Synopsis England in the 1920s - the post-War party is in full swing, the English are living life to the full and the enchanting if middle-aged Florence remains a sparkling beauty on the fashionable scene. When her son Nicky returns from Paris with a secret, the veneer of charm and decadence begins to disintegrate as guilty truths are confronted... The Vortex created a notorious sensation when premiered in 1924 with its brave depiction of the darkness behind the dazzle of the Bright Young Things. Noel Coward's career was launched by this compelling, stylish story of the jazz generation dancing its way into a whirlwind of desire and deceit.
The Donmar Warehouse effects an extremely smooth and seamless transition from old to new regimes in which the new artistic director Michael Grandage shines a new and dazzling light on an old text and reveals a freshly sparkling gem, just as his predecessor Sam Mendes was so adept at doing.
Grandage has given this gleaming treatment to one of Noel Coward's earliest plays, The Vortex. First produced when the playwright was just 25, the piece was nearly banned by the Lord Chamberlain who declared, "This picture of a frivolous and degenerate set of people gives a wholly false impression of Society life".
Coward's typically witty reply to the Evening Standard was to capitalise on the stereotype: "I am never out of opium dens, cocaine dens, and other evil places. My mind is a mass of corruption. That brittle flippancy and daring outrageousness - and the ping-pong dialogue of witty rebukes in his plays that made him the natural successor to Oscar Wilde - of course belied Coward's more serious intentions.
The Vortex is a portrait of society in miniature, where appearance and the pursuit of being constantly amused (and amusing) were all. But what is the cost of living lives of constant denial? Peeling away the surface glitter here, Coward uncovers a highly damaged, dysfunctional relationship between a mother and her adult son.
Florence Lancaster (Francesca Annis) is desperate to hold onto her youth and beauty, even if she can only see it by reflection in her young toyboy lover, Tom Veryan (Mark Umbers). When Florence's 24-year-old musician son, Nicky (Chiwetel Ejiofor), returns from a year in Paris with a fiancée (Indira Varma) in tow, a crisis occurs as the girl swiftly swaps her affections from him to Nicky's mother's lover. Mother and son both dumped, the stage is set for a blistering confrontation that finds them groping towards at last admitting some self-truths.
Behind the constant cries for cocktails, Coward dares his characters to expose far more urgent needs. And Grandage dares his actors to delve deep beneath their characters' artifices to present their real faces. "Don't be obvious about anything", says Florence's friend Helen (Deborah Findlay); and the joy of this production is that nothing is, not least the colour-blind casting.
Ejiofor swaps the Rastafarian ramblings of the black psychotic patient in Blue/Orange to now assume a cut-glass accent and suit as Nicky in a performance that confirms him as Britain's fastest rising new stage star. As his mother, Francesca Annis - whose own real-life partner Ralph Fiennes is nearly 18 years her junior - strikes a potentially autobiographical note in taking a younger stage lover but proves her irresistible attractiveness behind the growing insecurity.
In an outstanding production, the entire company are brilliant, but the beautiful Indira Varma, the always superb Deborah Findlay and Bette Bourne (as the louche Pauncefort Quentin) make strikingly individual contributions. This is the best reclamation of a neglected Coward play since Semi-Monde.
Saw the last night of the Vortex. It was the second time I have been and it was absolutely brilliant. Well done to the whole cast especially chiewetel and Francesca. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.31.253.21)
16 Feb 03
Excellent. Well portrayed by all. Great play, beautiful set, brilliant acting by the lead characters. Lots to think about.... especially how shocking drug taking was in those days and how we are all more than a little numb to it now. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.92.67.69)
29 Jan 03
I was expecting much more from this. I think Coward is one of the most over-rated playwrights there is - true, a brilliant songwriter and epigrammis, but someone whose plays seem incapable of presenting real people.
This is a shockingly dated play: it is ludicrous to a 2003 audience that mother should have the vapours because her rich, spoiled, musician son is taking cocaine is laughable (it would be more radical in having such a person not tooting a bit of charlie).
I was expecting something a bit more radical from the Donmar but this is such a straightforward production. Despite the presence of such a talented cast hardly any of the characters seem to resemble real people in any way (the exception is the brilliant Deborah Findlay (sp?) who manages to breathe some real life into Helen. The rest of them are monstrous caricatures. Let's hope the new regime at the Donmar does better than this. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.120.117.40)
13 Jan 03
My husband and I saw the play on Saturday 28th. We both thought it was absolutely excellent. I have to say the whole cast were brilliant but for us the star of the show is Francesca Annis - the only way to describe her is awesome. She is a great actress. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.117.133.118)
30 Dec 02
This is not up to the Donmar standard that we are used to (we might be a bit spoilt). But Umbers was good, but one thing I did notice about him was that he was the only cast member not to take a bow (he did not come out at all). This was very strange to me and other audience members. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.117.133.118)
30 Dec 02
the donmar production of this coward play is stunning
michael grandage is ensuring that the donmar continues as londons leading theatre
the whole production is brilliant - especially the set and lighting designs
the cast are all fantastic - i think the three who really stand out are mark umbers (freddie in mfl - yum yum!!!!) indira varna (privates on parafe) and the brilliant deborah findlay (mother clap)
catch it whilst you can - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.117.133.118)
28 Dec 02
Absolutely agree about Francesca - I saw the preview on 7 Dec and her performance was superb - she is fantastic! Such a shame she doesn't appear on stage more often!
There is great support from the other cast members too.
- USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.40.3.97)
14 Dec 02
Saw this show earlier in the week, awesome is the word to use. All the actors were brilliant but the best of the lot is Francesca Annis - a seriously underrated actress. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.31.224.2)
Re-opened in 1992. Seats 254. 1999 - Ambassador Theatre Group takes over from the Associated Capital Theatres as the landlord of the Donmar Warehouse. 2002 - Michael Grandage succeeds Sam Mendes as Artistic Director of the Donmar. Nick Frankfort succeeds Caro Newling as Executive Producer.
Whatsonstage.com - Discount London theatre tickets, theatre news and reviews, Theatre videos, Theatre discussion, National Theatre Listings. Covering London's West End, all of Theatreland and all UK theatre. The best
for London Theatre Ticket Discounts.