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Synopsis West Germany 1969. Willy Brandt begins his brief but remarkable career as the first left-of-centre Chancellor for nearly forty years. Always present but rarely noticed is Gunter Guillaume, Brandt's devoted personal assistant - and no less devoted in his other role, spying on Brandt for the Stasi.
Dates: Opens 09 September 2003. Aug 30, Sep 1,2,3,4,5,6,8,18,19,20,22,23,24,25, Oct 3,4,6,7,17,18,20,21,30,31, Nov 1,17,18,19,20,26,27,28,29, Dec 1,2,11,12,13,15,16,22,23,26,27,29,30 at 19:30. Sep 6,11,13,16,20,25,27, Oct 4,7,18,21, Nov 1,20,27,29, Dec 2,13,16,23,27,30 Mats 14:30. Sep 9
NOTE: The following review dates from September 2003 and this production's original run at the National's Cottesloe Theatre.
Michael Frayn's multi-award winning 1998 three-hander Copenhagen was set in 1941, at the outset of the Second World War, and centred around the real-life visit of a German nuclear physicist to his Danish colleague in the Nazi-occupied city of the title.
In his latest play, once again directed by long-time associate Michael Blakemore, Frayn returns to the fertile field of 20th-century European history. Back in Germany, nearly 30 years after the events recorded in Copenhagen, the country - and its citizens - has been split down the middle, divided between East and West, right and left, past and present. The capitalist West has managed to rebuild itself from the rubble into a world power, while the communist East remains veiled behind the Iron Curtain, grey and dull but reassuringly simple.
Democracy begins with the election of Social Democratic Party leader Willy Brandt as West German Chancellor and follows his turbulent course in office over the next four years, during which "the great peacemaker" implores his countrymen to have "courage to show compassion" and to accept reconciliation with their former enemies in Eastern Europe. Along the way, his personal assistant Gunter Guillaume organises Brandt's schedule, cheers him, comforts him - and spies on him for the East German secret police.
As Guillaume, Irishman Conleth Hill is virtually unrecognisable from his last London outing in Stones in His Pockets. Seemingly greyer, plumper, more unassuming, Hill plays well the oleaginous "little man" who grows bigger, bolder and ever more conflicted in the "sunshine" of his idol's smile.
And Roger Allam is utterly convincing as the subject of Guillaume's devotion and betrayal. With the cast of his eye and the turn of his lip, with his delivery of Brandt's trademark silent gestures and speeches, with his very stillness, Allam conveys the immense gravitas that attracts seas of upturned faces even as it belies moments of self-doubt and deep despair. His is a great leader indeed.
Special mention, too, to David Ryall who, in a strong, all-male ensemble, impresses as Brandt's opportunist party peer Herbert Wehner, and to designer Peter J Davison, whose two-tier office set, with its walls of colour-coded files, keeps its own nifty secret till the end.
In the programme notes, Frayn writes that "complexity is what the play is about". For our sake, his script and Blakemore's direction succeeds in simplifying the complexities of German history and politics, with Hill providing helpful asides to Steven Pacey's Stasi agent. But the complexity of "human arrangements and of human beings themselves" that lies at the heart of Democracy, is left for us to judge. Is the lesson to "trust no one" or to follow the maxim that "we must trust each other...there's no other way we can live"?
Brandt may not have been able to trust his aide, but ironically, it was Guillaume's reports that gave the East the confidence to trust Brandt. In the play's closing moments, the evocative sounds of hammers chipping away at the Berlin wall remind us how that trust ultimately paid off.
why no reviews for this play??? - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.92.67.76)
27 Mar 04
I thought this play was just tremendous, shedding light on an era I had had little interest in or knowledge of. The writing is so good I actually bought the book of the play (in which -bonus - Frayn gives some wonderful background on the events portrayed). Oh, but the language! So poetic yet realistic, what a great night at the theatre. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.225.131.65)
22 Dec 03
Congratulations on all fronts. Michael Frayn astonishes yet again with his ability to present complex arguments in a gripping way. Blakemore directs superbly. The design is ingenious with a great coup de theatre. The acting is flawless. Conleth Hill's character is a magnificent creation - Iago with heart. Roger Allam gives what is surely his finest performance - a huge range of emotion achieved with remarkable economy. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.34.14)
04 Oct 03
It was with some trepidation that I booked for a play about post-world war II german politics, but what a fascinating, riveting and entertaining evening it proved to be. Gripping from start to finish, racing alonmg without seeming rushed, this is a fine play given an excellent staging. The performances are universally exceptional. The RNT is not just on a rioll - its the mother of all rolls ! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.211.100.40)
22 Sep 03
A complex, challenging, and ultimately deeply moving play. My interest focused primarily on the many-layered relationship that develops between Brand and Guillaume--both Allam and Hill give superb performances in those roles. (And the absence of female roles is a crucial part of the point of the play.) Unmissable. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.30.192.1)
11 Sep 03
the ideas in this play really stayed with me. I appreciate it that much more a few days later. very accomplished stuff and enlightening too. My niggle is that there isn't a single female part. Considering it was Brandt's pecadilloes were the unmaking of him in the end, frayn/blakemore surely could have made use of at least one actress! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.62.168)
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