Synopsis The play revisits the lives of Audrey Prozorov, first seen in Chekhov's 'The Three Sisters', and Sonya Serebriakova, from his 'Uncle Vanya'. Afterplay takes place 20 years on and set in a run-down cafe in Moscow in the early 1920s at night-time.
Irish playwright Brian Friel recently caused a stir with Sam Mendes' production of Uncle Vanya at the Donmar Warehouse. The Donmar programme credited that classic drama as "by Brian Friel, a version of the play by Anton Chekhov", which seemed to rather stretch the definitions of authorship and adaptation. With this West End opening following a mere two days later, Friel lays his claim not just to the existing work of his imminent Russian predecessor but also to the lifelong development of his characters.
Afterplay picks up the stories of two Chekhov characters twenty years later. A sequel then, as so loved by filmmakers onto a money-spinner, but with a significant twist. These characters have never met before and are, in fact, from two different plays. The result is the equivalent, say, of mining the works of Steven Spielberg and 'reuniting' a grown-up Elliott from E.T. with one of the kids out of Jurassic Park.
In this case, the re-imagined beings are Sonya, the unrequited lover of Astrov in Chekhov's Vanya, and Andrey, the failed brother of the Moscow-pining gaggle of Three Sisters. Now older, sadder and more ground down by the destinies and attitudes that were predetermined in the original works, the pair meet in a run-down Moscow café (design by Liz Ascroft) to fill each other - and us - in on family developments during the intervening decades.
Whether a familiarity with Chekhov is an advantage or disadvantage when seeing Afterplay is open to debate. If you don't know Vanya or the Sisters already, you'll undoubtedly miss many of the references and the significance of various character outcomes. However, if you do know those plays, you may find much of the dialogue unnaturally expository, retreading plots and reintroducing characters for the benefit of the uninitiated.
Thankfully, this fine line, balancing the needs of the knows and know-nots, is tread as well as can be expected by two exquisite actors - Penelope Wilton and John Hurt - in Robin Lefevre's gently paced if largely static production. Despite the years and disappointments, the pair capture the inherent helplessness and childlike nature of their characters, willing themselves to believe their own feigned optimism with a few swigs of vodka and a litany of little 'fictions' and 'fables'.
Their highly accomplished performances combined with Friel's intriguingly ambitious, if problematic, artistic conceit - to explore "the afterlife of make-believe", as a programme note puts it - elevate Afterplay despite the slightness of its 70 minutes.
I would concur with the comments of others. This is a slight piece - knowing the plays by Chekhov doesn't add that much to the enjoyment of this play. It doesn't really take things much further than Chekhov and there seems to real point to this play in the sense that there is no urgency or need for this piece of writing. Both actors turn in, as one would expect, v fine performances although, that said, they're not required to do that much. At this price - Paid £30+ for stall seats, you'd be advised to spend your money on some other play. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
21 Oct 02
My three stars are an average - 4 for the two actors and 2 for the overall play.
I know very little about Chekhov and perhaps I lost some of the feeling for the characters.
It is worth seeing for the two performances. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
25 Sep 02
As a newcomer to Chekhov, I was worried that I wouldn't enjoy 'Afterplay', but I think you can follow it and understand the characters and their frailities whether or not you've seen 'Uncle Vanya' or 'The Three Sisters'. John Hurt and Penelope Wilton are wonderful (of course) and the ending is funny and moving. Yes, I share the previous reviewers' concerns about paying upwards of £20 for a 70-minute play - good though it is - but isn't that just typical of West End theatre at the moment? There's great stuff to be had at two of my favourite venues, the Royal Court and the Soho Theatre, for as low as £5 (and even 10p standing at the RC!) and now, we're faced with top West End prices of £40. Unbelievable. Anyway, rant over. Andrew B - USER: Whatsonstage.com
22 Sep 02
A very intimate, and somewhat static, play such as "Afterplay" requires an intimate theatre, and , although the Gielgud is by no means large, it was just not right. At £17.50 a ticket it was a shame to feel so distanced from the actors, both of whose performances were wonderful. Penelope Wilton's Sonya was especially touching and honest. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
20 Sep 02
I don't want to sound like a Neanderthal but I don't know the Checkov plays and so probably only squeezed half of the possible enjoyment out of this play. John Hurt was great (always a pleasure) and Penelope Wilton was excellent. At 70 mins it makes the ticket price quite high but, that said, the seats in the theatre are so uncomfortable, 70 mins is about all my knees could stand. It is worth seeing for Mr Hurt but that is about all. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
Originally opened 27Dec 1906 as The Hicks Theatre. Formerly The Globe, renamed in 1994 in part in tribute to Sam Wanamaker, so that his dream of a new Shakespeare Globe would be the only Globe in London. 983 seats. Society of London Theatre member. In 1999 Delfont Mackintosh Theatres Limited acquired the freehold of the Queen s and the Gielgud Theatres from Christ s Hospital, Horsham. The lease of the Gielgud Theatre will revert back from Really Useful Theatres to Delfont Mackintosh Theatres in March 2006 after which there are plans to refurbish both venues and to build a 500-seat theatre, The Sondheim, above the Queen s. This will be the first new theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue since 1931.
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