Use the form below to search for tickets on your desired date. Dates from
Synopsis Bent follows one man's journey from the hedonistic cabarets and clubs of 1930's Berlin to the inhuman excesses of an oppressive regime. When Max falls in love with a fellow prisoner he discovers the true meaning of love and self-acceptance against impossible odds. Studio 1
Olivier and Tony Award-winning Scotsman Alan Cumming, who has been based in the US since accompanying Sam Mendes’ 1998 production of Cabaret to Broadway, returned to the West End to star in Daniel Kramer’s revival of Bent, which opened last night (5 October 2006, previews from 22 September) at the Trafalgar Studios (See Today’s 1st Night Photos).
In Nazi Germany, homosexual Max (Cumming) is sent to Dachau, his lover killed en route. At the concentration camp, he denies being gay, preferring to wear the yellow star of the Jews, but when he falls in love with fellow prisoner Horst (Chris New), he must make a stand.
Written by Martin Sherman, Bent was first seen in London in 1979 at the Royal Court, when the role of Max was created by Ian McKellen, who also appeared in the 1990 National Theatre revival. The new stage production is designed by Mark Bouman and features a new song by the Pet Shop Boys’ Chris Lowe. Cumming and New are joined in the cast by Kevin Trainor, Benjamin Wilkin, Richard Bremmer, Hugh Ross, Ricky Champ, Charles Mayer, Laurence Spellman and Matthew Spencer.
Overnight critics had mixed opinions about Sherman and Kramer’s bold approach to sensitive issues, which many felt undermined the emotional power of the piece, while Alan Cumming’s lead performance did not totally win them over. But all were full of praise for recent RADA graduate Chris New, making his West End debut as Horst. In smaller parts, Hugh Ross, Kevin Trainor and Richard Bremmer also received plaudits.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (3 stars) – “On the one hand, Bent is as terrifyingly banal as it is terrifyingly sentimental. On the other, its dramatic crudity and flagrancy is exactly the point…. In the Berlin scenes – where Richard Bremmer plays a hauntingly cadaverous transvestite singer at his dressing table - Cumming is full of devilry, reclining lasciviously on the sofa while trying to remember who (and how many) came back to the flat he shares with Kevin Trainor’s devoted Rudy…. Things become tenser in what remains my favourite scene from the play, the park bench encounter with ‘Uncle’ Freddie (beautifully done by Hugh Ross)…. Then things become ugly as the Nazi thugs take over and, on the train to Dachau, Max is compelled to complete the murder of Rudy by hitting him with a truncheon…. Just as we have entered a place of no return, the second act friendship of Max and Horst, lugging their stones in the bleak compound, restores our faith in humanity.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (3 stars) - “Daniel Kramer's revival has an aura of flamboyant excitability at odds with a movingly restrained play…. precisely because the content is so explosive, the play demands a certain restraint. In the first half, however, we get a heightened theatricality…. a Nazi stormtrooper, after the invasion of Max's flat, exits with a gratuitous wave that would not be out of place in The Producers…. Fortunately, the atmosphere calms down in the second half when we see Max and Horst engaged in the futile activity of hauling a pile of rocks from one side of the stage to the other. In one extraordinary scene, we see them achieving mutual orgasm through the power of words alone… a moving demonstration of the power of passion to transcend circumstance…. Like the production, Alan Cumming's Max also improves steadily as it goes along…. He is also well-partnered by Chris New who lends Horst a prickly defensiveness that slowly turns to love. Richard Bremmer as a drag-queen and Hugh Ross as a camouflaged homosexual are outstanding while the Nazi stormtroopers are uniformly awful.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (3 stars) – “Martin Sherman's historic Bent, which fixes its unflinching gaze upon two gay men imprisoned in a Nazi death camp, left me scarcely less horrified, disturbed and revolted by its violence and cruelty than at its 1979 Royal Court premiere. Yet scenes of brutality, in which gay men are tortured, beaten to death and shot, scrupulously avoid the gruesome sensationalism of Jacobean playwrights or Tarantino's cinematic blood-baths. Daniel Kramer's under-powered production even misguidedly dons the velvet glove of restraint when the play turns nastiest, while Alan Cumming conspicuously fails to summon up serious emotion…. It is the play's cruel irony that Max, for whom love has mattered little, discovers the real thing in the death-camp…. Cumming's light, stiff, shuttered performance cracks no hearts even at the poignant finale, but Chris New, fresh to the London stage, all haggard and harrowed, shattering in fear and anxiety, steals the show.”
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail (4 stars) – “Bent is a forthright, dignified play about the persecution of homosexuals in Hitler’s Germany. When it premiered in 1979, it must have had shocking novelty value. Today, its bold depiction of gay love may not be quite so surprising. This production has flair. The acting is intense yet often good-humoured. There are ingenious touches…. But does Bent touch the heart? For me, the answer was ‘not quite’. I feel bad saying so…. But my heterosexual heart, though brushed, was not entirely stirred by Bent’s love theme…. Cumming and New do fine work here. Bent, despite my quibbles, is a technically accomplished, artistically ambitious evening. It makes you wince. But it did not make me cry.”
