Synopsis This is a compelling tale of two women whose lives are interwoven in ways neither of them yet understand. Madeleine Palmer is a retired curator, living alone on the Isle of Wight. One day to her door comes Angela Beale, a popular novelist whom she has met only once before. The progress of a single night comes fascinatingly to echo the hidden course of their lives.
There's an undeniable feeling of excitement sitting in the Theatre Royal Haymarket stalls when the lights come up and you're confronted with Maggie Smith on the stage, joined within moments by Judi Dench.
These two grand Dames of British theatre have never appeared together on the West End stage so it's a momentous occasion indeed. And the ladies are, indeed, worth the wait: breathtaking to behold singly and doubly so together. Two 'women of a certain age'- not quite middle age and certainly not old age, as author David Hare writes in the programme notes; rather a point at which they have "a long past behind them, but the expectation of a considerable future in front of them" - who have come into that age with all the grace and power and beauty of lionesses.
Smith and Dench bring those qualities and more to their parts in this world premiere of Hare's two-hander. Smith is retired museum curator and free-spirit Madeleine Palmer, at home in her Isle of Wight flat (designer William Dudley's bohemian enclave with tall windows, throw cushions and flaking-paint ceiling, all beautifully lit by Hugh Vanstone in hues of seaside sunsets, sunrises and boardwalk neon) when Dench's Frances Beale, the pulp novelist ex-wife of her ex-lover, turns up unexpectedly.
Frances is seeking 'closure', "some sort of end to the pain" of her husband Martin's betrayal and eventual family desertion into the arms of yet another (younger) woman. But Madeleine, still smarting from her own decision to settle for less and "be defined by my need for this man", is in no mood to offer either solace or apology.
David Hare is a writer of great intellect and sensitivity. This latest play of his - which he admits, he found tougher to write than any other he can remember - is rich in amusing lines, thought-provoking ideas and full-bodied rants (Americans, be warned), given an elegant treatment at the hands of director Howard Davies.
And yet despite Hare and Davies, despite Smith and Dench, despite this inredible assemblage of talent, a subversive thought creeps into my mind half-way through Act One, growing and growing through Act Two until it cannot be denied: this isn't very interesting. The problem is, nothing happens. The women talk a lot - and too much about the awful Martin, with lots of he-said's and I-said's - but never really get anywhere.
Certainly, neither woman seems terribly stretched by the material. I found myself repeatedly wondering how Dench would play Madeleine and what Smith's Frances would be like. Perhaps a bit of nightly role-swapping - as Mark Rylance and Mark Rudko did to scintillating effect in Sam Shepard's True West at the Donmar in 1994 - could help to up the ante. Not that any help's needed in selling more tickets to this sell-out event.
People who dislike this play are betraying their own stupidity in not understanding its subtleties. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.254.64.5)
16 Mar 03
David Hare has always been an annoyingly uneven writer - a gem is lilkely to be followed by a dud (eg the wonderful "Skylight" by the leaden "Amy's View") but even the presence of the hardworking Dames Dench & Smith cannot redeem what is by some considerable distance his feeblest play - empty, pompous and vacuous, two tedious hours in the company of a windbag desperately in love with the sound of his own voice and oblivious to the need for such banalities as story, character, plot, structure etc. There is intelligence, sure, and there are a few good jokes, but there are also acres of windy rhetoric. Characterisation is negligible, the emotions largely synthetic, and the rhetorical devices - such as saying everything three times, saying it three times,really, saying it a third time for that added eloquence - simply a tiresome habit. Really shockingly poor, and in a fringe venue with a non-starry cast this piece would have disappeared without trace. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (81.135.14.210)
12 Feb 03
Unbeatable performances in a gripping play, making what must be the theatre event of the year. Dench and Smith really shone - I couldn't help but be wowed by this production. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.1.18.157)
11 Jan 03
Great cast, shame about the play. Rarely have I sat through anything so mind-numbingly boring. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.217.253.5)
24 Dec 02
The Dames did not do themselves any favours by doing this play - except maybe a nice Christmas bonus for the pension fund - as it was a poor play, not fully realised. Like visiting a museum. And the Haymarket, oh dear, playwrights now write small stuff for intimate venues and the big theatres should stick to musicals. This production with its stars and a team to die for just did not deliver. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.117.133.118)
09 Dec 02
DO NOT MISS THIS PRODUCTION and your chance to see two of the greatest living actresses (Dames Maggie Smith and Judi Dench) together. I saw it Monday Nov. 4 and it was one of the most thrilling theatrical experiences ever.GO !!! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (205.188.209.78)
06 Nov 02
Very disappointing play - it ended without having really said anything innovative or intersting.
But Judi and Maggie were great - even if they could do these roles with their eyes closed! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.189.217.70)
06 Nov 02
I'm sorry to say that I was very disappointed in the play and I think Terri's review on here is fairly accurate. Listening to two women go on and on and on about a fella who was obviously an utter a**hole really wasn't that interesting. I felt so disappointed that this was the material the two Dames had to work with. I'm afraid I didn't see anything deep or multi-layered about it-they both went out with a guy and got dumped for a younger model. No conclusions of any kind were reached and I couldn't see what the play was trying to say. Judi seemed to be struggling with her throat on Friday sadly. Maggie Smith was terrific, but she did have the much better part - I'd like to see her in something more meaty. They could have done a performance of the song "I know him so well" ala Elaine Paige/Barbara Dickson-as this basically was the theme of the play. Sure, there was the odd moment about civil rights and some anti-american comments, but the main thrust of the play seemed to be an almost soap opera style plot that went nowhere.
I'd have to agree with Lee on this one. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.117.133.118)
28 Oct 02
One could wait a lifetime to see such a pairing on the stage. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
25 Oct 02
'The Breath of Life' is a flabbergastingly good play - I've rarely seen a new play reach for so much. On the surface it concerns two women meeting who have earlier in their lives shared the same man, but this is not what the play is about; almost effortlessly, David Hare uses this scenario to look at our need to salvage and repair, our need to communicate, and how we communicate - and when we talk, whether we're actually conversing or not, how much what we do is about the self and how much is about others, and the point of fiction, the use of fiction, what 'truth' actually subsists of...it's so superloaded. And for such an exquisite, beautiful and sad play to be articulated by not only two astonishingly balanced actors but by an amazing director and perfectly complimenting design, you get - or at least I got - even more than one would have anticipated from this high-profile production. - USER: Whatsonstage.com
Opened 29 Dec 1720. Closed in 1737 (partly for attacking the government), re-opened 1747. The current theatre opened on 4th July 1821 and was designed by Nash. The last theatre in London to use candles (1837). 888 seats. Society of London Theatre member.
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