Use the form below to search for tickets on your desired date. Dates from
Synopsis An Edwardian waiting room in an English train station. Two persons waiting....One, small in stature, of murky origins in Ireland, wears nevertheless the uniform of an inspector-general of army hospitals. The other is from a wealthy, upright English family. Both have striven to be reformers in their work, but only one of them has been honoured for it: Florence Nightingale. The other achieved fame - indeed infamy - only after her death. They seem to be strangers to each other , but they are not entirely so. Once upon a time in a far away place they had a bitter encounter.....
Plays like Terry Johnson's Insignificance and Caryl Churchill's Top Girls have famously made theatrical mileage out of putting historical figures into fictional collision with each other. Sebastian Barry now attempts to do the same with a poetically written but dramatically arid new play, Whistling Pysche, that introduces two 19th-century medical reformers to each other on a long, dark night of the soul for them, and an even longer, darker night in the theatre for us.
One is Florence Nightingale - the nursing pioneer and reformer of military hospital sanitation methods, who has been forever immortalised by history. The other is James Miranda Barry - an army surgeon who also did pioneering medical work, but is nowadays remembered more notoriously for a secret revealed after his death.
The fact that he is played by Kathryn Hunter in Robert Delamere's premiere production of the play is part of that secret. But Hunter is always such a powerfully strange but compelling actress that her presence here doesn't so much solve the mystery as add to it. Who is this diminutive creature scuttling about in army uniform, remembering his poodles (whom he called Psyche, hence the title of the play), and a career that took him from Cork in Ireland, where he was born, to British imperialist outposts from South Africa to Canada?
We have ample opportunity to find out in the long, discursive monologues that Barry supplies him with. Complete with a convincingly balding pate and stooped gait, it's another in Hunter's marvellously inhabited creatures. But there's no drama. And nor does it ignite in the portrait of the more staid, severe figure of Nightingale - taken by Claire Bloom in a no less total transformation of this usually beautiful actress.
Set in the waiting room of a Victorian railway station - atmospherically conjured in Simon Higlett's design and Tim Mitchell's evocative lighting, with an air of dislocation underlined by a rolling grey film on a rear projection by Jon Driscoll and the insistent musical underscoring of Ross Lorraine - they are awaiting some kind of redemption out of what may be purgatory. But though there are shafts of brilliant writing throughout, prose alone doesn't make drama, and I, too, longed to escape this particular theatrical purgatory.
Like a previous reviewer, I too found it more a radio play than an engrossing hour and a half in the theatre. While Kathryn Hunter is a hypnotic actress, her ticks and mannerisms become somewhat irritating after a while - Claire Bloom is far from monotonous but her role is less interestingly written, which goes against her. However, if you can stick it out the last 1/2 hour does bring rewards. Set design and atmospheric use of music get top marks. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.113.48.11)
04 Jun 04
Thought it was basically a few chapters of an A level history book, thrown together in the first person. A good radio play. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.69.37.108)
31 May 04
Alas I really couldn't see the point of the piece. It didn't seem to achieve anything and I found it too static to be engrossing - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.69.37.108)
29 May 04
More 3 1/2 actually. I enjoyed this, it wasn't easy going but Sebastian Barry's beautifully lyrical writing is enchanting. KAthryn Hunter is MArvellous and despite page after page of monolgue engages and engrosses with her strong sense of storytelling. For me the big let down was Claire Bloom who was monotonous and whinged her way through Barrys wonderful text so I longed for Hunter's characher to return to her tale. This is far from 'light entertainment' but it is a wonderfully touching piece of storytelling by Barry and Hunter. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.69.37.108)
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.