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Synopsis A brilliant, sexually charged and violently passionate drama about the impossibility of love and the trips of the family. Set in a seedy, claustrophobic motel room on the barren outskirts of the Mojave desert, this is high octane stuff - adult and thrilling, poetic and astonishing. Fool for Love is a story of two powerless people who love each other. Their love has nothing to do with romance and everything to do with the ravenous monster of desire and the dangerous energy of caged animals.
American screen actress and rock musician Juliette Lewis made her stage acting debut last night (15 June 2006, previews from 7 June) in a new production of Sam Shephard’s 1980s play Fool for Love at the West End’s Apollo Theatre, alongside New Zealander Martin Henderson as her obsessive lover from the past (See News, 18 Apr 2006).
Lindsay Posner directs the 90-minute piece, which recounts a painful love story. In a seedy motel room in southern California, May and Eddie go back beyond their adult lives, back to the legacy of their parents and their parents before. Larry Lamb and Joe Duttine complete the cast.
While many felt it was less shocking today than it was 20 years ago, most overnight critics enjoyed Shepard’s play and were impressed by Lewis’ performance. If some suggested that she could have been more intense, the general view was that Lewis is less inhibited than English actresses have been in the role.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com - Coveney said Fool for Love “arrives at the Apollo like a disturbing message in a bottle from a distant shore… In the casting of two non-English actors – the Los Angeles film star and rock singer Juliette Lewis, and the New Zealander Martin Henderson – as the half-siblings, ‘cousins’ and incestuous lovers May and Eddie, he rescues Shepard from the English coyness that makes him merely exotic… Fantasy and reality overlap with each other to create a sense of anxiety and foreboding, fears fulfilled by a climactic conflagration… You would never know that this was Juliette Lewis’ stage debut. She is absolutely superb in the role, combining washed-up misery and a casual air of sexuality with a natural unselfconsciousness and total relaxation…. Both performances lack any sense of calculation and fully inhabit their own savagely choreographed scenario of heightened doom.”
Benedict Nightingale in The Times - “Lewis could be still more intense. After all, May is trying to reconstruct her life in obscurity when something terrible yet terrific happens: Henderson’s Eddie arrives out of the blue, having driven 2,400 miles from his trailer park to her seedy motel room to satisfy his obsession, which is her… But if there could be more inward burning and boiling from Lewis, she still gives a performance that justifies her hop from her Hollywood habitat… It’s tough, unsentimental stuff, with no hint of the winsomeness film actresses so often find irresistible, and it’s matched by Henderson’s Eddie, who is wild, scattered, hapless, hopeless and in every respect the sort of loner and loser who haunts Shepard’s plays and his American West.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian - Billington gave three stars to “a perfectly decent, but hardly revelatory, revival of (Shepard’s) 1983 play about sexual desperation on the edge of the Mojave desert.” He compared the characters to “figures in a Greek tragedy acting out a pre-ordained pattern of flight and pursuit. The play has a visceral power which tends to evaporate when played by British actors. But Lindsay Posner, the director, gets one thing right by casting the American film and rock star, Juliette Lewis, as May.” According to Billingon, Lewis “catches the emotional confusion of a woman who, having kissed Eddie with voracious passion, instinctively knees him in the groin. This, you feel, is a woman in the grip of an erotic obsession that yields only self-loathing. But, while Lewis is psychologically astute, her voice lacks expressive range.” He was “slightly more impressed by the New Zealand-born Martin Henderson who brings out all of Eddie's reflex physicality.” He added: “It is all well done, and there is good support from Joe Duttine as May's hapless date, and Larry Lamb as the reminiscing elder. But a play that appeared shocking in the 1980s now seems to rest on an essentially conservative principle: that of characters who are helpless in the grip of fate.”
Paul Taylor in the Independent - “Sam Shepard's 1983 play, Fool for Love, is a savagely funny and disturbing study of the kind of fatal attraction that veers between devouring need and touchy, furious rejection… With the American film star and rock chick Juliette Lewis and the New Zealander movie hunk Martin Henderson in the leading roles, Lindsay Posner's revival sets out to show the benefits of using performers unrestrained by our native inhibitions… You would certainly have thought that Lewis, with her gift for suggesting the dysfunctional and the dangerous, would be ideal casting. But while she absolutely looks the part (think fallen, black-haired doll) she too often sounds (in this, her professional stage debut) as though she is reciting learned lines rather than fully inhabiting the role. Henderson makes a strong and exciting impression as Eddie - virile, volatile, endearingly ridiculous as he tries to work off jealousy of male competition… Missing in this revival… is that sense of frantic psychological claustrophobia.” In the supporting roles, said Taylor, “Larry Lamb adroitly captures the Old Man's unlovely transition from irresponsible detachment to indignant, hollow self-justification… and Joe Duttine is very amusing as May's sweating, nonplussed suitor.”
