Synopsis What happens when two sets of parents meet up to deal with the unruly behaviour of their children? A calm and rational debate between grown-ups about the need to teach kids how to behave properly? Or a hysterical night of name-calling, tantrums and tears before bedtime? Boys will be boys, but the adults are usually worse - much worse.
A power cut added extra drama to the opening last night (25 March 2008, previews from 7 March) of Yasmina Reza’s new comedy God of Carnage at the West End’s Gielgud Theatre (See Also Today’s 1st Night Photos).
An hour into the press performance, the on-stage lights waned. A few minutes later, the four-strong cast - Ralph Fiennes, Tamsin Greig, Ken Stott and [Janet McTeer - carrying on in semi-darkness, were interrupted by a stage manager who explained that the theatre (in fact, all of the theatres on that part of Shaftesbury Avenue) had been hit by a partial power cut that had knocked out the stage lighting and sound desk.
Producers Pugh and Rogers and theatre owner Cameron Mackintosh asked the audience to remain patient. After a 15-minute break and Pugh’s declaration that the show must indeed go on, the performance resumed with the house lights up, minimal “working lights” on stage and sound effects (mainly, regular phone ringing) left to the collective imagination.
God of Carnage revolves around two sets of parents who meet to discuss a playground altercation between their 11-year-old sons. The English-language premiere reunites for the first time the team behind Art, which ran for eight years in the West End - translator Christopher Hampton, director Matthew Warchus and producers David Pugh and Dafydd Rogers (as well as designer Mark Thompson, lighting designer Hugh Vanstone and composer Gary Yershon). The production is booking until 14 June.
Though in his address to last night’s audience, producer David Pugh threatened to “bloody kill” any critics who mentioned the power cut in their reviews, few were able to resist – however, the event certainly didn’t dim their praise. In addition to “handling the crisis so deftly”, the cast were applauded for their “style and finesse” and “superlative comic performances”. As for the piece itself, while all critics greatly enjoyed themselves and welcomed the Art team’s latest collaboration, some worried that Reza has tried too hard to make us “see her molehill as a mountain”, overburdening the comedy with inappropriately weighty macrocosm metaphors.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (four stars) – “An apparently superficial domestic comedy unravels as a grim anthropological study of fractured manners, marital rifts and drink-fuelled truth-telling, not to mention a surprise fit of projectile vomiting all over the coffee table books … Hampton’s English text has the quality of a Gallic Edward Albee. Every line stings like a poignard, and Matthew Warchus’ production, on a stark, blood red setting by Mark Thompson that suggests a tragic dimension the play grows into, is acted with style and finesse by a dream of a vocal quartet: Fiennes is the acidulous tenor, Stott the rumbling baritone, Greig the skittering soprano and McTeer the full-on dangerous alto. This is easily the best of the Hampton/Reza combinations since Art and is at the very least a big shot in the arm for new comedy in the West End. It is also a brilliantly uncomfortable dissection of the way some of us live now, and all your middle-class professional neighbours with problem children – and problems, period – will want to see for themselves.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (four stars) – “All four actors are excellent and, in Matthew Warchus' deft production, show the thin veneer of bourgeois pretence. But, even allowing for the enforced break two-thirds of the way through a 90-minute play, nagging questions arise. You wonder how the marriage of a chic radical like Veronique to a deep-seated racist like Michel has endured as long as it has. And there is a sense of accelerated Albee about the breakdown of the pales and forts of reason under the influence of a few glasses of rum: if anything, the play is too short to be a wholly plausible metaphor for the decline of western civilisation. But, to those who dismiss Reza as a boulevard writer, I would counter that she has the courage to tackle big themes; and this performance is full of delights. McTeer's voice seems to sink into her boots as she reveals Veronique's real venom. Fiennes' comic indifference gradually acquires a tragic edge. Stott also exposes the cowardice behind his macho bombast and Greig, as arguably the sanest of the quartet, conveys the sickly impotence of liberalism. Reza's commercial success is often held against her; but here, as so often, she holds the mirror up to bourgeois hypocrisy with the savage indignation of a born satirist.”
Charles Spencer in the Daily Telegraph – “One of the great things about live theatre is that there is always the possibility of things going disastrously, gloriously wrong - and last night they did just that … But what a pleasure it was to see the starry cast – Ralph Fiennes, Tamsin Greig, Janet McTeer and Ken Stott - handling the crisis so deftly. And there was something appropriate about the lights going out, for the comedy's somewhat grandiose theme is the fragility of western civilisation … Reza takes her own work extremely seriously, insisting that she really writes profound tragedies rather than elegant comedies, but fortunately her English translator Christopher Hampton always proves extremely generous with the jokes. The director Matthew Warchus choreographs the escalating violence with superb precision while drawing superlative comic performances from the cast. I never previously suspected Ralph Fiennes of being funny, but his boorish lawyer, constantly taking calls on his mobile and secretly proud of his psychotic son, is sheer joy. Tamsin Greig is equally hilarious as his wife. Janet McTeer proves outstanding as a caring earth mother who turns into a wild-woman warrior, while Ken Stott reveals shocking layers of misanthropic cynicism beneath his character's twinkly manner. I am not sure The God of Carnage is as profound as Yasmina Reza doubtless thinks it is, but it certainly offers a crackling night of electrifying comic acting - even with the lights at half power.”
