's Charles Spencer, who declared: “in his long career, Fugard has written nothing finer or more searching”.


  • Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (three stars) - “A powerhouse performance by Jonathan Pryce just about keeps Athol Fugard’s strange 1975 play afloat … Pryce and his director Douglas Hodge have removed any sense of this being a play about Fugard’s South Africa. Instead, it’s a play about the skill of the artisan, the expressive formulations of hands using materials, clay, rope or pulleys … Pryce moves through the play with a ferocious energy … It’s a wonderful performance in a play that is reluctant to yield its full meaning … A personal play, then, and finally one about the artist’s cannibalisation of his own life and the materials of his profession. And Pryce gives it his very best shot.”

  • Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (three stars) - “Dimetos … caused spasms of incomprehension, when it premiered in London in 1976. Why, it was asked, had Fugard, whose plays famously dealt with people enduring the inhumanities of apartheid, turned his attentions to an impenetrable, pseudo-Greek tragedy about incestuous desire in some remote, nameless back-water? ... Douglas Hodge’s emotionally fraught revival, in which Jonathan Pryce plays Dimetos with a cryptic, brooding intensity, helps provide partial answers … Fugard’s obscure, symbol-laden final scenes, the atmosphere over-clouded by nightmare, mysterious stench and Dimetos’ wild attempts to use his hands to assert his creative power, serve to emphasise how far Fugard’s play is like its hero ploddingly weighed down with symbols and arch poeticisms at the expense of direct engagement with life.”

  • Michael Billington in the Guardian (two stars) - “Fugard's weird play takes us deep into the land of allegory … So what on earth is Fugard driving at? … These characters possess neither topographical roots nor social connections and exist only in some symbolist void. Words also gradually lose any concrete application … Douglas Hodge's production strains every nerve to put some human flesh on these dry dramatic bones. Jonathan Pryce's Dimetos is a suitably anguished figure who gazes with voyeuristic longing at his young niece, and seems eaten up with some inner discontent … Holliday Grainger as his hapless niece and Anne Reid as his long-suffering companion quietly impress, even if Alex Lanipekun pushes a bit hard at the role of Danilo, who is meant to embody the limits of progressive rationalism.”

  • Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph (five stars) - “We think of Athol Fugard as the great playwright of the South African apartheid era … Dimetos is something different, a deeply personal, poetic and elusive tragedy that seems to have been dragged, painfully, perhaps even reluctantly, from the heart and guts of the writer … But great art often concerns the inner life rather than the external world, and this haunting, private play has a mixture of raw honesty, beauty and stage poetry about it which, in Douglas Hodge's outstanding production, mark it out as a neglected modern classic. On the evidence of last night's thrillingly rapt and intense performance I'd venture to suggest that in his long career, Fugard has written nothing finer or more searching … This is a beautifully acted production of great intensity and emotional truth … This is a deep, brave and beautiful play, magnificently performed.”

  • Susannah Clapp in the Observer - “There's a strange trompe l'oeil effect in Dimetos, where an atmospheric production by Douglas Hodge and two terrific performances generate an intensity way beyond Athol Fugard's action or words … Fugard's 1975 drama is actually a torpid affair. As if in reaction to the politically engaged plays for which he is famous, Dimetos is set in a nowhere world of foggy symbols. It begins with a groan and ends with a bad smell … Nothing, you see, is quite what it seems. That smell is also of guilt - for Pryce's charismatic genius is not as pure as he seems: he's retired from the world but peeps at it as a sexual voyeur; that gee-gee could have galloped straight out of DH Lawrence - or Mills & Boon. The result is a play about renunciation that manages to be both over-explicit and unclear.” 
  • - by Theo Bosanquet & Katie Blemler

