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Synopsis Set and written in urban Săo Paulo 1969 it tells the story of Victor, a lowly bank clerk. On the brink of insanity he kidnaps Hugo, a night cleaner separated by class and ethnicity and locks him in a room, forcing them both to confront the realities of their lives; power, money, desperation and sexual desire. Exiled for his involvement in the Brazilian left, the play takes direct inspiration from the playwright’s own experiences of the military dictatorship enforced at the time, in addition to the repression of his own homosexuality, experienced whilst studying to become a priest in his teens.
Written and set in 1969 Sao Paulo, Jose Vincente's The Assault, the first of this Brazilian double-bill, is a two-hander meditating on issues of class divide, repression and office-induced madness, now receiving a long-overdue UK premiere.
Young yet moustachioed bank worker Victor (Steven Farah) is keenly aware of his status as one of Brazil's 'haves', and manifests his guilt in the form of a creepy attempted seduction of his office cleaner Hugo (Jade Willis).
Deeply neurotic, Victor yearns for emotional intimacy (“not one of my companions exist anymore”), a yearning which is compounded by his homosexuality. Hugo is the perfect foil, a calm, mild-mannered working man with enough intelligence to recognise his suitor's condition - clearly one he's seen many times before - and how he might profit from both his white guilt and base urges.
Vincente's characterisation is not always consistent (Hugo's moral compass is sat on metal), and in Victor Esses' production the attempt to mix elements of Portuguese with the English translation acts as an unnecessary distraction; but in an age of recession the play is well-chosen, and one can hardly resist the employment of cliché by saying The Assault was way ahead of its time.
It plays in a double-bill with Rodrigo de Roure's The Last Days of Gilda, which received an outing at the Arcola back in January.
It's set in the kitchen of a woman who casts a spell over the local Rio menfolk with her charms both culinary and carnal; she's the bane of the local Favela wives. Performed by Gaël Le Cornec, this monologue is neatly directed (again by Esses) with tea-towels transforming into chickens and a washing line proving a neat screen.
Although overlong, it's an absorbing piece, performed with great energy and seductiveness by Le Cornec, which highlights the plight of big personalities trapped in lowly lives, and echoes The Assault's themes regarding the loneliness of wealthy men.
Saw "The Assault" last night. Brilliant piece of theatre. Intimate, well-acted. Great lighting. Brilliant acting and directing. What more do you want? If you get a chance go and see it before it ends on Saturday. - JJ
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