Sheridan Morley in the Daily Express - “Two years after being carved from the old Whitehall Theatre, the Trafalgar Studios has its first blockbuster hit…. At times the most homosexually explicit and violent show in town… it also happens to be a brilliant play about persecution under the Nazis…. Alan Cumming (gives) a breathtaking and doubtless soon-to-be award-winning performance…. Bent is about the importance and overriding power of friendship, even in the most unthinkable circumstances. In a production of intense power by director Daniel Kramer, it is also brilliantly played.”
I have quite a flexible attitude towards Bent, Martin Sherman’s stark 1979 narrative about the Nazi persecution of homosexuals in Berlin and, after the purge of the Brownshirts in 1934, in Dachau concentration camp. On the one hand, it's as terrifyingly banal as it is terrifyingly sentimental. On the other, its dramatic crudity and flagrancy is exactly the point.
Daniel Kramer’s revival does not pull its punches in this respect. The play is presented with a defiant flourish, smoke and flame bursting through fissures with a Wagnerian soundtrack suggesting the apocalypse, and Alan Cumming’s Max slithering to his destiny with a devious stickability that just about stops short of breaking out in a chorus of Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive”.
The role of Max was created by Ian McKellen, first with Tom Bell (whose death was reported in a curtain speech by the author) as Horst, his lover and nemesis in Dachau, and later, in the 1990 National Theatre production, with Michael Cashman. On that second occasion, public attitudes towards homosexuality, complicated by some apparently hostile Government legislation, had taken a turn for the worse, so the necessity of the revival outweighed all misgivings about its mawkishness.
Now, with the “new look” Conservative party making statements about respecting marriages between all gender types, the crusading elements give way once more to the theatrical. Alan Cumming, most mercurial (and funniest) of Hamlets before he gave full rein to his sleazier side as an unforgettable, bare-buttocked Emcee in Sam Mendes’ Cabaret revival, returns from New York to update us on his maturing acting ability.
In the Berlin scenes – where Richard Bremmer plays a hauntingly cadaverous transvestite singer at his dressing table - Cumming is full of devilry, reclining lasciviously on the sofa while trying to remember who (and how many) came back to the flat he shares with Kevin Trainor’s devoted Rudy. Gosh, I thought, Cumming’s got a hairy bottom, until I realised those were big dark bruises he was flaunting like battle scars.
Things become tenser in what remains my favourite scene from the play, the park bench encounter with “Uncle” Freddie (beautifully done by Hugh Ross) who arranges alibis and travel documents while casting a furtive eye in the direction of an off-stage policeman. Then things become ugly as the Nazi thugs take over and, on the train to Dachau, Max is compelled to complete the murder of Rudy by hitting him with a truncheon. That obscenity is compounded by his confession that he had sex with a dead teenaged girl to “prove” he isn’t gay.
What are we supposed to feel? That circumstances justify Max’s actions? That we would do the same in his place? Aesthetic revulsion becomes confused with intellectual sympathy, and just as we have entered a place of no return, the second act friendship of Max and Horst, lugging their stones in the bleak compound, restores our faith in humanity.
Tom Bell’s Horst was an eloquently understated foil to McKellen’s obsessive survivor, the man who exchanges a pink triangle for a yellow star because Jews are given meat in their thin gruel. Twenty five-year-old Chris New is a busier Horst, doing much more “acting” to convey his decency. But the scene where the two men have telephone sex without the telephone, simply standing next to each other on a bare stage, leaps at you with undiminished fervour and power.
I was deeply affected --Alan Cummings was brillant. - 81.171.142.181)
06 Nov 06
Some of the reviews nearly put me off seeing this revival. Christopher Hart in The Sunday Times was particularly vitriolic and now I've seen the show I would say deeply offensive. I didn't see the first production in 1980, but I did see the NT revival in 1990. It seems to me that Daniel Kramer's interpretation gives the play a new relevance in 2006 without in any way detracting from the seriousness of its subject matter. It makes you realise how far we've come and how far we haven't come. There is real theatricality in the staging and the performances are superb. In the history of 20th century drama, this is an important play and you should not be put off by narrow-minded critics. It's great that we have work like this in the Wedst End (thanks again to Sonia Friedman) so go and see it and make up your own mind I'm really glad I did. - 81.129.166.108)
24 Oct 06
I had not attended a Whatsonstage event before but myself and my friend went to Bent with them and had a brilliant night. Everything was well organised and all the staff were friendly and helpful. Bent absolutly blew me and my friend away. The performances were amazing. Bent is an emotional, moving and thought provoking play. Alan Cumming and Chris New both deliver exceptional performances, as do the rest of the Bent boys! Top play, top cast, top director, top night!
