Synopsis "But you can’t live in a principle, can you? Gotta live in a house. And so do they. Not in this house they don’t" In 1959 Russ and Bev are selling their desirable two-bed at a knock-down price. This enables the first Black family to move into the neighbourhood, creating ripples of discontent amongst the cosy white urbanites of Clybourne Park. In 2009, the same property is being bought by Lindsey and Steve whose plans to raze the house and start again is met with a similar response. Are the issues festering beneath the floorboards actually the same fifty years on? Bruce Norris’ satirical play explores the fault line between race and property. Clybourne Park first opened at the Playwrights Horizons in New York in February 2010. His previous credits include The Pain and the Itch (Royal Court, 2007), The Infidel, Purple Heart and The Unmentionables. Age guidance 14+ Downstairs
Royal Court artistic director Dominic Cooke launched his Sloane Square tenure with a production of Bruce Norris' satire The Pain and the Itch in 2007. Still committed to tackling the complacencies of bourgeois society, Cooke last night (2 September 2010, previews from 26 August) premieres Norris' new comedy Clybourne Park, which runs in the Royal Court Jerwood Theatre Downstairs until 2 October.
Martin Freeman, fresh from his role as Dr Watson in BBC1's Sherlock, and Whatsonstage.com Award winner Sophie Thompson lead a cast that also includes Lucian Msamati, Lorna Brown, Steffan Rhodri, Sarah Goldberg and Michael Goldsmith.
Norris, an American playwright, began writing this biting social commentary four years ago. Influenced by reactions to the election of Barack Obama as well as by Lorraine Hansberry’s modern classic A Raisin in the Sun, a traditional American school set-text, Clybourne Park considers the development of attitudes towards race over time by juxtaposing the problems faced by Russ and Bev, a white couple selling their home to a black family in 1959, with the issues encountered by Lindsey and Steve, a couple trying to raze and rebuild the same house in 2009.
Fraught with separatism and suspicion, did Clybourne Park segregate the critics?
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (four stars) - "Stand-out comic performances from Sophie Thompson as the truly desperate housewife and Martin Freeman as the glibly impervious Rotarian (‘Tell me where to find a skiing negro’) no way trample over the excellent work of Steffan Rhodri as the shattered husband, Lorna Brown as the maid or Sarah Goldberg as the blonde, pregnant mute. All find parallels in their updated counterparts, and there’s a link in the personnel on the contemporary housing committee in a property that is now a ghostly, run-down shadow of its former self. It’s an artfully worked and strikingly abrasive drama, killingly funny and beautifully presented in Cooke’s production, Robert Innes-Hopkins’ design and Paule Constable’s lighting. Looks like a smash hit to me."
Henry Hitchings in the Evening Standard (five stars) - "Bruce Norris’ Clybourne Park is an achingly intelligent study of middle-class hypocrisy. Shrewd about racial prejudice, territorialism and marital discord, it will make audiences of all kinds feel ill at ease. More to the point, it’s the funniest new play of the year... PIn Dominic Cooke’s crisp production, Martin Freeman is a delight as pedantic Karl and Sophie Thompson is spot-on as robotic Bev. There’s excellent work from Steffan Rhodri and Sam Spruell, a nicely understated performance from Lucian Msamati, a punchy one from Lorna Brown, and a bright-eyed freshness from Sarah Goldberg."
Michael Billington in the Guardian (four stars) - "Norris' skill lies in stripping away the polite camouflage of euphemism to reveal the racism of America, then and now. In 1959 the debate about coloured infiltration of a white sanctuary is conducted with staggering insensitivity in front of the black maid and her husband, patronised even by the liberal house-owners... Far from trading in stereotypes, what Norris is showing is that, even in Obama's America and in the age of political correctness, racial antagonism is exposed in all its rawness when property is at stake... I'm not equipped to judge the accuracy of his observation, but, in Cooke's excellently acted production, it carries enormous emotional charge."
