Quantcast

Anna Chancellor and Alex Lawther
Anna Chancellor and Alex Lawther

Review Round-up: South Downs & The Browning Version

Date: 25 April 2012

The Chichester transfer of the South Downs and The Browning Version double bill opened at the Harold Pinter theatre last night (25 April 2012) to enthusiastic notices.

South Downs is a specially commissioned companion piece written by David Hare in response to Terence Rattigan's The Browning Version.

Both examine life in boarding public school with Anna Chancellor and Nicholas Farrell featuring in both pieces but the evening is generally acknowledged to belong to 17-year-old newcomer Alex Lawther who plays the central role of Blakemore in  South Downs

Michael Coveney
Whatsonstage.com
★★★★

"The arrival in the West End of David Hare's tremendous new play South Downs on a double-bill with Terence Rattigan's classic The Browning Version from last year's Chichester Festival Theatre season marks a special moment in the history of the school play... Both plays are set in English public schools (Hare went to Lancing College in Sussex, Rattigan to Harrow) and share a brilliant, adaptable brown-panelled design by Tom Scutt that can allow the fluidity of Hare&'s play in contrast to the rigid sitting room of the Crocker-Harris's apartment... In South Downs, talented newcomer Alex Lawther plays the tortured Blakemore with a mixture of confusion and submission that is deeply touching... In all, it's a great evening of British theatre and Hare holds his own with Rattigan, providing lots of good jokes in suggesting that Blakemore's anxiety about the bomb is not unrelated to his unhappiness at school. South Downs is as much a period piece, in its way, as The Browning Version, and fully earns its right to share the billing in the newly christened Harold Pinter."

Fiona Mountford
Evening Standard
★★★★★

"Both these school-set dramas cleverly revolve around unexpected acts of kindness, one seen from the perspective of a pupil and the other from that of a teacher. They show men of all ages emotionally adrift in our great public schools, but tentatively offer shards of hope for uncertain futures. In Hare’s dryly witty South Downs, confidently directed by Jeremy Herrin who himself enjoyed a soaring 2011, the teenage Blakemore (excellently played by newcomer Alex Lawther), socially awkward and poorer than his peers, can’t quite get the hang of fitting in. The prospect of change hovers in the early ‘60s air, but it’'s only Anna Chancellor’s glamorous actress, the mother of a well-meaning older pupil, who seems to comprehend the poor boy’s suffering. Hare perfectly captures the posturing, questioning and awkwardness of adolescence, and we only wish the piece could go on longer. If it did, though, we wouldn’t get to The Browning Version, which would be disastrous as this play packs more truths about the human condition into 70 minutes than most other dramas could manage in a month... Nicholas Farrell’s marvellously controlled but lugubrious delivery shows a meticulous man poignantly aware of his failings as a teacher and a husband ... yet stoically unwilling to declare that he has been more sinned against than sinning. The silences in pAngus Jackson[’s fine production are increasingly freighted with weights of emotion. It’s a joy to welcome these theatrical gems to the capital."

Charles Spencer
Telegraph
★★★★★

"I find myself in a quandary with this review. When Chichester’s production of Terence Rattigan’s masterpiece The Browning Version opened last year in a double-bill with David Hare’s new play, South Downs, also set in an English public school, I gave it a rave review and five stars. Seeing it again on its transfer to the West End, it strikes me as an even greater achievement than it did then. The performances in both pieces seem deeper and more moving, the sense of English decency and reserve even more affecting. But I cannot go higher than five stars, so you will just have to imagine an extra tick in the margin... If South Downs is a very good play, The Browning Version (1948) is an indisputably great one, and I have never seen it better staged than it is here by Angus Jackson... Nicholas Farrell’s performance is extraordinary in its depth of pent-up pain, and when the emotional damn finally cracks, the effect is devastating. What’s equally moving, though, is that Farrell also shows how “the Crock” recovers himself, and somehow finds the strength to go on with a mixture of heroic honesty and dogged courage. There is wonderful support from Anna Chancellor as Millie, his cruel, philandering but not entirely despicable wife, Mark Umbers as her discomfited lover, Liam Morton as the kindly schoolboy and Andrew Woodall as the vile headmaster. If you can sit through this play dry-eyed you must be made of steel."