    Related Content

    Booking Tickets & Show Listings
    La Cage aux Folles Listing Page
    Internal Links
    Donmar Red & Menier Musicals Top 2010 Tonys - 14th Jun 2010 news
    La Cage Posts West End Closing Notices, 2 Jan - 11th Nov 2009 news
    1st Night TV: Barrowman's Back on Song in Cage - 6th Oct 2009 tv
    La Cage Aux Folles starstarstarstar - 6th Oct 2009 reviews
    Photos: John Barrowman Out & About as Zaza - 13th Jul 2009 photos
    Hodge Reprises La Cage Role on Broadway??? - 15th Jun 2009 gossip
    WOS Radio: Allam, Quast & La Cage Cast Outed - 10th Jun 2009 radio
    Photos: McKellen’s 70th Birthday Treat at La Cage - 26th May 2009 photos
    John Barrowman Returns to Stage in La Cage, Sep - 20th May 2009 news
    1st Night TV: La Cage Welcomes Allam & Quast - 14th May 2009 tv
    1st Night Photos: Allam & Quast Join La Cage - 12th May 2009 photos
    Roger Allam & Philip Quast Lead La Cage from May - 11th Mar 2009 news
    Review Round-up: Did Hodge Sparkle in La Cage? - 3rd Nov 2008 roundup



    Write a Comment
    Give us your opinion on this entry
    Comment:
    Name:
    Required, will appear on website
    Email:
    Required, will not appear on website
    Confirm: Please type in
    Please enter this number > SEVENTY-EIGHT < Just the two digits only, without any spaces.

    Free Newsletter

    Subscribe to our free newsletter


    Twitter

    Today's Editor's Picks

    Chariots of Fire
    starstarstarstar
    Designer Miriam Buether has transformed Hampstead Theatre into a compact arena stadium for Edward Ha...

    Jimmy Saville presenting Top of the PopsTop of the Pops receives musical makeover from Thriller team
    Iconic BBC show Top of the Pops will receive a musical theatre makeover later in the year courtesy o...

    Steven BerkoffExclusive: Steven Berkoff On ... The search for Six Actors
    Writer and director Steven Berkoff has written his latest stage play, Six Actors in Search of a Dire...

    Sally Hawkins & Rafe Spall in Constellations. Photo credit: Simon AnnandPayne's Constellations follows Posh & Jumpy at Duke of York's
    The Royal Court has announced that Nick Payne’s Constellations will follow Posh and Jumpy at t...

    Catherine MallyonRSC appoints Southbank's Mallyon as new executive director
    The Royal Shakespeare Company has announced that Catherine Mallyon will succeed Vikki Heywood as exe...
    >> More Editor's Picks
    >> Most Recent Stories
    >> Most Popular Stories

    Follow Us

    Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube

    Featured Video

    © Whatsonstage 1996-2012
    SITE MAP COMPANY INFORMATION

    Tickets
    Buy London Theatre Tickets
    Theatre Ticket & Meal Deals
    Discount London Theatre Tickets and Promotions
    London Theatre Ticket Hotel Breaks

    Content
    Theatre News
    Theatre Reviews
    Interviews & Features
    Theatre Videos
    Opera News & Reviews
    Off-West End News & Reviews
    Regional Theatre News & Reviewsl
    Whatsonstage.com Awards

    Meet the Editorial Team
    Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

    Community
    Discussion board
    Community calendar
    Theatre jobs
    Theatre blogs

    Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
    Join the Club
    Log in
    Current Club benefits
    How to get free theatre tickets

    Group Outings
    What's On Stage Magazine

    Mailing Lists
    Newsletter - weekly theatre news
    Special Offers - discount theatre tickets direct to your inbox

    Information Services
    What's On - national theatre listings database

    London theatre map
    A-Z of London Theatres
    A-Z of London Theatre Shows

    London Theatre Show openings & closings
    FAQ
    Work for us - current vacancies
    Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com
    Find and Book cheap UK Hotels

    Marketing Services:
    Website design
    Email marketing & CRM services

    Content feeds
    Add a press release to Whatsonstage.com

    Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.

    Products
    Whatsonstage.com
    What's On Stage Magazine
    Whatsonstage.com Awards
    Whatsonstage.com Theatre Club
    Testimonials
    Contact us
    Advertise with us

    Terms and Conditions
    Privacy Statement

    Loading...

    Book by Phone:

    Outings & Club: 020 7317 9100