Will definatly be going back. - 81.138.6.86)
17 Oct 06
I attended the WOS outing - my first time, and I have to say I was very impressed with the whole experience. The theatre was packed out, the WOS team helpful and friendly, and the added bonus of having the opportunity to be part of a Q and A session with Alan Cumming, Chris New, Martin Sherman and Daniel Kramer made this the best £25 I have spent in a long time.
I have read the earlier reviews and agree that the "Laughing Nazi's" don't work, and that the in the earlier scenes the actors seemed to be auditioning for a Carry On film. The scenes in their apartment came across as very hammy and over acted, rather than set the scene for the later brutal scenes.
However, at the Q and A session Kramer was asked why he had decided to portray the Storm troopers this way. He explained that he intended them to be a modern parallel to how British Troops are behaving in Iraq and Afghanistan, and how the US treats the detainees at Guantanomo Bay, a situation very close to his heart. The Storm troopers have worked with a Military Advisor who has first hand experience of what goes on, the torture and beatings that the detainees endure, and Kramer wanted this in his production of Bent.
I commend his passion for these despicable events, and agree that the situation in Iraq, Guantanomo Bay and Afghanistan is barbaric and has to stop; however I feel that events of The Holocaust don’t need updating. The message “Bent” gives is horrific enough in its own right. Millions of Jewish People, Homosexuals, and Gypsies etc were slaughtered by the Nazi’s. There are and will be plays, films etc that will speak of the current atrocities, without using “Bent” as a voice.
I am so glad I stayed for the Q and A session; otherwise I would have gone home completely confused as to why The Storm troopers were carrying on like the Droogs in A Clockwork Orange!
The second half was beautifully acted and directed, the relationship between Max and Horst more than made up for an uncomfortable and confusing first half.
To me going to the theatre is not just about the play and the actors on stage, it is about the whole experience, discussing the play, the seats, the bar, the loo’s, the marketing and the staff. It’s not a cheap interest, it is one I am passionate about, and I have to say if you get the chance to go to a WOS outing, go for it. I’ll be back!
- 62.252.64.30)
14 Oct 06
I disagree that Sherman's original text deserves "classic" status, but the undeniable importance of revisiting its themes in troubled and less troubled times deserves constant revival.
Here, it seems, we have two plays: a "Whoops Hitler There Go My Trousers" sub-Cabaret style farce in which Cumming is gratingly hideous, and few sympathies are drawn to him. The homoerotically presented stormtroopers further serve to unbalance the piece and make it increasingly difficult to side with the frothy characters of Max and Rudy. Great counterpoint cameos of the cadaverous drag queen and closet uncle Freddy are welcome punctuation marks between Cumming's one-note screaming.
Fast forward to the second part where the brutality sports fewer cock rings and less lip gloss, and Cumming has to work even harder to match the searing acting of Chris New in the role of Horst but just about pulls it off by the end.
Summary: too much Camp, not enough Concentration.
- 195.93.21.104)
14 Oct 06
Thank you so much WOS and all the Bent Boys for probably the best play and Q&A I have ever been to! (WOS outing 12/10/06) Not a dry eye in our party, the play left us all deep in thought and emotionally drained. 10 stars! Awesome, amazing performances by all. Just go and see it for yourself. Julia. - 194.203.103.2)
13 Oct 06
I thoroughly enjoyed this play. It is thought provoking and provocative. However I did find the naked stormtrooper to be unnecessary. - 82.110.212.210)
10 Oct 06
Absolutely devastating: Daniel Kramer's dynamic, inventive revival of this classic play starts as high camp farce and ends up as a deeply moving celebration of love and the human spirit. Sherman has never written anything finer than the extraordinarily sensitive scenes where the men make love verbally without touching. Alan Cumming gives the performance of his career so far and he is matched by newcomer Chris New whose warmth, humanity and flawless technique mark him out as a star of the future. This is completely unmissable, a play that will genuinely affect everyone who sees it. - 195.82.123.181)
07 Oct 06
What a wonderful play! I'm confused that the other reviewers wouldn't agree... perhaps they had very cheap seats near the back? I found the play to be well written, and extremely well delivered. The staging is fairly basic, but then it's not about the sets. The story is witty, entertaining and at the same time harrowing. I will be going to the this again, and prompting all my friends to do the same. An important play, well presented. - 82.71.13.8)
06 Oct 06
This production ruins a brilliant and oft-moving play. The first half looks more like a bad comedy, camp and sometimes trying too hard, causing problems for the second half. Misguided direction, dull design, and any show that uses music by the Pet Shop Boys is DOA. Alan Cumming is miscast but the other actors impress. I will hold on to my memories of the original and write this off as a missed opportunity. What a shame! - 84.13.28.96)
Opened 29 Sep 1930, on site of the Old Ship Tavern. Famous for the Whitehall Farces (Brian Rix) which started in 1950. 608 seats. Member of the Society of London Theatre. An [ATG] member. Closed after the run of Abigail's Party July 12th 2003. The 377 seat Trafalgar Studio opens early 2004. A further 100 seat studio space in the pipeline. Renamed from the Whitehall to Trafalgar Studios.
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.