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Synopsis Thriller. Alone in her flat Susie is anxious - so much so that when a stranger turns up claiming to be a family friend she is glad of the company. Suddenly she finds herself at the centre of a murder investigation and her only hope is to solve the mystery of the missing doll.
There's a tiny fringe company called Sound and Fury who are pioneering a technique of doing shows completely in the dark, like The Watery Part of the World seen at BAC earlier this year. This supposedly innovative corner of the fringe is a world apart from the apparently creaky old West End, but in fact thriller writer Frederick Knott got there first 37 years ago, with the climactic scene to Wait Until Dark played in darkness at the play's London opening at the Strand Theatre in 1966.
Though the play has since become a repertory staple, it has never returned to the West End in the 35 years since it closed after a two-year run. That's partly due to changing fashion - stage thrillers aren't the draw they used to be - but mainly, I suspect, owing the success of the subsequent film version that starred Audrey Hepburn that has rendered its surprises redundant.
There's a danger that a review could do the same, and I may have already done so by mentioning the scene that is played in the dark. But even anticipating it, as I was, it makes for a stark, surprising and gripping climax to a play that may often seem dated but also still has a dangerous edge.
With the original 60s setting of the play wisely retained in Paul Farnsworth's appealingly appropriate design, it at least feels deliberately anachronistic - and features like phone numbers that are stated as, for example, "Bayswater 1113" confirms it.
But there's also something universally chilling about the violence of the dark, especially as amplified by Knott making his play's victim blind, and then observing her as she is terrorised in her basement Notting Hill flat by three men who are in hot pursuit of a child's musical doll that her husband has unwittingly carried back from Amsterdam.
Under Joe Harmston's direction, the tension and terror are both in place, with Gary Mavers, Tony Scannell and Peter Bowles piling on the menace as Saskia Wickham ineffectually cowers but eventually finds her strength to fight back. The result is an enjoyably old-fashioned and entertaining West End night out.
Truly Godawful. Saskia Wickham seems to think being blind means walking limp, and Peter Bowles is an embarrassment as Roat -- the "big scream" moment is mis-staged (and thus, not a "big scream" moment at all) and the rest of the show makes a poor case for this once-sharp thriller. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (64.164.8.84)
24 Oct 03
It was AWFUL. Poor acting, very slow. Most of the action was stage left and our seats were left of centre so we missed lots. Plenty of people around us were also yawning. It did nothing to encourage us back to the theatre again. The night we went there was very weak applause and no extra curtain calls. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.137.110.33)
22 Oct 03
Really good night out. Nothing too spectacular or brain scratching; masterfully acted by Peter Bowles. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.105.168.6)
17 Oct 03
I really enjoyed this. It was a good old fashioned thriller and well acted. A good fun night out at the theatre. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.62.168)
16 Oct 03
If you only get to see one production this season - make damn sure it isn't this one - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.41.241.203)
03 Oct 03
Saw it during its pre-West End run at Windsor. Unbelievable.
Why isn't "0" an option? - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.41.241.203)
24 Sep 03
Saw Wait Until Dark in Windsor yesterday and thoroughly enjoyed it. This production has had it's problems with Sam Janus walking out etc, but you would never know. The brilliant central performance by Saskia Wickham as blind Susie holds it all together, she is just very convincing, I could have lived without Peter Bowles but him apart I thought it was deserved for a west end run, nice set to. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.62.168)
Opened on 24 Apr 1889, funded by W.S. Gilbert. 675 seats. Bought from Andrew Lloyd Webber and now owned by Broadway producer Max Weitzenhoffer and Nica Burns.Society of London Theatre member.
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