Synopsis In Festen, patriarch Helge Klingenfelt is celebrating his 60th birthday with his family at a magnificent old hotel in the Danish countryside. Gathered together are his loyal wife Elsa, his daughter Helene, and sons Christian and Michael. As the evening progresses, Christian feels compelled to break the silence surrounding a dark family secret. The effect is explosive and sets the tone for a celebration no-one will forget.
While Festen successfully managed its first transition from film to the stage of the Almeida earlier this year, the question now was whether it would survive another transfer. Could it manage, in the West End’s larger Lyric Theatre, to recreate the almost intrusive intimacy and shocking intensity of what we saw in that small room at the Almeida? And might three key cast changes in principal roles also disrupt what was previously a simply astonishing display of ensemble performance?
I had called this, after all, “one of the most electrifying nights I’ve ever had in a theatre” the first time I saw it (see below); and so I was ready to be disappointed. Maybe that judgement would prove to be rash; or maybe the change in venue and cast would alter its texture. In fact, I am astonished and overwhelmed all over again.
Even knowing the outcome now, or maybe especially knowing that, I find this family’s bruising, emotional long night’s journey into a day of irrevocable reckoning even more harrowing than before. It is, indeed, the most powerful drama of a family’s tortuous implosion I think I’ve ever seen since O’Neill’s Long Day’s Journey into Night. As this family makes their grim flight away from and then towards the truth, I had to stifle my own sobs in the midst of theirs.
David Eldridge’s adaptation and Rufus Norris’ extraordinary production is so densely layered and detailed that I also marvelled anew at the amazing psychological detail, rage and violence that are uncovered. But if that makes it all sound unremittingly grim, there’s also a surprising amount of humour that came to the fore this time for me, too.
While I doubted that the original cast could be bettered, they have been more than adequately equalled here by their brilliant successors. As the two brothers, Luke Mably (looking a little like a younger Rupert Everett) and Rory Kinnear are heartbreakingly good. And Stephen Moore, taking over as the father, is all-too-horribly plausible and seemingly sincere as a man finally being called to account for the damage he’s caused his children, and trying to deflect it one last time.
No less wonderful are the performances from the rest of a spellbindingly fine cast that includes Jane Asher, brittle and deliberately unsympathetic as the mother, and Claire Rushbrook as the surviving daughter. This family may prefer to forget what happened, but they never will. Nor will you: this is an absolutely unforgettable night of theatre.
- Mark Shenton
NOTE: The following review dates from March 2004 and this production’s original run at the Almeida Theatre.
After submitting one sexual taboo to intimate exposure in Edward Albee's The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? that dealt with a love that dares not bray its name, the Almeida now lights an even more powerful fuse under another still more lethal and damaging one, and detonates it explosively.
Festen, based on the searing 1998 Danish film of the same name, tackles the accusation of a father's long-term sexual abuse of two of his four children, and creates a powerful, painful and poignant portrayal of a family plunged into a desperate crisis.
At a gathering to celebrate the wealthy, outwardly respectable father's 60th birthday, his wife, now adult children, brothers and servants join to toast his health; but there's someone missing from the party. That's daughter Linda, twin sister to oldest son Christian, who it turns out had committed suicide.
And now Christian has some old scores to settle with his dad, and uses this public occasion to do so. As long suppressed family secrets come tumbling out, to the initial dismay and disbelief of the rest, the party - seated at a long table in Rufus Norris's extraordinarily tense and vivid production like a recreation of the Last Supper - faces a shattering, irrevocable reckoning.
This is an evening of gathering and eventually gut-wrenching tension that Norris ratchets up with a forensic intensity. (It is slightly dissipated by the unnecessary inclusion of an interval; it would be far better played straight through). As we are plunged headfirst into this churning atmosphere of secrets and revelations, it's difficult not to feel at once implicated and sullied: we are made to bear witness to a very private and naked kind of pain and grief, and the simple act of watching it feels intrusive.
But that's the incredible power both of David Eldridge's coolly measured adaptation of the original film script, in which the characters speak in eloquent silences as well as unbearable rage, and of a quite astonishing ensemble cast who animate it with raw feeling and eventually overpowering emotion.
As the three surviving siblings, Jonny Lee Miller, Tom Hardy and Claire Rushbrook capture perfectly the familiarity, hostility and rivalry that binds them; as their parents, Robert Pugh and Jane Asher offer frighteningly plausible studies in denial of what they're hearing, but know to be true. But then everyone in the company completely inhabits the skin of this family, and gets right under yours.
I was by turns stunned, appalled and completely gripped from beginning to end by one of the most electrifying nights I've ever had in a theatre.