Quentin Letts in the Daily Mail (five stars) - "The Royal Court has come up with a cracking satire about the nightmarish tangle of 21st-century race awareness... Our sympathies are tugged this way and that. Warning: amid the jocularity are some distinctly adult lines. You come away realising how neurotic we have become about racial politics, about property ambitions and much else. Like any really good satire, this story holds a mirror to our shrewish faces. Playwright Norris has alighted on the territorial instincts of even the most apparently liberal men and women. But I am worried that this makes it all sound terribly intellectual and clever-clever. It is a better play than that.”
Libby Purves in The Times (five stars) - "I spent the interval racked with worry that this play might decline in Act II. If that had happened I would have trudged heartbroken into the night, unable to write a word. No danger, though: it roared off again into the stratosphere, glittering and throwing off sparks... Bruce Norris' premiere is billed as a satire on race and property in America, in 1959 and then the present day; but it reaches wider. Norris is occupying territory somewhere between Arthur Miller and vintage Ayckbourn, and holding it triumphantly... As self-control evaporates, a series of challenges and abominable two-way racist jokes leads to dazzling cross-play in which everyone - black, white, gay, female, pregnant, patriotic - ends up offended. Nor is the old tragedy forgotten: it comes poignantly full circle to remind us that next to love and grief, all is trivial. You don't often come out of a comedy thinking that. Genius."
American playwright Bruce Norris’ satirical racialist drama Clybourne Park – such a big hit at the Royal Court last year, and already named Best Play by the Evening Standard and the Critics’ Circle – does not seem such a big deal, after all, in its transfer to Wyndham’s.
Maybe it’s just one of those plays you don’t need to see a second time. Maybe it wasn’t really that funny first time around. Maybe there’s nobody famous in it. And the conceit of having a second act set fifty years later in the same 1959 Chicagoan bungalow is not all that innovative.
The dead Korean veteran whose parents are torn apart in the first act returns at the end of the play, to haunt premises appropriated by a black ghetto after the white “ruling party” checked out.
But similar social consequences have been addressed far more imaginatively, in parallel circumstances, by Tom Stoppard in Arcadia and Mike Leigh in It’s a Great Big Shame. The theme of geographical invasion is over-engineered: turns out, the black housing committee member is a great niece of the first act house maid.
There are two cast changes: Stuart McQuarrie, absolutely magnificent, is now the bereaved father of the first act and the embroiled workman of the second, while Stephen Campbell Moore makes a good job of replacing the more brilliantly funny Martin Freeman as the redneck Rotarian, though I note he says “a tad overweight” and “a tad unreasonable” in either act and this is surely a tad too much on the solecism front.
Olivier award-nominated Sophie Thompson swoops and dithers hilariously as a suburban gorgon and acidic bourgeoise, though she makes less differentiation between them than before. And Sam Spruell as the vicar, Sarah Goldberg as a deaf mute – butt of much uneasy laughter – and Lorna Brown and Lucian Msamati as a married “slave” couple who exact some sort of updated revenge, are all terrific.
But the play depends for take-off, finally, on some outrageous joke-spinning in the last quarter: and it may be the case that Clybourne Park is remembered, if at all, as the one where a black woman asked why a white woman was like a tampon, and got a reply I couldn’t possibly repeat on a family website.
Dominic Cooke’s direction is smart and sassy, and Robert Innes Hopkins’ design, beautifully lit by Paule Constable, is magically transformed from a place to live in to a place to fight over. But I’m not convinced the play is as good as I first thought it was: perhaps, at the Court, it was just a delightful surprise.
- Michael Coveney
NOTE: The following FOUR STAR review dates from 2 September 2010, and this production's premiere at the Royal Court
As in Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia, or Mike Leigh’s It’s a Great Big Shame!, American playwright Bruce Norris’ lacerating new comedy paints the present over the past in the same location and finds echoes and ironies in the passage of history between four walls.
It’s a stunningly well written and crafted history play, a worthy follow-up to Norris’ The Pain and the Itch with which Dominic Cooke so notably began his Royal Court regime three years ago.
And it detonates uncomfortably revealing racist jokes and paybacks across the decades as a once white housing community is invaded, fifty years later, by white middle-class home-seekers in a black ghetto on the same patch.
