Synopsis Frank's got the interview; it's his big break. He just has to convince two formidable women from the corporation and he'll have his chance to get back to Russia. But somehow, history is working against them all. Downstairs
Recent films like The Corporation and Super Size Me have addressed the pervasive and often malign influence huge multinational corporations have over the individual. April De Angelis’ new play takes a similar tack, but in such a woolly and obtuse fashion it's hard to fathom her true intentions.
Its nominal hero is Frank (Tom Brooke), a bumbling anthropology graduate from the University of Lampeter eager to secure a position that will take him back to his beloved Russia. First, however, he must face a tough grilling from Dr Gray (Helen Schlesinger) and Dr Pitt (Sylvestra Le Touzel), two formidable women with their own, often contradictory agendas.
With its three-hander format and single, claustrophobic setting – a sleek, modernist office designed by Mark Thompson in glinting glass and chrome – comparisons to Huis Clos are unavoidable. And as the interview unfolds, it becomes clear these three people are very much trapped in a Sartre-esque hell of their own making.
Yet two things stop De Angelis’ play achieving a similar metaphorical weight. The first is her love for tongue-twisting verbiage, which forces her protagonists to spew meaningless doggerel that inevitably confines the action to the here and now. (“How might you begin to hypothesise a notional strategy of product placement in the present Russian climate?” asks Schlesinger at one point) The second, more damaging factor is that the characters behave like no human beings on earth – especially not those in a formal situation that’s being filmed by an overhead camera.
Would a prospective candidate really smoke a joint during an interview? Would his interrogators – estranged lesbian lovers whose jobs are both on the line – really lock lips in the workplace? And would an anthropology graduate be of any use in getting an oil pipeline laid through rural Russia? Such literal questions may conflict with the absurdist ambitions of this often farcical piece. But, if Wild East is to satirise the oppressive corporate mindset, it must surely have at least one foot in the plausible.
Director Phyllida Lloyd elicits strong performances from her cast, particularly Le Touzel as an embittered executive whose post-traumatic stress disorder arising from a brutal assault has made her surplus to requirements. But a baffling subplot involving a stolen artefact of great Shamanic significance over-eggs the pudding, turning what should have been an ironic commentary on murky business ethics into a strained and alienating curio.
The nerdy and nervous candidate for employment by a business which sells in Russia is faced at interview by two women PhDs, one trying unsuccessfully to recover from physical and emotional damage, the other a power freak.
The applicant Frank (Tom Brooke) has at least two other agenda items; so have the women (Sylvestra Le Touzel and Helen Schlesinger), and all three are in competition for jobs in a downsizing outfit. A mix of salesmanship, archeology and shamanism, spiced up with the usual (these days) unnecessary bad language and with some furious action, benefits from Phyllida Lloyd's tight direction and Mark Thompson's spare striped stage, and three entirely believable performances by the actors. - 217.44.167.77)
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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