Synopsis Set in Pittsburgh cab company in the late 70s, it tells the story of the men who drive the jitney cars and their struggle to find honour and accomplishment in a landscape of diminishing possibility. Running time 2 hours 40 minutes
Dates: Opens 16 October 2001. Oct 11,12,13,15,17m,17,18,19,20m,20,22,23,24m,24,25,31, Nov 1,2,3m,3,5,6,7m,14,15,16,17m,17,19,20,21m,21 Cont Eve 19:30 Mats 14:15, Oct 16 at 19:00
The plays of August Wilson - a fixture on the New York stage - haven't travelled frequently or too well to Britain. Now, however, the National Theatre (who previously introduced Wilson's work here when they staged a production of Ma Rainey's Black Bottom in 1989, five years after it had proved to be his first commercial success in New York) make partial amends by importing this outstanding production of Jitney to London in its recent hit off-Broadway revival.
Its director, Marion McClinton, tells John Lahr in a programme profile about Wilson, "It's August's language - the rhythm of hurt, the rhythm of pain, the rhythm of ecstasy, the rhythm of the family - which sets him apart and is why we call him the heavyweight champion." And it is precisely those insistent and complementary rhythms that are so meticulously and movingly caught by the championship heavyweight cast that McClinton fields in this production.
These actors, with the kind of totally inhabited and uninhibited realisations of their characters, are not just completely in the moment of the play's action but also in its space and place. As beautifully rendered in the set design of David Gallo, that's the dingy office of an unlicensed black Pittsburgh cab company in the late 1970s, run by Roger Robinson's Becker, and facing imminent closure.
The classic work play that follows - in which a vividly realised workplace environment becomes the setting against which everyday and epic conflicts can be spun out - has poetry as well as potency in the extraordinary detail, both of the magnificent performances and the tremendous writing.
Every interaction, large and small, is a study in human behaviour, whether concerned with repaying a 30 cents debt for a cup of coffee, or a bigger betrayal between a father and son that occupies the centre of the play. I salute the whole company who are here for a limited run of 34 performances only, and demand to be seen.
A masterpiece in human relations, Jitney is all about life: that mysterious mixture of laughter, tears and danger. Although we experience its routine everyday it still manages to surprise us. Jitney is all about life: sometimes you know what's gonna' happen after such a tensed dialogue; and sometimes you're left stunned. Wonderful set, extremely sensitive lighting and a company of elderly actors who blossom into sheer, human poetry. Jitney is life - experience it. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
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