The first act in the Chicagoan bungalow on Clybourne Street in 1959 is an acrid suburban farce, a marriage torn apart by the death of a son in the Korean War, with neighbourly intrusions from the vicar, a racist Rotarian and his deaf wife and the bullish husband of the black housemaid.
Stand-out comic performances from Sophie Thompson as the truly desperate housewife and Martin Freeman as the glibly impervious Rotarian (“Tell me where to find a skiing negro”) no way trample over the excellent work of Steffan Rhodri as the shattered husband, Lorna Brown as the maid or Sarah Goldberg as the blonde, pregnant mute.
All find parallels in their updated counterparts, and there’s a link in the personnel on the contemporary housing committee in a property that is now a ghostly, run-down shadow of its former self.
It’s an artfully worked and strikingly abrasive drama, killingly funny and beautifully presented in Cooke’s production, Robert Innes-Hopkins’ design and Paule Constable’s lighting. Looks like a smash hit to me.
The Royal Court has replaced the Young Vic as my most irritating theatre. Not all its patrons live in Kensington and Chelsea so starting a matinee at 3.30 pm is inconsiderate at best. However, all is forgiven if all palys are as brilliant as Clybourne Park. I was in Chicago last week and a tour guide told us that although Chicago is now a well integrated city most ethnic groups still live in their own communities; China Town, Greek Town, Korea Town, etc. So Bruce Norris' incredibly funny play can also be said to be an accurate satire on racial and property prejudice across two time periods. He bravely confronts the truth that prejudice exists in all groups and communities but does so through an astonishingly funny script which contrasts favourably with the poor taste of Yes Prime Minister seen the day before. It would be iniquitous to single out any one member of a quite brilliant ensemble who deliver Norris' scathing prose superbly and with peerless Midwest accents. Clybourne Park has already been scheduled to follow Jerusalem and Enron into the West End which will provide an opportunity for a second visit to one of the best plays of the year. - David Baxter
02 Oct 10
It took me a while to get into this intriguing and clever play, but by the end I felt deeply satisfied by a very funny yet unsettling drama. In many ways, my reaction was similar to the same venue¡¯s Posh ¨C the reviews led me to expect a more straightforward satirical comedy, but it had so much more depth than that. There are many layers to this play, the first act of which is set in 1959 as a couple prepare to move home and the second act in the same house 50 years later as another couple are seeking to demolish it and rebuilt on the land. The attention to detail is extraordinary ¨C from Robert Innes-Hopkins brilliant sets to the nuances of the acting. I was captivated throughout and there was a roundedness to the structure which I just loved.
It¡¯s rare you get a set of seven impeccable performances, but here you get that and more as each actor has two very different roles. They¡¯re all terrific ¨C Steffan Rhodri morphs from bereaved dad to straightforward workman, Sophie Thompson from highly strung unfulfilled housewife to icy cold lawyer, Lorna Brown for servile to assertive, Sam Spreull from passive priest to gay lawyer, Lucien Msamati from quiet disbelief to assured confidence , Martin Freeman from 50¡äs racist neighbour to fashionably liberal and Sarah Goldberg goes from deaf & dependent to politically correct & defiant. Under Dominic Cooke¡¯s direction, these characters come alive and Bruce Norris¡¯ dialogue sparkles. The play¡¯s devastating message is that in 50 years everything¡¯s changed but nothing has changed. Clybourne Park is this year¡¯s Jerusalem and I suspect we won¡¯t see a better new play for some time. Go! Go! Go! - Gareth James
07 Sep 10
Loved it. Truly smart, hilarious and surprisingly heart wrenching. - LondonFan
03 Sep 10
so.. this is mostly well directed and acted, and well designed - and skilfully written - but - it's a very cold and misanthropic satire - one of those royal court plays where playwright and audience look down on the characters (who are, almost all, either stupid, or selfish, or both) and congratulate themselves on being more sensitive and aware than the people they're watching...
still, though it mostly left me cold (one can't feel any involvement with these caustic stereotypes) - and the racial questions aren't original (a truly original point of view, from anyone, might not leave those watching feeling superior), a fair part of the audience found it uproarious (all cruel laughter though - and often at the expense of truth..), so those who like their humour chilly might like it... - fred
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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