Synopsis When psychoanalyst Dr Prentice instructs his new secretary to undress, little does he expect to be interrupted by his wife, her blackmailing lover, a meddling government inspector and an inquisitive policeman. But hiding a naked woman is the least of his worries, as libidos run riot, identities are swapped and social decorum is buried.
Peter Cook once famously said he went to the theatre to be entertained, not to see plays about rape, sodomy, and drug addiction - because he could get all those at home. Joe Orton’s What The Butler Saw gives us all this and then some more (though we only get to see the drugs onstage).
But this is no grim morality tale of life amongst the underclass. Rather, Orton’s last play is a sparkling and at times wild farce of order, rapidly descending into chaos and staying there, set in (where else?) a psychiatrist’s waiting room. Orton gives us the familiar farce material of mistaken identity, two-thirds of the cast down to their underwear, and mad-as-a-sack-of-ferrets authority figures, overlaid with his own distinctively taboo-busting wit which takes on everything from incest to Winston Churchill.
Directing team Ian Forrest and Mary Papadima bring out the riskier elements of Orton’s vision towards the end of the play when, after an energetic physical interlude during which the play’s two female characters are forcibly placed into straitjackets and, it seems, pushed into traumatised catatonia, the action momentarily stops dead as an eerie red light fills the stage. After that, Orton’s breathtakingly sardonic happy ending – accompanied at one point here by the Beatles’ "All You Need Is Love" - comes as a genuine relief.
Like Wilde, Orton is deceptively difficult to do well, not least because even his brand of subversion dates.This production deals with this sensibly by grounding itself firmly in the late 1960s, and Amy Ewbank’s dumb-blonde secretary, talked into taking her clothes off within five minutes of beginning a job interview, is a perfect Carry On period piece. Patrick Bridgman’s Sergeant Match – seemingly fresh from a going-over at the hands of Miss Marple - is an amusing incarnation of the stock ‘stupid policemen’ character from a seemingly more innocent age.
However, Robert Calvert’s Dr Prentice – whose predicaments drive much of the early action - appears only mildly discomfited as his world spirals towards complete anarchy. Maggie Tarney’s trip from Fanny Cradock-esque sang-froid to silenced dejection as Mrs Prentice, and Stephen Ley’s satisfying transformation from man from the ministry Dr Rance to blood-letting voyeur, are much more in tune with the play’s trip to farce’s outer limits.
This early performance found it difficult to build comic momentum, with several noticeable line fluffs as well as talking through laughs.
Overall, Orton’s jokes are well served by this production, but it doesn’t fully capture his dizzyingly irreverent vision as well as it ought to.
Located at the side of Derwentwater, Theatre by the Lake offers a whole host of events throughout the year, from visiting drama, music, dance, talks and comedy, to its home-produced work of an Easter production, a Summer Season of six plays and a Christmas show. It also hosts the Keswick Film Festival in February, the Words by the Water Literature Festival in March and the Keswick Jazz Festival in May. The first floor café is open daily and serves a range of snacks and drinks. The Stalls and Circle bars are open on evenings when there is a performance. There are also two free galleries, which host an ever-changing array of work by local and national artists. The theatre has two auditoria - a 380 seat Main House and a 75 seat Studio. Both auditoria are flexible spaces and can be used for in-the-round and end-stage performances, or flat-floored for conferences and trade fairs. Theatre by the Lake offers easy access for all its users. There are lifts to all levels and wheelchair users can get to all front-of-house and backstage areas, including central stalls positions in the Main House. The Main House has enhanced-hearing and induction loop systems.
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