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Synopsis Tessa has set up a business; a brothel by the sea where mature women specialise in the Girlfriend Experience, a surprisingly caring and sympathetic service. As the women stoically strive to make a living in a competitive market, their personal lives start to crumble. Will they ever have loving relationships outside work and enjoy being girlfriends themselves? This play is created entirely from edited conversations recorded inside a real brothel. Upstairs
Alecky Blythe’s latest verbatim drama employs her favoured technique – the actors listen to recordings of their characters (in this case working girls in a Bournemouth brothel), and repeat the lines shortly after. Almost like a script-in-hand, only with headphones.
But that’s where comparisons with rehearsed readings end, for The Girlfriend Experience (a reference to a service offered by the ladies which is as much about emotional as physical intimacy) is a slick and polished production, played out by a bold and affecting cast. Debbie Chazen and the prolific Beatie Edney play lovable prostitutes Tessa and Suzie. Between 30-minute stints with various punters, they fold laundry, watch Jeremy Kyle and build flat-pack furniture. This is a wholly domestic arrangement, an ordinary basement flat which just happens to receive more visitors than the Queen.
Tessa and Suzie are assisted by Poppy (superbly underplayed by Lu Corfield) and Amber (a cheeky Esther Coles), who only work on a part-time basis but cater for clients with more specialised requirements – suffice to say rarely has a man with wet hair been such a disturbing sight. But all the while, they talk of boyfriends and love with the same innocent reverie of teenagers. For Tessa, who amongst other tasks must pleasure a deaf old man with a pair of leather gloves, it is holding hands with her new squeeze that gives her the greatest rush.
Despite the warmth of the characters and the plentiful moments of poignancy, there is also something strangely predictable about The Girlfriend Experience. As the audience sniggers at the sight of a dildo and recoils in horror at the thought of ‘solid sports’ (no elaboration needed), there’s nevertheless a feeling that all this achieves is to enhance the stereotype and ignore the wider debate. The clients only make brief appearances (each one played by the versatile Alex Lowe), but it is perhaps through them that we learn the most about ourselves.
The headphone verbatim style is an effective technique, creating patterns of speech that are remarkably authentic, juxtaposing with the frequently outlandish costumes. It sounds a strange comparison to draw, but my companion on the evening had exactly the same thought – it creates an effect that is not dissimilar to watching the Aardman animation series Creature Comforts. Only with leather boots.
Sorry, I'm having a bad day! As I have buggered this up twice I shall leave five stars now to balance it out - I hope it works! - rds
30 Sep 08
Apologies, I meant to leave 4 stars. - rds
30 Sep 08
Original, touching, funny and thought provoking. The action takes place in a Bournemouth brothel which offers their clients "The Real Girlfriend Experience". The basic concept of the piece is for the actors to speak the dialogue whilst simultaneously listening to the recorded dialogue of the actual prostitutes and their clients on headphones. It starts with one of the actresses explaining this to us before we hear both her and the real person speaking. That doubling is slightly confusing at first, but the confusion doesn't last long as the recordings are faded out and only the actors voices can be heard. It is the sort of concept that will polarise audiences. One couple sitting in front of me almost started a fight with each other as she demanded he left with her. She should have given it more time to see how the characters eventually endeared themselves to us. A tart's lot is not a happy one, but these girls get through it, hobbling pensioners and all. It has to be said that the skill of the actresses pull this piece off, it could so easily have gone for nothing in the wrong hands and also to the one man who plays the ten punters, my favourites perhaps being Dickbrain and Glove Man (don't ask!) All credit then to Alecky Blythe, the writer for such an imaginative concept, Joe Hill-Gibbins for his bold direction and the Royal Court for taking the risk with it and ultimately pulling it off. - rds
30 Sep 08
4.5 if there was such a points system.
Absolutely wonderful, may have its flaws but overall a fantastic night out, can't reccomend it highly enough. - Greg
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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