Synopsis Fifteen years ago Ray and Una had an affair. After its disastrous ending, Ray went away and tried to forget, hoping that he'd never be found. But Una has thought of nothing else. Tracking him down and arriving unannounced at his place of work, she forces him finally to confront his actions. Back when he was 40 and she was 12. This highly provocative and tragic love story takes us into dark and difficult waters. Preconceptions will be challenged and difficult questions asked. When does love become abuse? When does wrong become right? And can we ever really escape the shackles of the past?
There hasn't been an original new play as gripping, provocative or ultimately startling as David Harrower’s aptly harrowing Blackbird in years. Not since Festen left me shaken, sobbing and stirred has a play taken an audience on such an intimate rollercoaster journey into an irrevocable settling of old, long suppressed scores and festering sores as this one does; while that is high praise indeed coming from me since I seriously believe Festen to me amongst the greatest events of my theatregoing lifetime, that took its story from a prior existing film, rather than the original story put forward here.
Intriguingly, though, both revolve around illicit relationships that occurred many years before the plays themselves are set: a father with his young twin children in the case of Festen, or a 40-year-old man with the 12-year-old daughter of a family friend here. And just as a family birthday celebration ignites an irrevocable night of reckoning in Festen, so a reunion of the two parties to the relationship in Blackbird some fifteen years later – after he has served a six-year prison sentence for his crime and is now settled in a new town with a new identity and in a seven year relationship, but is tracked down by her to the factory he works at – becomes a forum for the unravelling of unfinished business between them.
Even if David Mamet’s Oleanna wasn’t mentioned in the programme, you might also find yourself also remembering that incendiary play and how it toyed with the various positions that you might adopt towards it; but Blackbird is a far more compassionate and less obviously manipulative play. It may seem odd to say that, since paedophilia isn’t a tactful or tasteful subject, but Harrower makes no excuses or apologies for it, either; however, without judgement on either person, he simply makes us party to the bond that formed between them and the catastrophic consequences it has for both that made it so deadly and dangerous.
The play is given shattering life and dramatic detail in a production by veteran director Peter Stein that distils its extreme, oscillating emotions to their essence. Even if I could have done without the occasional mood music that intrudes to underscore certain scenes and thereby seems to be prompting an emotional response rather than letting it speak for itself, it is performed throughout with the kind of bruising integrity that makes for an evening of otherwise undiluted and harrowing power. As Roger Allam and Jodhi May progress from a watchful wariness with each other and mutual resentments at past pain inflicted, their mutual anger and passion eventually erupts into the open with a mesmerising intensity. This is a play that detonates with a rare theatrical charge; don’t miss it.
Superb on every level. Provocative, challenging, mesmerising and never compromising.
Excellent acting and direction. - 62.253.96.46)
11 May 06
I thought that the strength of the play was that it DIDN'T have a banal, easily sum-upable message. These two were desperate creatures, fixated on a past event, nothing that had happened to them since (dull jobs, bloodless relationships) providing them with the intensity of their "affair". At last, some real daring, transgression and challenging material on an English stage!
The only thing that marred it for me was the quite pathetic and perfectly unnecessary ending, with its dreadful soft-rock soundtrack, Kate Bush movement and money-wasting effects. Why Stein felt the need for this risible "coup" I'll never know. - 86.132.127.143)
08 Apr 06
Hmmm,
very well acted but very unsure about the message of the second half.
A very well acted play but one that ends up confusing itself in a circle so as to try and give both sides of the argument.
