Synopsis A derelict space. Three urban cowboys. Two jaded bohemians. One woman, alone, in pain. Their lives collide and in an attempt to connect with each other, their conflicts unfold. A modern tale of love and loss set against the underground art world of London's East End.
There's a line that jumps out of Rebecca Lenkiewicz's Shoreditch Madonna that just shakes one to the core. Nick (Adam Croasdell), a hanger-on in an arty dive in Hackney, has just been having a terrible angst-ridden fight with a suicidal young woman in a black evening dress and fur coat whom he has fallen in love with. `I love you', he declares to the fragile Christina (a shimmering Alexandra Moen). `Three days ago you didn't know I existed', she counters. To which Nick replies, `Three days ago some people were alive and now they're dead'.
That strange prescience with our own recent London trauma isn't the only thing that makes Lenkiewicz's new play so startling or gives it such a sense of cultural immediacy. Sean Mathias' production, by turns tender and techno-throbbing, also has something to do with it. But Lenkiewicz, who wrote the award-winning The Night Season, has caught current speech and ways of being that ring absolutely true. She also has another string to her bow, a poetic, metaphysical sense of other worlds – not necessarily religious, though, given the title, obviously a component - to do with the ghosts we carry around in our heads of dead loves and lost loved ones.
Very different from The Night Season, Shoreditch Madonna, written as part of Soho's Writers Attachment programme, is both more challenging and messier. Sometimes it feels as if Lenkiewicz is playing with just too many strands to do with obsession, the modern way of loving and reality versus illusion - though, to tell truth, the arty bit, for all the camcorder visuals, does seem a little tacked on. This is a play, after all, about relationships and honesty.
Still, Lenkiewicz hasn't lost her ability to lighten the tone of what, at times, becomes emotionally harrowing in the hedonistic world inhabited by Nick and his friends, Michael (Daniel Rabin), Hodge (Lee Ingleby, heart-clutchingly amusing as a rookie lover) and Leigh Lawson's degenerating old reprobate artist, Devlin.
Personally, whatever the shortcomings of the play, such is the charge of Mathias' production and the outstanding performances, I remained entirely hooked. And then there's Francesca Annis, sashaying and boogieing with more grace than someone half her age. Who wouldn't cross London to see her? Sting, Trudie, Ralph Fiennes (her husband) and Twiggy (Leigh Lawson's wife) certainly did. Good call.
Exceptionally disappointing. The writer has produced some very good plays but this is well below her usual standard. None of the characters were remotely credible. The acting and the production were very unimpressive. This is not what we have come to expect of the Soho Theatre. - 80.177.231.164)
29 Jul 05
Emperor's new clothes, clearly. Indulgent, self-conscious dialogue, unearnt plot development, characters who brilliantly failed to extract any empathy from us, an evening saturated with a back story you couldn't care less about and tragically poe-faced in its arguments. At every turn, I found myself asking "why do I care?" The kind of evening that leaves the worst kind of theatre scars. Sorry. Bit of a rant. But it was bloody awful. All four of us agreed. - 62.255.64.10)
22 Jul 05
Another remarkable piece from Rebecca Lenkiewicz. Not as immediately engaging as The Night Season" perhaps, largely because of the sheer self-absorption of the characters (having a number of mates who are active in the "art world" I can vouch that it is at leaqts accurate), it is nonetheless powerful and ambitious. Her way with dialogue is terrific, and it's emphatically theatrical, meaty prose that comes from her characters mouths, and Sean Mathias' stylish production is perfectly pitched. I couldn't fault any of the acting, but if I had to pick out two performances, it would be Francesca Annis' witty, gorgeous, disappointed artist, and Lee Ingleby's delightfully gauche loner. Sometimes this is uncomfortable viewing, and there are moments when it feels a bit clever and thematically diverse for it's own good. Nevertheless, I would highly recommend it. - 195.82.123.181)
19 Jul 05
Very dissapointing.
Some great passages, esp in the second act and much to say on love and life but some parts dull and act one esp poor.
I loved the work of the boys, Adam Croasdell, Daniel Rabin and esp Lee Ingleby - great work all round.
All names to watch out for.
I shall long remembr Lee and Francesca in the 'morning after' scene.
Francheca Annis and Leigh Lawson are good but Alexandra Moen as Christina is just all wrong and total throws the whole play.
I blame the direction not the actress. - 217.13.129.151)
15 Jul 05
I found the play disappointing and cliched. Some of the actors seemed to be playing "artistic" types rather than full-blooded characters. There were some shrieking, hysterical moments which struck this viewer as not particularly organic. - 207.69.136.204)
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