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Synopsis Don is outside - he can either knock on the door now or walk away with his memories of rejection. But why would Diana remember their tryst on the back row of the local fleapit anyway? From childhood flirtations to adult deception some things come back to haunt us. Downstairs
In Stephen Sondheim’s musical Into the Woods, one character sings: “Oh, if life were made of moments,/Even now and then a bad one!/But if life were only moments,/Then you’d never know you had one”. She then goes on to urge: “Let the moment go…./Don’t forget it for a moment, though.”
I was hauntingly reminded of these words while watching Forty Winks, Kevin Elyot’s latest play that is now premiering at the Royal Court. The point about theatre, says Charlie, a budding 31-year-old fictional playwright in the play, is that “it can give you what you can’t actually have”; and Elyot, the playwright who created him, has obsessively re-written the same play again and again about seeking to reclaim those lost but defining moments in life that got away and can’t be had again, from My Night with Reg and Mouth to Mouth (also originally premiered at the Court) to The Day I Stood Still (seen at the National).
“If we could only step back….”, says Diana to Don, the boy she once loved at school, when they are reunited for the first time in 14 years in this play. She’s now married to Charlie’s older brother Howard, who was the school prefect who not only stole Don’s girlfriend but also shopped Don to the headmaster for stealing a book – another event that Don has brooded over and resented ever since. Charlie, meanwhile, has also always had an unrequited passion for Don that has stayed with him forever, too.
As these events are pored over in four short, intimate, compressed scenes that play out in just 70 lean minutes and across different time-frame jumps, Elyot has created an intricately patterned drama about the complexities of love and loss. It’s also possibly his most disturbing play yet for reasons it would be unfair to spoil the surprise of.
Katie Mitchell’s deliberately spare but emotionally charged production plays it with a febrile, minutely calibrated tension that exerts a powerful hold throughout. It’s only a pity that Hildegard Bechtler’s impressive design requires lengthy scene changes that threaten to dissipate the tension between each scene. But it is blessed with an amazing ensemble of terrific actors, including Dominic Rowan as Don, Anastasia Hille as Diane, Simon Wilson as her husband Howard and Paul Ready as Howard’s brother Charlie.
At 65 minutes this might be a minature, but it's a minature masterpiece. A fascinating story told in four scenes (three short and one long) which are out of sequence. Despite its length, the characters develop fully and the story unravels intriguingly. The design, staging and performances are faultless. I left the theatre feeling more satisfied than many 3-hour epics. Kevin Elyot confirms himself as one of our great new playrights. - 81.134.81.210)
03 Dec 04
I enjoyed this play, though it did make me worry that Elyot is recycling his theme maybe too obsessively, and running out of changes to ring on it. It's an impeccable production, with very strong acting all round (Rowan, Ready, and Hille are especially fine), and the first two scenes are quite brilliant. After that, though, the play seems to run out of gas, and the ending is obvious and banal. I'd like to see Elyot take the play apart and develop it more fully. But it was certainly a compelling theatrical experience, guided by the always scintillating Katie Mitchell. - 132.162.40.214)
09 Nov 04
For me Forty Winks is definitely one of the plays of the year. It may be brief but it is also rich in allusions, cross-references, and reverberations which stayed with me long after the final curtain. It has been the subject of much discussion since, as it is so much richer in detail than its simple surface suggests. I see the much criticised 'scene changes' as necessary 'gear changes' which bring down a shutter separating one important time-change from the next. Annastasia Hille gives an astounding performance as a woman totally fazed by a face from her past, and Dominic Rowan brings a creepy blandness so appropriate to the ambiguity of his character. Once again Kevin Elyot has brought his special originality to an unusual examination of obsession, sexual desire and how a 'moment' (thank you Mark) can change a life. - 82.43.170.60)
08 Nov 04
'Forty Winks' is strange... and strangely unengaging - and I left feeling I'd failed to grasp what it all meant. Fortunately, it's a short one. The whatsonstage review is spot-on about the set changes, insomuch that the stagehands shift around a lot in a (relatively) short space of time, but still, you're plunged into darkness for too long and you get restless. However, the acting is fine - not 'wooden' - especially Anastasia Hille. - 193.130.127.205)
08 Nov 04
I would give this no stars if it were possible. Absoolutely terrible. The scrpit is utterly banal, predictable and completely uniteresting. The acting is wooden, cliched and yet, is never given a chance to show itself since the director has decide to have the actors with their back to the audience for most of the performance. A waste of time. - 80.225.65.244)
06 Nov 04
This is an absolute damp squip of a play. None of the ideas are developed, the characters are sketchy, the structure about as hopeless as you can get. It manages to be both a lurid potboiler and utterly inconsequential at once, which is some kind of achievement. At £30 for an hour and 5 minutes, it is a real rip-off - especially as 5 of those minutes are taken by scene changes. - 158.94.254.20)
The first theatre opened as The New Chelsea on 16 Apr 1870. Changed name to Belgravia. Re-opened as Royal Court 25 Jan 1871. Demolished in 1887. New theatre opened (current, slightly different site) 24 Sep 1888. Famous for supporting and commissioning new writing. Probably the first UK Theatre to regularly include their URL in advertising. Member of the Society of London Theatre. In 1996 the theatre closed for redevelopment, funded by the National Lottery. The refurbished theatre at Sloane Square re-opened in February 2000 including two theatres the 389 seat Jerwood Theatre Downstairs and the studio style Jerwood Theatre Upstairs.
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