“Greek tragedy set in the Mid-West” is how the director Lindsay Posner describes Sam Shepard’s powerful, intense short play Fool for Love (1983) which arrives at the Apollo like a disturbing message in a bottle from a distant shore.
Shepard has always seemed less commercial than his contemporary David Mamet, and Fool for Love is the only play of his to be seen in the West End - over 20 years ago, a National Theatre production starring the late Ian Charleson and Julie Walters transferred for a sold-out season. Posner’s revival is immeasurably superior to that version. In the casting of two non-English actors – the Los Angeles film star and rock singer Juliette Lewis, and the New Zealander Martin Henderson – as the half-siblings, “cousins” and incestuous lovers May and Eddie, he rescues Shepard from the English coyness that makes him merely exotic.
Eddie, a rodeo rider and stuntman, has driven thousands of miles to find May in a bleak motel on the edge of the Mojave Desert. She’s working as a short-order cook and is waiting for her new boyfriend, Martin (Joe Duttine), a garden maintenance worker in a suit, to take her to the movies. Instead, Eddie insists on creating their own movie in the motel, which is eerily lit by stuttering neon lights, and whose sound is amplified in the heavy echo of the slammed doors. In addition, an Old Man (Larry Lamb) sits nursing a bottle of hooch in a rocking chair at the side of the stage, demanding that Eddie gives the “male” side of the family story.
Fantasy and reality overlap with each other to create a sense of anxiety and foreboding, fears fulfilled by a climactic conflagration. At one point Eddie starts lassoing the bed posts and cleaning a rifle. May strips down to her flowery underwear and pours her limbs into a slinky red dress, hips jutting in provocative defiance of Eddie’s vicious assault on her memories.
You would never know that this was Juliette Lewis’ stage debut. She is absolutely superb in the role, combining washed-up misery and a casual air of sexuality with a natural unselfconsciousness and total relaxation. Martin Henderson, bearded and clad in grimy denims, looks uncannily like a younger version of the handsome playwright, himself an outdoorsman and horse-rider with a tortured relationship to his own family history. Both performances lack any sense of calculation and fully inhabit their own savagely choreographed scenario of heightened doom.
There’s comedy, too, when Martin tries to escape the claustrophobia by hurling himself at the window, but we are slowly gripped in the tragedy of what happened to the Old Man’s wife when the truth emerged, and moments of savage intimacy between Eddie and May carry an overwhelming carnal conviction. Shepard took his epigraph for the play from Archbishop Anthony Bloom: “The proper response to love is to accept it. There is nothing to do.”
Pointless. Just utterly pointless. Why did anyone bother? - 217.196.231.33)
09 Aug 06
Very well acted and very well designed, but I'm afraid this production lacked electricity. Both of the earlier London outings, at the Cottesloe and the Donmar, had you on the edge of your seat but this one didn't really take off. - 86.139.77.57)
01 Aug 06
Despite the superb acting all round and the classy production values, this left me rather cold. Some of the dialogue is viciously funny and some of it cod-poetic, yet I never felt any real connection with these tormented souls. Also, at barely 80 minutes long, it is hard to justify the steep pricing. - 195.82.123.181)
22 Jul 06
This was one of the worst plays I have seen anywhere anytime. The acting was wooden, the lines poorly delivered, the sound effects for door slams tedious, the supposed tension non-existent. Juliet Lewis was especially poor. I spent much of it looking at my watch, not a good sign in a play that lasts a little over an hour... - 195.171.163.194)
15 Jun 06
Maybe we saw it too early in the previews, plus the Henderson fan club behind us didn't help by drooling loudly over Mr H the whole way through, but that aside it wasn't a great evening. The effect of echoing the doors slamming became very tedious very quickly and neither of the leads seemed too comfortable with their lines. Juliette Lewis who would have seemed born to play a Shephard role was unimpressive, not edgy enough - maybe the venue was too big after the recent Donmar and Almeida Shephard productions, both of which were far better than this pallid production. - 212.159.122.205)
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