Synopsis Contentedly full of good Italian food and drowsy with wine, four holidaymakers are relaxing on the terrace of a villa in Tuscany. Suddenly, out of the evening shadows, there appears a fugitive - a man who claims to possess long-hidden knowledge that is both momentous and dangerous - an enigma involving the Vatican's Secretary Archieve, an Italian dealer in antiquities, and a Jewish preacher known as Yeshua Ben Pantera. And the answer to this riddle.....?
God only knows what God Only Knows is doing in the West End. This new play by Hugh Whitemore toured the regions earlier in the year, and looked like mercifully expiring there. But it's suddenly been resurrected for a new life.
Whitemore is another senior English dramatist who has fallen out of favour, luck, or both lately, and, like Simon Gray (whose fortunes have recently been restored with the fine Japes at the Haymarket), has seen his immediately prior work to this fail to reach the West End.
In Whitemore's case, however, his last one - Disposing of the Body, seen at Hampstead Theatre - was far superior in every way to this verbose and unconvincingly executed theological thriller. Such things don't come along every day - thank God. If there is a God, that is... which is the rhetorical, and inevitably unanswered, question that lingers over and permeates the play.
The evening peace of a Tuscany holiday of two English couples is suddenly shattered by the arrival of a stranger in their midst, Humphrey Biddulph, an English expert in medieval manuscripts who has lately been working at the Vatican.
He has just had a car accident nearby, and has recently stumbled upon a deadly theological secret that could destroy the very precepts of Christianity itself. More urgently, he needs to avoid being destroyed by the Vatican - which has a vested interest, of course, in ensuring that this news doesn't reach the outside world. Thus is the basis of Whitemore's drama improbably set up. It goes on to lurch from unbelievable thriller to a still more unbelievable discussion on the nature of religious belief.
Well, i enjoyed it. Anyting that brigns Derek Jacobi back into the West End has got to be a good thing. More please! - USER: Whatsonstage.com
06 Apr 01
You'd expect a bit more from Derek Jacoby. The acting is as always immaculate but the play is banal, presenting as scoops a few well known truths.It does'nt even raise a serious theological discussion let alone an insight into life. In short- derek find another project soon- old will wrote one or two good parts we'd love to see you in! - USER: Whatsonstage.com
Opened 16 Apr 1870. Front re-constructed in 1890. 694 seats. Member of the Society of London Theatre. Each year there will be, from 1997, an Autumn to Spring Variety Season. The theatre is run by Max Weitzenhoffer.
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