Dominic Maxwell
The Times
★★★★

"Both can make you laugh and even cry with the way they entertain the idea that pragmatism and playing the game is the key to success while ultimately suggesting that, no, life has to be richer than that. South Downs comes first. It is David Hare’s most buoyant work in years. Although it is highly personal — scholarship boy Blakemore shares some of the playwright’s background — it is also witty, vivid, erudite and always enjoyable as it evokes the hierarchies and priorities of boarding-school boys in 1962. We get a stream of hilarious yet touching lines as Hare traces the way that changing the world once felt both doable and a duty. Alex Lawther, in his first acting role as Blakemore, nails the gently lopsided brilliance of a boy with no idea how to convert his intelligence into influence or happiness. Even his eventual saviour, Anna Chancellor as a glamorous but wise actress, suggests that he has “not a trace” of charm... If, at first, Rattigan seems creaky by comparison, the ideas eventually dig deep in Angus Jackson’s fine production... Nicholas Farrell plays the classics master Crocker-Harris, mocked by the boys, cuckolded by his wife, disrespected by the governors. A terrific performance is superbly supported by Chancellor as his embittered wife, among a fine cast of adult and teenage actors. This pairing makes a hat-trick of West End shows for the Chichester Festival Theatre, which has also brought Sweeney Todd and Singin’ in the Rain to town this year. It’s another inspiring delight."

Related Content

Booking Tickets & Show Listings
The Browning Version Listing Page
Internal Links
South Downs & The Browning Version (West End) starstarstarstar - 25th Apr 2012 reviews
WOS Radio: David Hare & directors at South Downs/Browning Version Q&A - 24th Apr 2012 radio
Live Tweeting: WOS Outing to South Downs/The Browning Version - 23rd Apr 2012 news
20 Questions with ... South Downs' Jonathan Bailey - 19th Apr 2012 interviews



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


Featured Video

Twitter

Featured Editor's Picks

To Kill A Mockingbird
starstarstarstar
Twenty years ago, a young Robert Sean Leonard appeared on the London stage with Alan Alda in a revival of Our Town. Now he’s back, newly renown...

West End Live in actionWest End Live returns to Trafalgar Square next month
West End Live, a weekend of free entertainment from top London shows, will return to Trafalgar Squar...

Robert Sean Leonard. Photo: Dan Wooller1st Night Photos: Robert Sean Leonard leaves House for the Open Air
Timothy Sheader's production of To Kill A Mockingbird opened at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre last ...

Disgraced
starstarstarstar
The timing of this UK premiere of Ayad Akhtar's Disgraced is eerily apposite in light of yesterd...

Tom Hiddleston. Photo: Dan WoollerDonmar stages Nick Payne premiere, Wesker's Roots & Tom Hiddleston in Coriolanus
The Donmar Warehouse has announced its new season, which features the premiere of Nick Payne's new p...

X Factor musical titled I Can't Sing!, opens Palladium March 2014
The forthcoming X Factor musical will be called I Can't Sing! The Musical and will premiere at the L...

Oscar winner: Clint EastwoodClint Eastwood on board to direct Jersey Boys film?
Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood has reportedly been signed up to direct the film version of Jersey B...

Kazeem Tosin Amore. Photo: Jethro ComptonTanzi Libre
starstar
First things first, it's great to see the Southwark Playhouse open again. Set halfway down New...

Michael Coveney: Big Apple bites and Manhattan memories
You should always do new things in familiar cities. Over the past few days in New York, I walked a...

Kara Tointon in Relatively Speaking. Photo: Nobby ClarkPodcast: Kendal & co in Relatively Speaking Q&A
Last night (21 May 2013), 140 Whatsonstage.com theatregoers attended Relatively Speaking at the West...
>> More Editor's Picks
>> Most Recent Stories
>> Most Popular Stories

Follow Us

Facebook Twitter Google Plus YouTube