Synopsis Farcical goings-on at Merton-cum-Middlewick vicarage. What happens when a vicar goes away, leaving his ex-actress wife to entertain a former colleague who has to dress up in her husband's clothes, and they're spotted by a nosy parishioner who reads too much into what she sees? And when the wife's uncle, a bishop, mistakes the colleague for her husband, and an escaped prisoner breaks into the house and also dresses up as a reverend, will the real vicar be able to disentagle fact from farce on his return?
Actor-director Douglas Hodge - currently on stage himself in Shakespeare’s bloodiest tragedy Titus Andronicus at the Globe – takes a total change of pace by directing Philip King’s classic wartime farce See How They Run. The new production opened at the West End’s Duchess Theatre last night (29 June 2006, previews from 20 June), following a regional tour (See News, 28 Apr 2006).
Written in 1942, See How They Run premiered in Peterborough in 1944 before touring the country three times and, still in the midst of the Second World War, transferring to the West End’s Comedy Theatre in 1945 – three doodle bugs fell on London on the play’s opening night. It’s credited as the original “English vicar” play – at one stage, five men in dog collars are lined up on stage - and inspired the long-running TV comedy series Dad’s Army.
Overnight critics were mainly delighted to see Philip King’s madcap comedy – which several acknowledged as the first of all modern farces - back in the West End, despite some reservations that it may be too antiquated with limited appeal for modern audiences.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com - “In my book, See How They Run… is probably the high point of British farce between Ben Travers and Ray Cooney, and certainly the funniest play in the language. All great farces conspire against sanity, wherever it may be found, and this is no exception. The parsonage becomes a madhouse where identities dissolve in mayhem. Hodge’s production has been slightly re-cast and considerably improved since it went on tour earlier this year. Jo Stone-Fewings… repeats his hilariously engaging performance as Clive, and is now joined by his off-stage wife Nancy Carroll… as an enchanting Penelope…. The new improved Bishop of Lax is Tim Pigott-Smith, who is on wonderful comic form… This is one of the finest farce productions I have ever seen. It is a feast of delights from start to finish.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian - Aside from Donkeys' Years, we farce-fanciers have been starved of late. So it is a delight to welcome Philip King's wartime classic back into the West End after a gap of 22 years. And, watching Douglas Hodge's superb revival, I was struck by the play's quintessential Englishness. For a start, it could only work in a country that found vicars cherishably funny… Where French farce is about sex, English farce also depends on words. It's hard to explain why the name of the resident vicar, Lionel Toop, is funny: it just is… But Hodge realises that farce is chiefly about performance; and accordingly, he has engaged a crack team… It may be an evening tinged with nostalgia. But it proves that farce is the essence of theatre in that it requires physical agility, spot-on timing and is capable of transforming a preposterous situation into spiralling ecstasy.”
Benedict Nightingale in the The Times - Nightingale watched “Douglas Hodge’s sprightly revival of Philip King’s wartime farce through tears of laughter… You won’t be surprised to learn that the village is called Merton-cum-Middlewick. Indeed, you half expect to see Captain Mainwaring escorting Miss Marple through the churchyard or Sergeant Wilson fêting Mrs Tiggywinkle in the Royal British Legion hut. But this isn’t an especially cosy piece. On the contrary, it often seems to be sending itself up… there’s a sort of jaunty invulnerability, a cheerful imperviousness, about such stuff that’s as inspiriting as it’s maddening. And Hodge’s cast have the ultimate excuse: they are very funny."
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail - "See How They Run is far more surprising and brave than any modernistic black-mood drama about the politics of despair... It belongs to an era when theatre was there to raise morale and send people home with a chuckle in their souls... I almost gnawed off my knuckles in discomfort at how old-fashioned and hokey it all felt... but then the ludicrousness took over, and by the end I was cackling as merrily as the rest of the mainly elderly audience."
