Synopsis Brandon is prepared to go to any lengths to inject some excitement into his life. When he and his impressionable friend Granillo murder a fellow student, they place the body in a wooden chest. In a macabre twist the pair invite some acquaintances, including the dead man's father, to a party where the chest and its gruesome contents serve as a supper table. As the horror and tension reaches a climax, will the two murderers' nerve hold out or will the suspicious Rupert Cadell discover their ghastly secret? Premiered in 1929, and later adapted as a film by Alfred Hitchcock.
Patrick Hamilton’s macabre 1929 psychological thriller Rope is best known as the Alfred Hitchcock movie, but the relocation to New York and the celebrated continuous long takes drained the piece of much of its tension and flintiness.
Roger Michell’s revival at the Almeida is the best I’ve seen and renews the shock element not only in the freshness of the casting but also in the re-arrangement of the theatre: there are new seats, and a gallery, behind the stage, where I sat, creating an octagonal “in the round” acting area and the sort of focus Michell found in the first Cottesloe staging of Blue/Orange.
The last West End revival, over ten years ago, played up the homoerotic element in the relationship between Wyndham Brandon and Charles Granillo, who are here seen stuffing the corpse in a trunk in a smoky Mayfair prologue. Their crime was inspired – though Hamilton always denied this – by the Leopold and Loeb motiveless murder case in Chicago.
But the real fascination for Hamilton was the way in which the pair first of all think they have committed the perfect murder and secondly justify it to themselves as a daredevil escapade, allowing critics who read their programme notes to say things like “holding the mirror up to Nietzsche”.
It’s a most unusual thriller whose quasi-denouement hinges on the discovery of a stray ticket to the Coliseum Theatre. The boys are rumbled by the extraordinary character of Rupert Cadell, a lame poet and melancholic veteran of the First World War; Bertie Carvel plays him, rivetingly, as a sinister agent of all-seeing worldly experience, heavily clipped in tone, manner and moustache.
Brandon and Granillo are compellingly played, too, by Blake Ritson and Alex Waldmann, one smooth and satanic, the other fragile and puppyish, destroyed by the consequences before they even kick in.
The clammy morbidity of the party scene, drinks and crockery laid out on the disguised coffin, is all the more effective for the dry indifference in the playing of Michael Elwyn as the victim’s father, the blank sweetness of Emma Dewhurst’s Mrs Debenham and the daffy delight of Phoebe Waller-Bridge as the good-time girl, Leila Arden.
With Mark Thompson’s spot-on design and Rick Fisher’s wonderfully atmospheric lighting, the whole show is like Pinter by gaslight, strange, hypnotic and suitably chilled for this time of year.
Well it seems that if you sat in the Circle, you could hear Carvell fine, but there were real problems in the stalls. Surely an actor should make sure he can be heard everywhere in the auditorium?! - Sally
06 Feb 10
Fantastic all round, really evocative theatre arrangement, helpful staff and great lighting.
Bertie Carvel amazing and perfectly audible to me (up in the circle), tremendous performances from Blake Ritson (Brandon) and Alex Waldmann's (Granillo), leaving the dramatic humour ringing in the air while the dark tension continued apace. - Steve
03 Feb 10
I agree with all the posts about inaudibility. On the back row (Row L) of the stalls, I missed about half of Bertie Carvel's lines. Very disappointing having read rave reviews for his performance, I really couldn't see what all the fuss was about. And for a thriller, it sorely lacked thrills. - Quentin
03 Feb 10
Bertie Carvel's perf would be wonderful if it could be heard. He talks through laughs and mumbles over vital plot. Fundamental actor training gone awry. A potentially brilliant portrayal falls foul of indulgence. Such a shame, he could be blinding, he's unheard.
It's a fine production, the re-assembled Almeida a joy. The final coup doesn't quite work. The final lines of the play should do it all for you. Ahh, if only they were heard! - Vanya
01 Feb 10
I can't think of a production which has been enhanced by being staged in-the-round and Rope is no exception with all the usual problems of obscured views and muffled dialogue. The play itself is a dated oddity only coming to life at the beginning and end. In between is a lot of irrelevant dialogue which only reinforces the view that the characters have become stereotypes. There are also no real clues to allow Rupert Cadell to leap to the conclusion that the two flatmates have carried out a motiveless murder. Bertie Carvel creates a strong ending as someone who has come through the First World War and therefore places a greater value on a human life - pity about the weird camp Clousseau accent though. The sound design is superb but Roger Michell's production did not produce the tension I had hoped for. - David Baxter
20 Jan 10
We sat on the side and could not hear all of the dialogue either. We had particularly problems with the Rupert character and missed quite a bit of his last big speech.
We were impressed with most of the performances, particularly the two young murderers. Towards the end the play became quite gripping but prior to that we did not feel involved. Thought the last minute, jack in the box, a bit risible. - jan donaldson
19 Jan 10
I'm baffled by the comments from people who had trouble hearing - I was up in the Circle and could hear, perfectly clearly, every word. Having previously only been familiar with Rope through the Hitchcock film version this was a revelation - an extraordinary, fascinating play, lifted greatly by the uniformly wonderful acting - Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Bertie Carvel in particular were superlative. - Rob Baker
14 Jan 10
Gripping and atmospheric, I absolutely loved this. Regarding the sound levels I was in Row G and could hear everything. - addicted to theatre
10 Jan 10
Five for acting and three for the reconfigured auditorium. Yes it looks great, but like all in-the-round staging has serious flaws. The most obvious being it exacerbates the issue of voice levels. With the audience sat all around the stage there has to be a problem for at least some of the audience some of the time and I have NEVER heard it resolved. Bertie Carvel as the effete, older friend, Rupert is at times inaudible mainly because he employs such an affected accent that some of the best lines of the play are sadly lost. I can't help thinking that would not have been such a problem on a conventional stage. But having said that he still gives one of the most astonishing performances of the past decade and one which if he doesn't get a Best Actor award for I'll eat my hat! I was amazed at how fresh this old play still is. Clearly, credit must go to the superb acting and the deft direction of Roger Michell. There isn't a duff performance, only top notch ones. Particularly, as mentioned, Bertie Carvel, but also Blake Ritson's brilliantly psychopathic Brandon; Alex Waldmann's jittery and pathetic acolyte Granillo; Phobe Waller-Bridge, whom I had the pleasure of seeing in Roaring Trade at The Soho and more recently in 2nd May 1997 at The Bush, gives a wonderfully gauche performance as Leila. I have been thrilled of late at how much fantastic young talent there is out there on the London stage. I happy to report that the future of British theatre is well and truly safe in their hands. - rds
10 Jan 10
Disappointing showing from actors not quite up to the less than brilliant script, all that is except for the amazing Bertie Carvell who gave another brilliant showing. Silly, pointless staging in the round didn't help, where just like at the Old Vic last year, audience talking and coughing drowned out the cast. Shame. - coral
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