Synopsis The Secret Rapture, first produced at the Royal National Theatre in 1988, was hailed as one of the best plays since the war. It is both a comedy of contemporary manners and a morality play - a timeless tragedy that deals with the nature of good and evil. Its themes are family, religion, politics, madness and sex. In a review written shortly afterwards the critic Michael Billington described it as a 'deeply optimistic play which says that the English virtues of tolerance, consideration and humanity will in the last resort triumph over the historical aberration of Thatcherism....that harmony and peace will return to our diseased, temporarily unrecognisable Britain.' The plays contain scenes which have adult language and nudity.
Just a week after David Hare's latest play The Permanent Way - about the state of the railways - premiered in York on its London-bound national tour, so the West End now offers up a still shockingly pertinent revival of his 1988 'state of the nation' play that argues with a Shavian intensity against the kind of values that the then-ruling Conservative government brought to the fore.
But if this mostly compelling production proves nothing else, it also sadly shows that the play (and the times that it reflects) has lost little of its force now that we're into a second term of office for New Labour. Instead of being about the specifics of those in power then (and one of its leading characters is actually a holder of junior office in that government), it's a timely reminder of the universality of the human impulses of greed on the one hand and the price to be paid for idealism on the other that transcends mere party politics.
In the process, too, Guy Retallack's intelligently realised production tests the strengths, but also exposes some of the weaknesses, of a play that revolves around notions of good and evil and how, as Hare immodestly says in a programme note, he stumbled on a "this magnificent theme: that good people bring out the worst in all of us."
As two adult sisters convene at the bedside of their dead bookseller father, Marion (Belinda Lang) - a Junior government minister in the Department of the Environment -- is all pent-up aggression and defensiveness, while Isobel (Jenny Seagrove), a graphic designer, grieves more calmly. Soon, the long-term fissures in their relationship are exposed over their handling of their young, now widowed, stepmother Katherine (Liza Walker), a damaged waif of a thing who is quickly identified as an abusive alcoholic.
When the do-gooder Isobel lets Katherine into her life and gives her a job at her graphic design agency, a destructive force is unleashed, but Marion and her businessman husband Tom (Peter Egan) persuading Isobel and her partner Irwin (Simon Shepherd) to expand their business proves to be even more fatal.
It's a plot that not only supports a raft of ideas to be eloquently expounded, as in a play by George Bernard Shaw, but also creates a platform for several electrifying encounters between these contrasting characters that provide a gripping, compelling study in human behaviour, beautifully articulated in all of the performances. Only towards the end, when it tips the usually reliable Lang into a display of shrill, strident hysteria, does the play and the playing of it lose its grip. It also boxes Seagrove's character, Isobel, into such a tight corner that a melodramatic conclusion is the only possible outcome, and so it proves.
But Seagrove - who has never been better - appealingly conveys the pain behind the self-sacrifice, and Walker, following a performance as a similarly disruptive waif that she played in Patrick Marber's Closer with which she made an indelible mark a few years ago, is superb, too, at catching her character's vulnerability and manipulation.
Peter Egan plays it for laughs, and provides just about the only saving grace of the evening. Jenny Seagrove is awful - does she have a problem with neck and shoulder muscles as all she can do is turn with her whole body and her arms are permanently glued to her side. David Hare had a gem of a good idea, but then forgot to develop it, e.g. to include realistic characters. "Secret Rapture" alludes to the supposed moment of elation a nun experiences just as she dies - well this play is the corpse: it should long ago have returned to its maker. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.128.173.20)
13 Feb 04
Took my 15 year old daughter to see this, and we were both very impressed by Belinda Lang and Peter Egan, however what was wrong with Jenny Seagrove's acting? Almost non-existent in the first half - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.64.234.236)
08 Feb 04
Prententious and badly written. According to the programme notes, David Hare wrote this very rapidly and it showed. The acting was far too self conscious. Not sure if Jenny Seagrove's acting was bad or it was a one dimensional character. Highlights were both Peter Egan and Liza Walker's performances. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.154.40.211)
13 Jan 04
Fantastic performances from Peter Egan and Belinda Lang. David Hare at his best in this sometimes dark but moving piece - yet still moments that make you laugh heartily. Thouroughly recommended. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.34.14)
02 Jan 04
A great play and really well acted. A must see! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.34.14)
26 Dec 03
Interesting and well acted - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.189.229.61)
17 Dec 03
I was very impressed. Belinda Lang is amazing and accurately reminds you of all the reasons why the Tories became so loathed. Jenny Seagrove's character is so wet you expect her to leave a puddle. Well worth seeing. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.225.131.65)
05 Dec 03
What a show. Whilst dealing with serious matters (Death and relationship breakdowns), the cast handled this very well and still managed to get a lot of humour from David Hare's script. Peter Egan's line about Christian Businessmen will live with me for many years to come. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.200.154.253)
03 Dec 03
Great production of a great play. Maybe a little bit dated in parts but the strong performances make up for it. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.122.164.75)
28 Nov 03
Jenny Seagrove - never been better ????
true - she is always appalling and so she is in this limply directed revival -thank goodness for Peter Egan and Belinda Lang (and David Hare). - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.34.10.193)
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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