Nick Curtis in the Evening Standard - Contrary to his peers, Curtis found that See How They Run was not to his taste, though he conceded that “lovers of outrageously contrived wartime farces will love this outrageously contrived wartime farce. Philip King's 1944 comedy features a welter of unlikely misunderstandings and no fewer than five capering clergymen, mostly fake and all in varying states of undress. Quite what it's doing in the West End now is anybody's guess. It's easy to see how such gleeful absurdity stiffened upper lips and tickled funny bones in the doodlebug-studded last year of the war. Today, the play seems an amusing but terribly creaky curio.”
“Sergeant, arrest most of these vicars!” There are vicars ’ere, there and everywhere, as well as an escaped German prisoner, a bendy-limbed spinster who has been hitting the sherry and an innocent housemaid who is accused of being an accelerator before the fact. If none of this strikes you as funny, then you shall go in peace my child and may God have mercy on your soul.
In my book, See How They Run by Philip King, first performed in 1944 and gloriously revived at the Duchess by Douglas Hodge (taking time out from playing an old misery guts, Titus Andronicus, at the Globe in Southwark), is probably the high point of British farce between Ben Travers and Ray Cooney, and certainly the funniest play in the language.
See How They Run is rooted in all sorts of very British fears such as those we harbour of foreigners, emotional truth and the word of God. The hapless country vicar of Merton-cum-Middlewick, Lionel Toop, is simply submerged in the consequences of his racy wife, Penelope (she wears trousers, for heaven’s sake), innocently resuming a war-time dalliance with an actor, Lance Corporal Clive Winton. Rekindling an on-stage passion – in Coward’s Private Lives – the couple are entangled in a series of misunderstandings veering out of control. All great farces conspire against sanity, wherever it may be found, and this is no exception. The parsonage becomes a madhouse where identities dissolve in mayhem.
Hodge’s production has been slightly re-cast and considerably improved since it went on tour earlier this year. Jo Stone-Fewings, who has served his time at the RSC and is emerging as one of our most brilliantly versatile actors, repeats his hilariously engaging performance as Clive, and is now joined by his off-stage wife, Nancy Carroll – fresh from The Voysey Inheritance at the National – as an enchanting Penelope. The couple’s real-life dog gets a look in, too, bounding across the stage in the chaotic chase for a bite of somebody’s (I think it’s a vicar’s) bottom.
The new improved Bishop of Lax is Tim Pigott-Smith, who is on wonderful comic form, and the necessary ingredients of physical oddity are well provided by Julie Legrand as the devastated spinster Miss Skillon, a village gossip who gains her come-uppance while hanging, senseless, from a coat hook in a convenient cupboard; and by Nicholas Blane as a rotund clergyman, with a lovely sing-song voice, who is labouring under the delusion that his sermon is what everyone is waiting to hear.
This is one of the finest farce productions I have ever seen. It is a feast of delights from start to finish.
- Michael Coveney
Note: The following FOUR-STAR review dates from March 2006 and this production's earlier tour.
There is a sense of total theatre about this smashing little production of Philip King's classic WW2 farce. From the sandbags in the foyer to the drill-hall sergeant warning about mobile phones before curtain up, the aim is to evoke a time when comedy was gentler and morals just a bit more uptight.
The setting is a Home Counties village in wartime England. The young vicar, Reverend Toop (Simon Wilson), is doing his best to keep his young and vibrant ex-actress wife Penelope (Hattie Morahan) on side with the village. But she will insist on doing such scandalous things as wearing trousers and having an opinion of her own.
With Julie Legrand as spinster of the parish Miss Skillon, who had clearly had her own designs on Toop, and Natalie Grady as the Toops’ earthy housekeeper, Ida, there is bound to be an upset when Clive (Jo Stone-Fewings), an ex-colleague of Penelope's, calls round while Toop is away.
