Synopsis In The Goat, during the same week that Martin is celebrating his 50th birthday, receiving an international prize and being awarded a lucrative contract, he is forced to confess to his wife and son that he's involved in a bestial relationship that will probably destroy his marriage, his career and his life.
NOTE: The following review dates from February 2004 and this production's original run at London's Almeida Theatre.
Edward Albee has long applied his dramatic scalpel to exposing and exploding the games that bind and the lies that unwind between married couples.
In 1998, the Almeida gave the world premiere to Albee's The Play About the Baby - a brittle re-visiting of his most celebrated play, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, that likewise questioned what was reality and what was life-sustaining illusion. But now, in what could have been called "The Play About The Goat", Albee offers his most sensational, not to mention sensationalist, entry in a narrowly focused but intensely examined dramatic canon.
In The Goat, Or Who is Sylvia?, the couple in question may play witty, pithy word games with each other like verbal ping-pong, but there's a very real crisis between them. Their apparently secure, comfortable marriage of 22 years is about to be detonated by the revelation that Martin, a prize-winning architect who has just celebrated his 50th birthday, is having an affair.
But it's not just any affair. While scouring the countryside to buy a farm house, 60 miles from the city, he's stopped at the crest of a hill to admire the view, and was about to get in the car when he saw her: "just looking at me...with those eyes of hers, and -".
It's not giving away too much to say that the object of his love turns out to be a goat. But the conviction with which Martin talks of her means that this isn't another of Albee's games but a real, distressing love that Martin can't fully comprehend himself. In a series of bruising encounters - between the husband and his wife, then the husband and his gay 17-year-old son, and the husband and his former best friend and confidant - Albee writes of the irrationality of love and the grip of despair that takes over as something irreversible happens and shatters the quiet certainties of the lives of everyone affected.
It's a play that treads a fine line between its overpowering emotions and the breaking of strong taboos that is wildly and fiercely provocative, yet is also frequently funny and which should ultimately be as moving as it is shocking. It requires a delicate balance (to quote the title of another Albee masterpiece) to be struck between such extremes, and I'm not sure that Anthony Page's production fully reconciles them.
While the Broadway production - the original cast of which featured Bill Pullman and Mercedes Ruehl, with Bill Irwin and Sally Field subsequently replacing them - provided beautifully judged pairings in both casts that I saw, part of the problem here is that Jonathan Pryce and his real-life wife Kate Fahy don't deliver the same degree of tension or, more surprisingly, intimacy. Fahy simply registers (understandable) outrage; Pryce, merely regret at having his secret revealed.
There's more shading in Eddie Redmayne's appealingly confused teenage son, and Matthew Marsh's defensive friend. But without the fire and passion of the central duo, the play threatens to fizzle rather than sizzle. That it still grips is a testament to vibrancy and daring of the play rather than the players.
Very good. It was fascinating and moving to see Jonathan Pryce try to explain the unexplainable to his wife, and also watch his son's reaction to the break-up of his family. I don't think any of the reviewers have mentioned Eddie Redmayne, but I think he's got a bright future ahead of him - a very impressive performance as Billy. If I had one small gripe, it is that Jonathan Pryce lost his American accent towards the end of the play; otherwise, my friends and I had a great time... and the ending was stunning. Andrew B - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.130.127.205)
27 Feb 04
Did the writer below see a two Act play? Or maybe the mat AND eve performances? Did they see the same play as me? I think not! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.43.172.241)
18 Feb 04
Well, after all the raves, I fear I was dissapointed: I thought this a surprisingly lazy, rather feeble piece, which seriously fails to get to grips with the potentially disturbing themes it toys with. Lazy characterisation - the central character is, wouldn't you know it, an "award winning architect", the standard characterisation invoked to suggest a creative, yet practical artist-stroke-author substitute. And the minor characters? Well, the "best friend" is a one-dimensional cipher at best, and while the son is a convincing portrait of annoyingly self-obsessed teenager, he has no dramatic role at all - if he were removed from the play it would make no difference to the action. More seriously, there IS no action, it's just not dramatic; the first act is a long teasing prelude to the revelation which is no revelation because we all know perfectly well what's coming, and in the second act the same accusations are just endlessly repeated - literally repeated - back and forth again and again. I can't believe that a woman subjected to such a potentially soul-destroying horror would react by simply throwing crockery around in a temper, a la 60's sitcom. And does Albee really think that a kiss on the lips between two men is genuinely, thrillingly shocking any more ? Even a "sexual" kiss, between father and son? Here and there original lines and glimpses of real feeling do break through; but I fear that in this production at least the smart comedy that Albee has set out to undermine has actually suffocated the real gut-wrenching play lying buried deep beneath... - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.122.75.131)
16 Feb 04
I watched this play last Saturday (Feb. 07) - and I'm still flying: It was absolutely brilliant - gripping - and the cast was amazing. Go see it before it's too late! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.249.127.231)
11 Feb 04
The first great play of the 21st century; an emotional roller-coaster that sets comedy against heart-wrenching tragedy and asks its audience to examine their own feelings as much as those of its characters. All this and some of the best acting in London.
(Shame on certain critics who revealed too much of the plot and treated its subject with an undeserved flippancy just to prove their own "cool".) - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.43.172.241)
11 Feb 04
Very surreal. What I would like to tell people is that if they can't cope with the subject they they should just come and marvel at the superb acting especially from Jonathan Pryce. I was exhausted by a whole wave of emmotions by the end. Well done to all. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.113.37.9)
09 Feb 04
This is one of the more surreal plays that I have seen recently, but that is not saying it is not good by any means. Albee has writen an anti the conventional American play. It has all the elements of the conventional American drama, succesful in buisness characters, family troubles e.t.c. However the main twist is that the main character is having an affair with a goat. Albee questions how far we can forget morals and just focus on love, he seems to be asking is it really bad to have sex with an animak when we are all creatures after all? I was unsure about the writing, I thought it was good but not excellent and I did not come out of the theatre enlightened about anything. However the acting is excellent Jonathan Pryce in particular, who is brilliant as the troubeled architect, and the directing from Anthony Page is pacy but lacks a certain intensity that I felt the play needed. This showed though that the new Almeida is still going strong in presenting high quality productions and I look forward to their next one "Festen" - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.40.0.241)
05 Feb 04
Great to see the Almeida back to form. At last, a new play on a bigger scale than the 'studio' productions we've become accustomed to. Albee is still an original and does not disappoint, with excellent characterisations and a fascinating storyline. The production is impeccable - all of the actors deliver fine performances and the design and staging is faultless. I was pleasantly surprised that the audience dealt with the subject matter and language in a mature way, unlike the Broadway walk-outs; perhaps our exposure to productions like 'Jerry Springer - The Opera' have helped us grow up! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (172.153.158.50)
05 Feb 04
I was at the opening tonight - what a play-Albee is a genius-I laughed,cried and left the theater exhausted from the simply incredible beauty of the acting and writing.What a must see! T.N.PB. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (64.12.97.12)
04 Feb 04
Without any shadow of doubt, the Goat is the most brilliant Albee play I have seen and I include 'Who's afraid of etc etc'. Absolutly incredible. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (64.12.97.12)
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