Synopsis The 1958 Philip is in love with Oliver, but married to Sylvia. The 2008 Oliver is addicted to sex with strangers. Sylvia loves them both. The Pride examines changing attitudes to sexuality over a period of 50 years, looking at intimacy, identity and the courage it takes to be who you really are. Upstairs
Gay life either side of the liberationist divide is the self-evident topic of actor-turned-writer Alexi Kaye Campbell's highly accomplished debut play. But his real attentions are directed toward loneliness as it is experienced by three people with the same names separated by 50 years. The result covers some ground comparable to Nicholas de Jongh's Plague Over England, seen earlier this year, but with the Gielgud celebrity factor here replaced by two triangular relationships that bleed into and away from one another - and leave the audience at times aching, too.
In 1958 London, we first encounter the married estate agent, Philip (JJ Feild) as he enters into a four-month relationship with a well-travelled writer called Oliver, whom Bertie Carvel, in a riveting performance, plays with a smile that has clearly known its share of disappointment. Their burgeoning liaison makes a decidedly awkward outsider of Philip's wife, Sylvia, an onetime actress who brokered the men's meeting only to end up producing by way of carnal evidence a gold pen: Campbell's equivalent to the handkerchief in Othello.
The sublime Lyndsey Marshal trades in some decidedly clipped vowel sounds to then inhabit a different Sylvia in 2008: a Royal Shakespeare Company actress who has just landed the part of Viola at Stratford. This Sylvia is less cautious than her 1958 forbear, feistier, and very much in love with an unseen Italian by the name of Mario. That burgeoning relationship means that Sylvia could do without the demands made on both her time and emotions by the modern-day Oliver, a gay Daily Mail journalist addicted to anonymous sex. Ever on the prowl, Oliver nonetheless pines for the photographer, Feild's huskily spoken Philip, who has been driven away by his lover's promiscuity.
The director Jamie Lloyd follows his exceedingly smart, fleet reclamation of Pam Gems's Piaf with a more verbally hefty assignment that honours both the Rattigan-esque hommage of the 1958 sequences and the contemporary fear of intimacy encountered in the work of, say, Terrence McNally. Campbell, however, is his own man, not least in the triple challenge he throws the direction of Tim Steed, who plays all the other characters in The Pride. Steed gets a delicious visual gag early on as a fetish-prone rent boy and then a tumultuous second-act soliloquy, playing a blokish magazine editor who has his own "personal connection to the gay thing."
The Pride, meanwhile, makes all manner of connections of its own. Let's have more from Campbell, please, and soon.
You can't help but admire the strength of the acting, and the script does has some nice touching moments, but ultimatley the play has nothing new to say about modern gay life. It feels dated, even though it is obvioulsy new. - Matt Woods
03 Dec 08
It would be 5 stars for the magnificent acting of all concerned particularly Bertie Carvel who is just heartbreaking. But the problem is the play which, while cleverly pointing out what has and had not changed in 50 years, has nothing new to say. - fred
03 Dec 08
This is a beautifully acted and well staged prodiction. All performances were spot on and some of the finest I've seen on stage all year. I particularly loved Lyndsey Marshall whose character Sylvia both in 1958 and 2008 seemed the strong one who was loved by everyone and gave that love freely in return. It seems wrong to single one performance out as all were outstanding and I heartily recommend this production which shows that whilst the issues may be different, that sense of sadness and unfulfilment can be just as strong in 2008 as it did 50 years earlier. - Paul Wallis
28 Nov 08
Pin sharp performances from Bernie Carvel, Oliver, JJ Field, Philip, and Lyndsey Marshall, Sylvia who managed to elicit a round of applause after one particular scene and all ably supported by Tim Steed playing three characters. However, it had more than a whiff of a gay Brief Encounter about it all for my liking. The tortuous scenes between Philip as he denied the affections of Oliver were so stilted that it slipped into parody. I even began to hear touches of Around the Horne! Quite what the writer was trying to get at I have to say was lost on me. It all seemed so terribly dated and for no obvious reason. Was it about promiscuity, or how "lucky" gay men are today, certainly in the West, or what? Having said that this is the first produced play from this writer, Alexi Kaye Campbell, and it ia highly watchable. A terrific debut. Well done! - rds
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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