Alice Jones in the Independent - "Imagine the most supremely awkward social situation you can and multiply it tenfold … that is the nightmarish scenario cooked up by Yasmina Reza in her new play, God of Carnage … Last night's star-studded audience was clearly willing her to succeed this time round too. But however much they tried to roar with laughter at every possible opportunity and cheered on the heavyweight cast – Ralph Fiennes, Janet McTeer, Green Wing's Tamsin Greig and Art alumnus Ken Stott – it didn't shine, and not just because a power cut dimmed the lights half-way through … The cast do try to give it their all. Stott has a pleasing moment when he rants and raves like a madman and McTeer as his bleeding-heart liberal wife … is a wonderfully comic mixture of earthiness and brittleness. Greig also explodes into life after a quiet start … But Fiennes never convinces as Alain, her boorish lawyer husband. He is not, unlike the rest of the cast, a natural comic and his killer, bone-dry one-liners hit the mark only half of the time … This is Reza's nastiest play yet. She has proved she can skewer the middle classes like no other, stripping back the social niceties to reveal the grotesque prejudices and cruelty not only of her characters but also of the audience. In the end, this curious hybrid of Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? and Ayckbourn-esque farce left me feeling distinctly queasy.”
Benedict Nightingale in the The Times (four stars) “With Matthew Warchus directing these superb performers and Christopher Hampton translating, the effect is tense, edgy and funny. The problem, as the title hints, is that Reza wants us to see her molehill as a mountain. Her subjects come to embrace African genocide, conflict resolution, restorative justice and the moral nature of us human animals – and, though she might retort that microcosms may imply macrocosms or acorns signify oaks, the play cannot bear such weight … A bottle of rum is unwisely opened. Emotions intensify. Alliances shift this way and that. Misogyny, racial prejudice and homophobia enter the equation. Stott sneers at his wife’s ‘Sudanese coons’. McTeer’s virtuous façade cracks when Greig, who has earlier maddened her by vomiting on a favourite book, calls Bruno ‘a snivelling little poof’ who deserved his beating. Despite a touching end, we are not left feeling that Reza has much faith in love, altruism or you and me. If we cannot solve playground rows, how can we halt the world’s atrocities? Sometimes I felt that Reza’s scepticism, rather than human logic, was manipulating her characters and determining their misbehaviour. But again and again, I found myself delighted by her incisive observation, her acerbic wit, her shrewd humour – and her stunning cast.”
The impeccable progress of God of Carnage, Yazmina Reza’s savage new middle-class comedy translated by Christopher Hampton, was interrupted by a power failure on the first night. The stage went suddenly dark, the four characters picked out in silhouette as if in a stylishly under-lit European production by Giorgio Strehler or Patrice Chereau.
The effect was not inappropriate. Janet McTeer as Veronique had just been talking about the book she was writing on Darfur. Ralph Fiennes as Alain was slumped centre stage, embarking on a speech that showed dangerous signs of turning philosophical. A meeting of two couples to sort out the playground violence of their children was becoming something else.
Then a stage manager appeared, like a spaceman reporting to NASA, to tell us we had a problem. Five minutes later, the theatre owner, Cameron Mackintosh, and the producers, David Pugh and Dafydd Rogers, stood at the front of the stalls to say that the show would go on with the house lights up and working lights on the stage.
And so it did, with barely a hiccup and a strange, eerie intensification of a social experience moving into uncharted waters of barbarism and hostility. The 11-year-old boy of Alain and Annette (Fiennes and Tamsin Greig) – he is a lawyer, incessantly on the mobile phone, she is in “wealth management” and wears great shoes – has struck out with a stick in the face of the son of Michel and Veronique (Ken Stott and McTeer).
Michel is a wholesale dealer in domestic goods, a self-made man whose mother may be ailing, we eventually learn, because of the side-effects of a medicine produced by the pharmaceutical company Alain is dealing with over the phone. Alain himself has visited the Congo and knows of the god of carnage in whose name young boys there are always killing each other.
