Synopsis Based on true events, On the Rocks delves into the lives of D H Lawrence, his German wife Frieda and their close friends John Middleton Murry and Katherine Mansfield. The unlikely foursome attempt to set up an alternative existence, shunning the confines of the war-torn cities in favour of communal living in a remote village in Cornwall.
No, this isn’t the satire by Bernard Shaw set in the cabinet office of Number Ten, though there are odd moments when I wished it were. Instead, Amy Rosenthal’s new comedy is a study in friendship and communal living in Cornwall in 1916. D H Lawrence and Frieda have invited Katherine Mansfield and John Middleton Murry to come and live next door.
Murry had met Lawrence in 1914 but didn’t marry Mansfield until 1918, and the heart of the play is poised somewhere between the publication of The Rainbow and the writing of Women in Love, a novel (and Ken Russell film) directly alluded to when Ed Stoppard as the bearded wonder strips to the buff and invites Nick Caldecott as Murry – easily the most attractive, interesting performance of the night -- to express his manly side and wrestle with him in front of the cottage fire.
While being diligent with her sources, including Mansfield’s wonderful journals, Rosenthal – daughter of the peerless late Jack and his wife Maureen Lipman – has avoided many of the pitfalls of domestic strife among the famous by writing strongly and sensibly about the characters, so that you don’t feel too bludgeoned by heritage-style chit-chat.
There’s a bad moment, though, when Tracy-Ann Oberman as Frieda reads two lines of the new novel and acidly remarks that a book about women in love is really all about the men. And Paul Burgess’s design is an over-priced, over-literal, off-putting construction of plastic bricks, turrets and garish colours with a token view of the wild-flower cliff vistas you wish engulfed the whole stage.
Oberman’s Frieda is a well-judged Jewish comic turn that suggests her lust for Lawrence was almost as keen as her taste for cream cakes, while Charlotte Emmerson’s chiselled Mansfield hints at the rough man’s pulling power and her own suicidal tendencies rooted in a peripatetic existence since leaving New Zealand.
Stoppard is a game and hearty Lawrence, spitting out his routine objections to the Bloomsberries at Garsington, but there’s something a bit “put on” about the performance. Clare Lizzimore’s production is good at the ingrown communal vision and invites comparison (unflattering, I’m afraid) with Bloody Poetry, Howard Brenton’s play about the Shelleys and Lord Byron on Lake Geneva at this address two decades ago.
Saw this play at the end of its run. I suppose the most fascinating part of it was the play itself. It was obviously well researched and there were some cracking lines. I never really believed that Ed Stoppard was D H Lawrence. It was just too theatrical a performance for my liking.Perhaps it was his accent? Sound performances overall though from the rest of the cast made for an interesting evening. Not sure about that set! Bit plastic.. - Stuart
Eton Avenue Swiss Cottage Inner London London NW3 3EU
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020 7722 9301
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Swiss Cottage (LT)
Description
[TMA] member. Housed for 40 years in a 'temporary' prefab. In 1999, the Arts Council of England awarded the theatre a National Lottery grant of £9.86 million to fund a new building. The new Hamstead Theatre opened in 2003. The Hampstead Downstairs is a studio space dedicated to new writing.
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