Synopsis Now or Later examines religion, freedom of expression and personal responsibility: Election night in the U.S., and things are looking rosy for the Democratic Party. Holed up in a hotel, watching the results flood in, are the likely President-elect, his wife, advisors and 20 year old son John Jnr. Every speech, interview and photocall has been carefully controlled and meticulously orchestrated, all leading up to this big night. At the same time controversial photos of John Jnr are gathering momentum on the internet. Whilst his father's advisors work against the clock on damage limitation, it's up to father and son to try and reach an agreement. Downstairs
The world premiere production of Christopher Shinn’s US election drama Now or Later, a timely exploration of the tension between liberalism and fundamentalism in American politics, opened at the Royal Court last week (11 September, previews from 3 September), starring Eddie Redmayne (pictured) and Matthew Marsh (See 1st Night Photos, 12 Sep 2008).
On election night, things are looking rosy for the Democratic party. But as the likely President-elect (Marsh), his wife, advisors and 20-year-old son watch the results roll in, controversial photos of John Jr (Redmayne) are gathering momentum on the internet and the press team are working on damage limitation. Father and son must reach an agreement.
The cast also features Nancy Crane], Adam James, Pamela Nomvete and Domhnall Gleeson. American dramatist Christopher Shinn has had four previous plays staged at the Court: Where Do We Live, Four, Other People and, most recently, 2006’s Dying City, which was this year nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in the US. The premiere production of Now or Later is directed by Royal Court artistic director Dominic Cooke and designed by Hildegard Bechtler, with lighting by Charles Balfour and sound by Ian Dickinson.
Overnight and weekend reviews were generally favourable – critics applauding Shinn’s “razor-sharp wit” and “urgent” choice of subject matter. Although they couldn’t agree on the precise running time (70, 75 and 80 minutes were all suggested), most appreciated Cooke’s “thrillingly paced” production, even if some felt the compact playing time was “insufficient to debate or resolve the problems raised”. The performances were roundly praised, with Redmayne’s “riveting” and “volatile” turn as John Jr confirming his status as one of the country’s hottest young acting talents.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (two stars) – “American playwright Christopher Shinn’s Now or Later is a deft piece of writing, skilfully directed by Dominic Cooke, unfussily designed by Hildegard Bechtler and beautifully played by a small cast including a bullish Matthew Marsh as the Democratic President-elect, John, and a gangling, emotionally pent-up Eddie Redmayne as his son, John Jr. But in a week of Brecht and Sam Shepard in London, it does not strike me as being either very theatrical or, to be frank, all that interesting … Curiously, Marsh resembles a stunted Gerald Ford in his turbo-charged dynamism, while Redmayne has the freckly, high cheek-boned look of the Kennedy clan. Nancy Crane is delightfully ditsy as a blankly conciliatory mother in a mauve suit, while Domhnall Gleeson as John Jr’s stolid chum and Pamela Nomvete and Adam James as the political gofers all play their part in sustaining the play’s temperature if not its physical urgency. The piece will sound good on the radio.”
Paul Taylor in the Independent (five stars) – “Do you want to hear something good about Prince Harry, something that hasn't been spun by the Palace and that does not involve the armed forces or ‘extras’ from the third or developing worlds? Well, I suspect that he may have partly – and wholly inadvertently – inspired a controversial new play of razor-sharp wit and explosive canniness … Prince Harry is not troubled by conspicuous intelligence, and his hormonal life is simple. John, Shinn's preppy protagonist, is gay, the survivor of a teenage suicide attempt and is very intelligent … Eddie Redmayne is superb. Eyes glittering with wit and wounded sensitivity, he shows how John is both damaged goods and the goods … Matthew Marsh is equally good as the burly president-elect, his sleep-deprived eyes darting little glances of calculation as he tries to manoeuvre his son into authorising the all-important apology. The play raises deep questions. Should liberals respect the religious views of theocrats who may abuse that right to smuggle through hateful political baggage? And how far should you misrepresent your post-election intents to gain power? Unmissable.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (three stars) – “Young American playwright Christopher Shinn certainly has sharp political antennae. His new play tackles freedom of speech, the dangers of disrespect to Muslims and the embarrassments caused by presidential offspring. I admire Shinn for addressing the big issues. I just feel that, in adhering to the currently fashionable 80-minute playwriting rule, he doesn't allow his arguments room to breathe … There is enough matter here for a good ding-dong debate, which Shinn duly delivers … And, although Eddie Redmayne as the defiant John has a habit of dropping his voice at the end of sentences, he conveys all the character's gangling, principled obduracy. Matthew Marsh as his equally unbending father, Nancy Crane as his bewildered mother and Domhnall Gleeson as his loyal chum, fulfilling the role of the raisonneur in classical comedy, give fine performances in Dominic Cooke's suitably urgent production. I simply found that absorbing so many complex arguments in such a short span made my head spin.”
