Synopsis A womaniser is about to become engaged. Before he succumbs to commitment, he pays visits to four former girlfriends, with not altogether pleasant consequences.
“Why would I want to be pals with you? Buddies? Especially now…. So, no, I think ‘friends’ is off the list,” a former girlfriend says to the 33-year-old Man being played by David Schwimmer in Some Girls. She is one of four women he’s re-visiting from his troubled romantic past, before he finally gets hitched back in New York to a 22-year-old student nurse.
But Friends is very much on the list for why audiences might flock to see this play, which revolves around the kind of catching up with past flames that another contemporary cultural phenomenon, the website Friends Reunited, has also widely facilitated. For a decade, Schwimmer was, of course, Ross Geller in the hit sitcom.
Now that Friends has ended, Schwimmer is following in the footsteps of fellow cast member Matthew Perry to make his West End debut. Unlike Perry, who was a theatrical virgin when he came to London to star in Sexual Perversity in Chicago two summers ago, Schwimmer is an accomplished stage actor who founded his own company in Chicago when he graduated from university and continues to act, direct and produce for it there.
And he hasn’t taken an easy route here, playing a desperately unsympathetic character whose apparent need for atonement reveals a catalogue of selfish acts of flight. When the going gets tough, another of his former lovers points out, his modus operandi is to “run away and hide like a fucking child”.
Schwimmer articulates this man – a teacher who also aspires to be a writer, and has cannibalised his past for a story in The New Yorker – with an admirable lack of sentimentality but a bruising need. “I think you’re the kind of person who leaves a bunch of hurt in your boyish wake… all the time”, he’s told. And playwright Neil LaBute, a specialist in the theatre of discomfort, doesn’t make it easy for him, or us, to watch him facing up to some home truths.
LaBute’s play is structured as a series of hotel room encounters between Schwimmer’s character and four former lovers – Catherine Tate as his Seattle high-school sweetheart Sam; Sara Powell as his Chicago grad-school girlfriend who graduates him in a sex education, too; Lesley Manville as the married Boston woman he has an affair with on his first teaching job; and Saffron Burrows as the LA undergraduate love of his life.
Though there’s a certain morbid fascination as the patterns of the Man’s behaviour emerge, LaBute’s 100-minute play also feels strangely repetitive. But in David Grindley’s elegantly poised production, there is one stand-out scene of blistering intensity, as Manville’s ferocious Lindsay tries to settle some old scores of her own. It’s worth seeing for this scene alone.
David Schwimmer doesn't get beyond Ross. The play doesn't get beyond "Nurse Betty" and that wasn't La Bute's best work. I went to see this for the Neil La Bute who wrote "Your Friends and Neighbours," but he is only present in flahes. - 142.35.4.130)
10 Aug 05
The theme is a bit over-familiar (men are basically b*****ds) and the play seems a little long even at 100 minutes, but there is some very good acting here; Schwimmer quite easily shook off the character of Ross. - 86.129.127.151)
24 Jul 05
I really enjoyed this play - the cast are all excellent, and the script is great. Although Schwimmer does look and sound exactly like Ross he does not re-produce the character on stage; instead he creates an excellently tactless ‘man’ opposite some great performances from the four women. At times it feels as though Catherine Tate’s acting is slightly forced, projecting her voice and speaking very clearly. However, this pointed and blunt manner of talking is her character’s personality and the way in which she confronts the man she once loved. Sara Powell is brilliantly funny as the out-going Tyler, whose bubbly nature lessens as ‘man’ digs deeper and deeper verbal holes, while her cheery smile is replaced by raised eyebrows. Manville is also great as Lesley, who seeks out revenge rather than reconciliation from the man who betrayed her and hurt her loving husband, while Burrows makes a very elegant Bobbi who becomes increasingly angry at his “emotional terrorism”.
This play is very funny in parts whilst being incredibly cringe-making at the same time. It is highly enjoyable and entertaining - well worth seeing! - 80.177.14.225)
16 Jun 05
Not sure quite what made David Schwimmer want to make his W/End debut in this role: he does a great job (he has a very distinctive sound and look but he is emphatically NOT giving us Ross "live") but his character seems essentially a feed to the four women...all of whom have much better roles, each instantly recognisable as "types" yet with a couple of surprises apiece,and some terrific dialogue. All 4 actresses are quite wonderful and completely steal each of their scenes. If the piece as a whole seems more a series of vignettes than a full play, and is considerably less confrontational and original than much of LaBute's other work, this is a consistently entertaining, slick and elegant piece of theatre. - 195.82.123.181)
02 Jun 05
It's okay. I agree with the reviewer who said it's insubstantial, but not with the remark that David Schwimmer can only ever be Ross. His performance is good - it's the writing that provides the problem. The character of The Man, as written, would not have had the effect he has clearly had on the 4 women. To me, it would have made more sense to have the actor play a different 'Man' to each woman.
The various comments I've seen about the women acting Schwimmer off the stage, and Catherine Tate being the best of them all, are all overstated. Everyone in it is good, but overall this quite sombre play is just too lightweight to have the impact of, say, The Shape Of Things. - 194.82.50.2)
01 Jun 05
I really enjoyed the play, it is very well acted by all of the cast. Other reviews which say Schwimmer will only ever be Ross are wrong (and frankly short sighted) Man and Ross are very different characters. It also has some great comedy moments. - 195.137.35.22)
29 May 05
A really fun and interesting change of pace for Neil LaBute and David Schwimmer. It's a beautiful production and all of the women are outstanding. Fresh and clever and very telling; it was great to see a new play (and an American one at that!) in the West End. - 72.255.41.158)
26 May 05
Having seen a number of Neil La Bute plays now I have to say that this doesn't rate as one of his best. There are however strong performances - but David Schwimmer will only ever be Ross I'm afraid ... - 212.158.229.242)
25 May 05
Well, 2.5 really. It's an interesting premise, but a very insubstantail piece. The staging is slick and the four 'supporting' performances excellent. The problem with 'Some Girls' is that the play is not worthy of the production and the central performance weakens it tremendously. David Schwimmer has played one role for so long, it is clearly all he can do. I found him completely unbelievable, totally unconvincing and, to be honest, very irritating. The incessant camera flashing at the curtain calls tells us we're in star-spotting territory, so they'll no doubt fill the theatre. What they'll see is four premiere league actresses act their hero off the stage. - 81.134.72.80)
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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