So an apparently superficial domestic comedy unravels as a grim anthropological study of fractured manners, marital rifts and drink-fuelled truth-telling, not to mention a surprise fit of projectile vomiting all over the coffee table books – “People of the Tundra could do with a wipe,” mutters Stott, the increasingly desperate host, reaching for the hair dryer.
Hampton’s English text has the quality of a Gallic Edward Albee. Every line stings like a poignard, and Matthew Warchus’ production, on a stark, blood red setting by Mark Thompson that suggests a tragic dimension the play grows into, is acted with style and finesse by a dream of a vocal quartet: Fiennes is the acidulous tenor, Stott the rumbling baritone, Greig the skittering soprano and McTeer the full-on dangerous alto.
This is easily the best of the Hampton/Reza combinations since Art and is at the very least a big shot in the arm for new comedy in the West End. It is also a brilliantly uncomfortable dissection of the way some of us live now, and all your middle-class professional neighbours with problem children – and problems, period – will want to see for themselves.
Outstanding - in all departments. Should return with an equally amazing cast. - Ed
21 May 08
Outstanding - in all departments. Should return with an equally amazing cast. - Ed
21 May 08
Apparently Yasmina Reza is a bit miffed that English audiences find her plays funny. Well, either she has a very strange sense of humour or Christopher Hampton has taken massive liberties with the translation because God of Carnage is frequently very funny indeed. The formula which worked so well with Art is fully in place including superb comic performances from a stellar cast but the play is not as original or profound as Ms Reza thinks it is. An entertaining 90 minutes but I don't think this will live in the memory beyond the end of its' surprisingly short run. - David Baxter
14 May 08
There is some good acting from some fine actors here but other than that what is the point of this play? The characters are hideous and would two sets of parents really behave in this way to each other? Billed as a comedy, I never laughed once. Maybe I missed the point, what was it?
- Paul Wallis
10 May 08
"It holds the mirror up ..." Hmm, sounds like the previous poster has been reading their Michael Billington, thereby saving them the effort of having to develop their own response to this particular play, for which 'The God Of Garbage' would be a more appropriate title ... As a happily child-free twenty-something I can't say that I belong to the demographic that Reza is heavy-handedly trying to skewer here, but I agree with the few dissenters that - like Art - this is a smug, empty piece that's been totally over-rated. For a start, the whole "parents-behave-worse-than-their-sprogs" plot is so obvious it's painful. Bourgeois politesse masks latent savagery? Quel big news, Ms. Reza. It plays well for about ten minutes, might have worked as a sketch, but as full-length play there's just not enough depth to it. By the end, the characters' childishness seems indistinguishable from the play's own childishness; it doesn't so much 'challenge' or 'expose' anything as simply confirm a set of archaic stereotypes and prejudices that most people held before they entered the theatre. The morality is so skewed that it's the Fiennes character - crass and obnoxious from the beginning - who finally seems to be presented as the most admirable figure. And I think it's highly unlikely that anyone would 'see themselves' in this unwritten bunch of characters, since human beings actually tend to have more than one dimension ... In short, a shallow, undemanding evening for undemanding audiences who are prepared to laugh moronically at any dreck that's put in front of them. - JackT
29 Apr 08
It holds the proverbial mirror up and someone here clearly doesn't like what they see! - Found!
22 Apr 08
I am amazed by the praise that this obvious, obnoxious play is receiving. The scenario has promise, and the actors are clearly working hard, but the treatment is gratingly unsubtle, the comedy way too broad for the "wider issues" that the play is (allegedly) exploring, and the characters paper thin. It's another contemporary comedy which treats its characters with total contempt, revealing, in turn, how unpleasant each of them is and expecting the audience to agree. For Tamsin Greig fans, an average episode of Love Soup has more genuine wit, style, imagination and compassion than this mediocre piece of work. - Lostintranslation?
21 Apr 08
I wish I was fluent in French, so that I could see this play in both languages and find out how much of it is Reza and how much of it is Hampton.... and to see it with a bog standard cast, to see how much of it's success is writing and how much casting (as was the case with Art).....and to see it directed by someone else to see how much Matthew Warchus' brilliant staging makes a difference......Anyway, as it is, four fine actors deliver some great lines perfectly in a clever piece which is great at changing direction on a word and is never predictable - and has more depth than a simple comedy too. - Gareth James
16 Apr 08
Superb, just superb!! I thouroughly enjoyed myself, the entire cast was wonderful. Special kudos to Janet McTeer though! Very funny yet at the same time thought provoking. - Gertie
14 Apr 08
This is a fantastic play. You won't see better acting from all four actors for a very long time. The play is very very funny but you leave the theatre thinking about the issues raised and which of the roles you resemble. So it isnt just funny flim flam. It does make you think about modern parenting and what a mess it can become. Well don to all concerned - Margaret
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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