Festen -Saturday evening 26th March. This play and production was a dissapointment for me after it being recommended and the great reviews it has recieved. An "electrifying" evening in the theatre it wasn't!! The play has been recast and some of the performances were woefully inadequate - Paul Nichols along with other members of the cast were inaudible at times ( I was half way back in the stalls) and lacked projection, many lines being spoken upstage with no allowance for this, consequently many lines were missed and the play seemed full of contradictions and strange motivations, which were not explained. Given the shocking nature of what was exposed at this 60th Bithday Party, the reactions on stage seemed completely unbelievable and inconsistant. Perhaps at the Almeida in a smaller space with the original cast it may have been fabulous but in a bigget space with poor projection obviously something was lost. These long running producions ought to be re -reviewed with cast changes to reflect a more accurate picture of the present standard. I would like to read the play and see what I missed!! - 81.156.105.7)
29 Mar 05
Hello
I saw last night, and i agree very much with the previous reviewer (Lesely). It is not a bad play, but no where as good as the reviews led me to believe. None of the characters really made me feel strongly for him. Good staging though.
- 172.200.2.135)
13 Mar 05
Carole Royle has taken over from Jane Asher and is fabulous - 195.93.21.100)
08 Mar 05
Terrific theatre, fine acting from ensemble. Paul Nichols and Stephen Moore led a perfect cast. Clever adaptation of comparably excellent film, but 'f-word' grossly overused! - 62.252.0.10)
01 Mar 05
A gripping study of family gone wrong, well acted and cast... each performer gave it their all. Paul Nicholls, still in my mind wearing that dirty old jumper from his EE days, finally shed it, with a brilliant performance as Christian. He was obviously pleased with himself as we saw him happily skipping down Beak Street at 10.15 with a girlfriend, as we enjoyed a coffee at Bar Italia.
Nicely staged, too, but with some moments of cringe, such as when the party goers overact having a good time. Can't wait to see the film version now... but do, go see this. The best play I've seen in a good while - 217.43.119.145)
06 Feb 05
What a thin piece; unrecognisable from the reviews I'd seen. It appears that, if you have child abuse as the subject matter, you don't have to do very much else to win plaudits. The play made no sense, with inconsistent characters (why, for instance, is Michael said to be banned from the party but then allowed in without another word, and, finally, made a Lodge member?), and an utterly unconvincing ending. What on earth is the father's last speech meant to be? An apology? Hardly: his "it's all you were good for" is clearly the voice of his truth. It doesn't make sense that the mother would suddenly change sides after years of silence.
The cast gave it their all (though were of variable quality) but I was also uneasy with the presence of the small child actor on stage: should she be part of such an evening? I wouldn't like my child to be.
Clever direction, yes, but what weak material.
- 163.1.142.173)
31 Jan 05
A strange year of theatregoing – by no means vintage, alas – was topped and tailed by two west end plays set at dinner tables. But what a contrast there is between the wetched, empty little piece called Dinner that (dis)graced the west end at the start of 2004 and the sheer brilliance of Festen that I ended the year with two nights ago. I recall moaning here that Dinner was a pitiful, self-important piece of codswallop that had nothing worth saying but said it loudly and with vulgarity masquerading as chicess. Festen, by contrast, has plenty to say yet deploys finesse and sophistication in order to get its message across.
The richness of Festen only kicks in after you’ve left the theatre, because only with a little distance can you properly see past the huge central bombshell and reflect usefully on all the little bombshells within – vanity, snobbery, racism – which make this such a powerful critique of a decaying class system that so closely mirrors our own. (For some reason I kept thinking of all those vile apologists for blood sports we keep seeing on the box.)
Bravo David Eldridge and Rufus Norris for mounting this exceptional play. I’m so glad I caught up with it at long last. - 82.34.192.109)
31 Dec 04
Electrifying acting, ingenious design, gripping story. A compelling and disturbing play, really well directed and performed, but not exactly one to take the girlfriend to! But still, a powerful experience. - 81.156.178.164)
31 Dec 04
Very strong acting and a very moving piece of straight drama. - 195.93.34.11)
17 Dec 04
Not really sure that this subject matter should be entertaining. It was though and Luke Mably as Christian was tremendous. When he was believed by his horrible family I felt like punching the air so I did get involved. Well written and well produced but fundamentally unpleasant hence the lack of the fifth star. - 193.118.206.221)
Opened 17 Dec 1888. 959 seats. [Bought from Andrew Lloyd Webber and now owned by Broadway producer Max Weitzenhoffer and Nica Burns. Society of London Theatre member.
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