Could have done without the nudity and the appearance of the car. - 62.254.189.98)
03 Apr 06
I think this is a highly dubious play. Is there anything positive to say for relationships between adults and minors? It seems Harrower is trying to suggest there may be. I found the girl's recollection of the events when she was 12 entirely unconvincing. However mature children may be at an early age, what possible justification can there be for having sex with a 12 year old girl? So what is this play about? What does it offer us? In my view a dubious foray into paedaphilia. - 213.123.205.8)
23 Mar 06
One of the most intense and disturbing plays I have ever seen but also one of the best. The aptly-named David Harrower takes us on a roler-coaster ride of emotions with constantly shifting perceptions and sympathy. Given the highly sensitive subject matter it is an immense achievement to create a feeling of understanding, or even more, for Roger Allam's pathetic Peter/Ray. It is never completely clear who is the true victim or who seduced who and even the closing moments, which hit home with an almost physical impact, leave more questions than answers. Whilst Allam is excellent, Jodhi May is sensational as Una, full of hurt and rage but still sending out dangerous signals. The true motivation of the character only begins to emerge at the end but Miss May manages to keep the depths of Una hidden. This is essential but uncomfortable viewing and must be remembered at the end of the year when the awards are handed out. - 62.6.139.13)
16 Mar 06
The most gripping two-hander for many years. Five stars if Jodhi allowed all her lines to be heard but her mood-jumping character soon captivates the onlooker, especially the women, to share her motivation. Roger Allam magnificent. Cunning production enhancements prevent audience restlessness. Superbly developed drama with shocking, thrilling climax. - 86.142.180.71)
02 Mar 06
A remarkable experience. Intelligent, thought provoking piece wonderfully acted and directed. Unmissable - 80.177.231.164)
26 Feb 06
this is 2 for the first half (which meanders terribly) and 4 for the second (where the play finds direction). some amazing moments, some very misjudged (both in the acting and in the staging). the performers give everything. with twenty minutes trimmed off the first half (before the monologue) and a rethink of some of the more directorly moments this would be a truly astounding evening. - 213.78.69.3)
19 Feb 06
In responce to Black Bird, I thought it was incredible. The best peice of theatre Iv seen. The acting was breathtaking, the play was heart wrenching and the set and props were used to their full potential. David Harrower captured what it was like for this man to be confronted by his worst, yet best past time and I felt the reality of it was very moving. Roger and Jodhi played these characters with such truth and I found their characterisations of Una and Ray so believeable!Yes the play was shocking but at the same time it touched so many people with its realistically rivetting themes. I have spoken to alot of people who felt the ending unnessisary and over the top, however, in my opinion, the end was signifying the two of them writhing together in their own loss, love, upset, grief and need. The music was very effective in that it made this ugly and desperat attempt to get what both their hearts wanted look beautiful and almost dreamlike. The people looking in the window at the back signified voyeurs watching their own lives and society being acted around them, just like we, the audience were. The rubbish was catastrophe and disaster all around, even though Jodhis character repeatedly said things like "I lived your sentance" and "do you remember..." as if he would have forgotten...To me the rubbish was a denmonstration of the shitty life he has had since, she accuses him of living in theat room and in my eyes, she right to a certain extent.anyway.I loved it and intend to see it for a third time next week.
becky - 85.133.19.51)
16 Feb 06
I hated this. Yes the subject of child abuse is inevitably an emotive and distressing one, but I found it very difficult to connect with this sterile, even dull play. True, Peter Stein's clumsy and pretentious staging didn't help (the crudely realised lapses into stylised speech and movement, the crude -one assumes metaphorical - crawling around on the floor and chucking of rubbish about, the gawping extras, the intrusive use of music....I could go on and on) but I find Harrower's characters too sketchily drawn to care about. Roger Allam turns in another sterling performance but, for me, Jodhi May is just not a stage creature.....her voice is irritating and the high emotions didn't ring true. For much of the piece I felt it was in the wrong theatre (never has the Albery felt cavernous) but then there is Stein's mystifying but spectacular coup de theatre at the end, involving lighting effects, a car and, of course,choreographed movement. Was so glad to get out of there. In his review, Mark Shenton compares this to Festen. I couldn't agree less...that was heartbreaking and thrilling...this is turgid and bloodless. - 195.92.67.77)
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