Synopsis Lisa is a New York performance artist who used to be very ill. Her mother is a Middle American housewife who healed her racially divided neighbourhood, but just can’t get well herself. Lisa’s trying to tell us about it, but it turns out that putting your attention-averse mother onstage with you is a really bad idea.
Even allowing for the fact that this is a West End filler between Rain Man and Three Days of Rain – a brief shower, perhaps – Well is a bad news addition to the West End list, a self-conscious stand-off between mother and daughter that doesn’t justify its theatrical promotion from a small studio space to the middle of Shaftesbury Avenue.
Whatever real edge the piece might have once had has been blunted in transit from New York, where the author and performance artist Lisa Kron played herself in a solo show – with other people – about issues of health. It’s a rant about allergies and Jewishness, not unlike, in shape and content, Joan Rivers’ stand-up vehicle last year. But, boy, does it push its luck on the “meta-theatrical” front with its endless nudge-nudge at the audience. Pirandello this ain’t, but he’s guilty.
Kron, played deftly and even delightfully by Natalie Casey from Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps on television, is recounting her medical history in an allergy unit, continuously undermined by her own mother, Ann Kron, whose own personal history as a neighbourhood activist has been submerged in hypochondria and general signs of senility.
Funny? You could see how it might be, but not all that easily. I was more sympathetic to Lisa’s problems with staying awake and keeping a focus. And oddly enough, Eve Leigh’s direction, which gained plaudits in the intimate Trafalgar space, militates against comic ding-dong here by leaving Sarah Miles as Ann stranded upstage on a sofa bed, covered in a blanket. Not until Miles gathers herself up for her big speech towards the end does her acting get a grip, and by then you’re just aching for the thing to finish and have done with it.
Interruptions to the play and apologies for “this mess” acquire the wrong sort of reality in this context, and the quartet of actors playing other roles and stage management – Oliver Chris, Jason Rowe, Maggie Service and Zara Tempest-Walters – achieve an accelerating opposite of welcome popularity with every reiteration of the show’s artificiality – shucks, it’s only theatre, and we’re only actors. Gee, we’re only the audience, and we might as well have stayed home.
very good performance from Casey, but that was the only positive. there is no break, if there was i wouldnt return to my seat. - karen
25 Jan 09
Really enjoyed the perfomance of Natale Cassey. The idea that the play was supposed to be confusing and under par gave the rest of the cast very lttle to aim for. Was suprised by Sarah Miless, thought she worked well with what was there. - Phillip Webster
23 Jan 09
Thoroughly enjoyed this play which cantered on at a good pace throughout. Both Sarah Miles and Natalie Casey gave excellent performances. Perhaps the secret of enjoying theatre like this is to sit back and enjoy rather than rack your brains for the meaning of life! - Mike Best
23 Jan 09
Weak, self-indulgent and overlong play. The performances were good but could not overcome the conceit. - JH
23 Jan 09
How dis this get transferred. It is an awful play that leaves you more confused than anything i have every seen. - Havel
15 Jan 09
Most people were walking out - its that bad. There is no break and I think this is because they know you will not return to your seat. Don't go its a waste of good money - Kay
10 Jan 09
The play is ok, but it is so innately claustrophobic and self-conscious that it was never going to succeed in a West End hangar. The fine work of Casey in particular is wasted.
Nice to see Sarah Miles back though. Shame she had a role that plays to the max the kookiness critics like to write her off for as an actress - Sars
08 Jan 09
A bit of a self-indulgent mess and I came away wondering exactly what it was about; race? health? Jewishness? The story was so personal it was hard to find anything any of the very small audience could relate to. Natalie Casey is excellent, believable and rather alone up there; the rest of the cast seem to have little belief in what they're doing- especially Oliver Chris who seems to have decided to make up for the plays shortfalls by over-acting. Maggie Service is good too. - atagirl
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