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (three stars) – “The 75 minutes’ playing time is insufficient to debate or resolve the problems raised. The implicit question Shinn poses about the dilemma facing John, the President’s gay 20-year-old son, under pressure from his father, is evaded rather than settled … John, his face and voice in Eddie Redmayne’s riveting performance suffused with the lineaments of neurosis and sadness, sits in his hotel room. He and Matt, a fellow student, both showing scant interest in the results, are disturbed by a Presidential aide, John’s glacial mother, Tracey a black party worker and by Matthew Marsh’s hypocritical President ... There would, however, be more sense of drama if the pictures had been published during not after the campaign. If only Shinn had concentrated on the thrashing out of an apology that satisfied intransigent John and the President. If only the play had not shot off on tangents … The President’s success in coaxing an apology from John unconvincingly concludes this flawed but gripping play.”
Sam Marlowe in the The Times (four stars) – “Playing out in real time over 80 minutes, Now or Later, in a riveting production by Dominic Cooke, sets up some of the most urgent issues facing Western liberalism and lets them battle it out in the amphitheatre of a US presidential election. With Obama and McCain's real contest for the Oval Office under way, it could not, of course, be more topical. But its brilliance lies in the way in which Shinn marries ideological debate to psychological complexity, shedding light, laser-bright and precise, on the way in which political discourse informs and shapes individual experience … Cooke's production is thrillingly paced, effervescent with wit and intelligence and superbly acted, in particular by Eddie Redmayne as the unhappily divided John and Matthew Marsh as his father, his every word carefully weighed but concealing an unnerving ruthlessness and volatility. This is highly accomplished work, thrillingly connecting the intellectual with the visceral, the abstract with the human. Urgent and unmissable.”
Susannah Clapp in The Observer – “Christopher Shinn's new play is a theatrical paradox: it's Shavian but snappy. Only 70 minutes, and pungently written, it's packed (over-packed) with debate. It has a persuasive emotional aspect; the ending, finely staged by Dominic Cooke, is a well-judged surprise. And it's cannily scheduled: its concerns could hardly be more current … In researching Now or Later, Shinn was helped by meetings with Cherie Blair and Hillary Clinton's head of communications. Matthew Marsh is very good as the about-to-be-President, suggesting the lustre of power as well as its damage; Eddie Redmayne, volatile and coltish, vividly projects distress and intelligence. Still, there's a hole at the centre: this boy, who's spent a lifetime complaining about his parents' way of going on, is now supposed to be astonished by their response to his actions.”
- by Theo Bosanquet
** DON’T MISS our Whatsonstage.com Outing to NOW OR LATER on 24 September 2008 – including a FREE drink & our EXCLUSIVE post-show Q&A Eddie Redmayne, Matthew Marsh & Dominic Cooke – all for just £25! - click here for more info! **
It is the day of the US elections and the Democrats are heading for victory. As the results pour in through the night, a problem: the candidate’s twenty-year old gay son has become a topic of heated debate on the internet, after photographs have been posted of him dressed as Mohammed at a college party. Is he really anti-Muslim? (Of course not). Will he apologise?
But in a week of Brecht and Sam Shepard in London, it does not strike me as being either very theatrical or, to be frank, all that interesting. The arguments are well expressed but deeply predictable, and the idea that a senior politician’s son would not wish to repair the damage immediately, however anxious to prove he is “his own man,” seems ridiculous.
But that is the only way the short eighty-minute play is sustained, as mother, father, best friend and party officials successively throw themselves against the brick wall of John Jr’s intelligent vanity. The boy’s homosexuality simmers as an issue and only boils over when John Jr retaliates to the pressure by accusing his father of sharing a platform with an evangelical homophobic bigot.
