Synopsis The Dice House unfolds in a commune run by maverick psychiatrist Dr Ratner, where patients are encouraged to surrender all their decisions to the roll of the dice. Into this unique environment is hurled young Matthew, who has been sent there against his will and his charming innocence may not be the only thing he is about to lose. The Dice House is a glorious glimpse of how insane life could be if determined by the dice - and how ordinary it can be if it isn¹t! This original and irreverent comedy by Paul Lucas is inspired by Luke Rhinehart's cult classic novel The Dice Man . The idea of letting your every decision be decided by the roll of two dice captured the imagination of a generation.
Perhaps The Dice House, a play by Paul Lucas that bills itself as a black comedy inspired by Luke Rhinehart’s cult 1971 novel The Dice Man, should have been called The Diceman Cometh.
Perhaps, too, I should allow a throw of the dice decide the verdict of this review: odds I hated it, evens I loved it. Though that might sometimes seem as good a way to exercise dramatic criticism as any, one’s responses to a play aren’t quite so random that they can be decided on that kind of whim, or play of fate.
In the “Centre for Research into Randomised Living”, or Dice House, the lunatics are clearly running the asylum. Dr Ratner (Neal Foster) has put into practice his solution for the human condition, which is to decide what options are available in any given situation, and then allow chance to determine which to take by the throw of the dice. Meanwhile, another psychiatrist, Dr Drabble (Jeremy Crutchley), is hatching a plan to retrieve his dice devotee wife Polly (Lucy Scott) by getting his own patient Matthew (Matthew Noble) to check in and kidnap her.
“Chance is God”, someone has scrawled onto the wall of this Fawlty Towers institution for the mentally anguished, and as played here, Dr Ratner is a Basil Fawlty of exaggerated comic emotions. But, like many of his patients, the play could be said to be suffering from an obsessive compulsive disorder. It’s obsessive about the (lack of) logic of playing the dice to resolve dilemmas, and compulsive about proving it in increasingly preposterous situations.
Alan Ayckbourn once let the flip of a coin determine the nightly outcome of his play Sisterly Feelings, and Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents’ short-lived musical Anyone Can Whistle was set in what it called a ‘cookie jar’. The Dice House has neither the comic ingenuity of the first nor the redeeming tunes of the second. It also signally fails to have the desperate, hilarious logic of another black psychiatric comedy, Joe Orton’s What the Butler Saw.
“Dice knows best”, a patient says, after a throw has told him he has to turn himself in to the police for a hit-and-run accident – but why does it also determine at the same time that he has to confess to a load of crimes he didn’t commit, and pretend to have Tourette’s syndrome, liable to make matters even worse for himself?
Since the thrower of the dice also calls the options, the madness isn’t so much resolved in what the dice say but is demonstrated by what it’s actually being asked to decide in the first place. Should I give this show a one-star review or should I be forced to sit through the show a second time? Phew – my sanity is saved! One star it is.
A great show and we all managed to roll the dice and get very reasonable ticket prices for the west end. A play of pure comedy. Monty Python springs to mind. Dr Drabble and Dr Ratner stole the show. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.120.56.45)
20 Feb 04
I laughed from start to finish. I am sorry to disagree with your critic but he can't have been watching the same show that I saw tonight. The characters are great, the gags are hilarious and quite frankly if you just fancy letting your hair down and not taking life too seriously for a couple of hours, go and see the dice house. I went with five other people and we all came away smiling! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (213.1.45.6)
18 Feb 04
I thoroughly enjoyed this intriguing, insane comedy. Anyone who has read the book (The Dice Man), enjoyed Joe Orton or Fawlty Towers will love it. The fact that the action depends on the throw of the dice means it is always unpredicatable and the wild logic that underlines it constantly leads into hilariously surreal situations. The performances are terrific. Wholeheartedly recommended. Go and roll those dice!! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (81.99.216.182)
17 Feb 04
superb. a triumph for Birmingham Stage Company. Neal Foster was particularly strong. I loved it. The WOS critic needs some therapy. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (80.58.19.107)
17 Feb 04
The most enjoyable play I have seen in years - brilliantly written and acted - the comdy made my laugh out loud - and the underlying hypothesis that life can be lived by the roll of the dice engaged the little grey cells. (And I got lucky on the ticket price!) - USER: Whatsonstage.com (217.207.196.215)
17 Feb 04
The danger is in taking the concept too seriously hence some rather po-faced reviews. Enjoy The Dice House for what it is - a jolly, farcical romp of chance. If this play had been trailed as a suddenly discovered Joe Orton piece it would be hailed as a work of genius. It's not that - but it's fun and funny with some biting lines. It won't change your life but it'll make you laugh and there's a lot worse in the West End at the moment. Finally, Lucy Scott deserves the Synthetic Materials Woman of the Year Award for making a tacky PVC outfit very sexy - she makes you believe that suburban woman does have a saucy dark side. Now there's a reason for going! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.43.45.73)
17 Feb 04
One of the funniest and most entertaining plays I've seen in yours. Are you sure your reviewer was at the same theatre? - USER: Whatsonstage.com (81.130.76.238)
17 Feb 04
I saw the show and it was sold out last night. I can see why - it was brilliant! Sorry to disagree with your critic - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.253.64.6)
16 Feb 04
Fantastic show - funniest thing in the West End. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (194.112.52.114)
16 Feb 04
Cynics, stay away. This is definitely a night out for the young at heart. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (62.231.138.74)
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