What has not changed over the last half century is the comic value of slapstick and sight gags. While director Douglas Hodge takes his time in the early scenes over establishing the moral tone of the piece and getting its tenor just right, as soon as the opportunity to hide behind the sofa or have two actors grappling on the floor comes along, he grabs it with glee.
Such care pays dividends. It allows a modern audience to share elements of the comedy which might have otherwise been lost to them. And it means that for the rest of the time, the actors can get on with the serious business of hiding, grappling, running around in small circles and falling over.
Timing is all in this kind of farce, particularly as the number of vicars on stage increases and, with it, the opportunities for mistaken identity. This large and lively cast are as strong with their entrances and their delivery as they are with the physical side of the comedy.
While Stone-Fewings and Morahan are both excellent - their re-enactment of one of the fights from Private Lives is a treat - it is Legrand who excels in the physical side of the comedy. She makes Miss Skillon a superbly rubber-legged drunk and, with astute characterisation from Grady, allows her scathing relationship with Ida to become a strong second strand.
A great night's entertainment for those prepared to immerse themselves in the old-fashioned way of farce.
Thom Dibdin (reviewed at the King's Theatre, Edinburgh)
Loved it! Laughed till the tears rolled down my face. - 82.69.1.188)
28 Oct 06
Great fun. Haven't laughed so much in ages. It is a real pity it is closing. Brillant cast as well. Up with Noises Off and Donkey's Years in quality and amount of farce. - 194.129.64.35)
24 Oct 06
Although this is an admirably performed farce and does have some very funny moments it must have seemed dated even by 1946. Frankly it is a bit odd that this staple of regional rep is in the West End, particularly with the far superior Donkey's Years currently running as well. It is also a bit wierd to see Nancy Carroll so soon after such a contrast in The Voysey Inheritance and, worryingly, I would never have guessed that Jo Stone- Fewings is her real-life partner. Having said all that, this is undemanding fun and the theatre is relatively cool. - 62.6.139.13)
27 Jul 06
What a wonderful surprise! Fifty-plus years has left this farce with creaks here and dust there, but the marvelous cast gives 200 percent and takes the audience along for the ride. - 71.130.57.216)
21 Jul 06
During the first act, I was beginning to ask myself 'what are you doing here?' 'what's all the fuss about?', but then I succumbed to its charmingly dated silliness. The success of the evening is not the creaky farce itself, but the infectious enthusiam of the cast. They're clearly having a ball and it's that which sweeps you up and carries you away. It's a bit invidious to single anyone out, but Natalie Grady makes a terrific West End debut as Ida; I suspect we'll see a lot more of her. - 86.130.219.140)
20 Jul 06
the essence of good farce is that it must be played absolutely straight with impeccable comic timing. This welcome revival superbly played and directed at breakneck pace by Douglas Hodge scores on all fronts. People may sneer about mock vicars losing their trousers but plays like this are part of English theatrical history and deserve their revival.A great nights entertainment
- 84.70.110.73)
18 Jul 06
Very funny show, with an excellent cast giving their all. Of course it's old fashioned but none the worse for that. - 86.129.142.209)
07 Jul 06
They get the audience into the swing of things by playing lots of wartime favourites before the show starts. There are even mini searchlights outside to add atmosphere although at 7.15pm on a bright summers evening they were a complete waste of time which brings me to the play.
I feel this one does not stand the test of time. Vicars in their underpants Oh! Please missus!! It is one of those shows that, at times, makes you wish for a sofa to jump behind and hide - and I noticed a fair number of the cast were doing that on stage which may have been scripted or due to their own embarrassment?
I would have given more stars for some of the actors in this show who, even reciting this drivel, were able to actually be funny - definitely a testerment to their acting skills. - 195.93.21.134)
06 Jul 06
Dismal, tired and hardly funny. - 80.177.231.164)
06 Jul 06
Never laughed so much at the theatre. Great! - 80.80.22.6)
Opened 25 Nov 1929. 476 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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