This exchange accelerates into a free-for-all in which the politician’s pro-Israel stance is mocked and the play collapses suddenly on a note of sour victory. Shinn is a gifted writer whom the Court have presented several times in the Theatre Upstairs. But here the play ticks too many boxes too glibly and seems over-naive in its critical content.
Curiously, Marsh resembles a stunted Gerald Ford in his turbo-charged dynamism, while Redmayne has the freckly, high cheek-boned look of the Kennedy clan. Nancy Crane is delightfully ditsy as a blankly conciliatory mother in a mauve suit, while Domhnall Gleeson as John Jr’s stolid chum and Pamela Nomvete and Adam James as the political gofers all play their part in sustaining the play’s temperature if not its physical urgency. The piece will sound good on the radio.
Three stars and nearly four - an enjoyable firecracker. Even in this 75-minuter, though, there were a couple of longueurs that made it drag a bit. However, you can't fault the performances, especially Eddie Redmayne, whose stage presence and pitch-perfect American accent, are mesmerising. If I were to pick a hole with the plot, I would say that - in the real world - the President's PR team would have drafted and issued the news statement to the media immediately to limit the damage, rather than wait for Redmayne's indignant and naive John to give them permission to check the wording. The son may have been trying to make a point about free speech but, on the all-important election night, they would have been a lot swifter to act. - Andrew B
14 Oct 08
I had to check, sorry Mr Billington I meant Mr Coveney. - rds
06 Oct 08
I've just seen the WOS review is only giving it 2 stars...Darh!! Is that Billington? I don't know as I haven't checked it out yet. And as I am in full flow I can't be arsed to do so, but if it is, he should hang up his cape and pencil now! This is without doubt a terrific piece of theatre performed by a terrific cast and led by a superb and supremely confident Eddie Redmayne as the President Elect's troubled son. I had the good fortune of seeing him in both Hecuba, at the Donamr and The Goat.., at the Almeida and he is a stunning actor. He and Andrew Garfirld are the new generation of great British actors. (And no I'm not their mums, but I know talent when I see it). The writer Christopher Shinn has deftly crafted a witty yet challenging piece of writing which disorientates our moral compass and in so doing makes us take stock of what and who we think we are. It's a terrific play, a world premiere, and just the kind of thing we hoped for from the Royal Court and don't always get. As someone here has said - "the Royal Court is back on form". Well Done and if it doesn't get a transfer to the West End it will be a crime. - rds
06 Oct 08
This is really good. The text is interesting and the delivery exciting. There is another beautiful set and the direction is slick and detailed. What more could you want? - joesmith
26 Sep 08
Extremely interesting and engaging production. Eddie Redmayne is excellent in portraying his complex character. - TS
18 Sep 08
What a relief.....the 'good new play famine' is over and the Royal Court is back on form (after it's misguided dalliance with the absurdists and some re-runs). Though it's premise isn't original, this is an excpetionally well written play which debates the issues intelligently. It balances the personal and the public story very well and the productioon is finely judged (with the exception of one moment when the father's behaviour is pushed just beyond plausibility). There isn't a fault in the casting and Eddie Redmayne is outstanding. It may be only 75 minutes, but it felt like a fully formed proper play and I left the theatre completely satisfied. - Gareth James
16 Sep 08
It's an intelligent and worthy piece, airing some important issues, with technically adroit performances and confident direction. Sadly, the WOS reviewer is right in hinting the material's not really been worked into a play: another hour, and more fully-fleshed out characters, might just do it (though that might lead to Shavian aridity - it's just his sort of talky posturing that's going on). As things are, you wait in vain for a final twist, like that delivered in a short story (my companion thought the boy would shoot himself); afterwards, you realise that you knew from ten minutes in more or less where the evening was going. Disappointing. - acheron
The first theatre opened as The New Chelsea on 16 Apr 1870. Changed name to Belgravia. Re-opened as Royal Court 25 Jan 1871. Demolished in 1887. New theatre opened (current, slightly different site) 24 Sep 1888. Famous for supporting and commissioning new writing. Probably the first UK Theatre to regularly include their URL in advertising. Member of the Society of London Theatre. In 1996 the theatre closed for redevelopment, funded by the National Lottery. The refurbished theatre at Sloane Square re-opened in February 2000 including two theatres the 389 seat Jerwood Theatre Downstairs and the studio style Jerwood Theatre Upstairs.
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