Reviews

Mouth to Mouth

Note: This review dates from February 2001 and the production’s original run at the Royal Court Theatre.


There’s a seam of such naked intimacy running through Kevin Elyot‘s
work that one often feels as if eavesdropping on very private
moments. The slow-burning but devastating emotional revelations in his plays
(as well as physical exposure, in the case of My Night with Reg) turn
the audience into voyeurs.

His latest play, Mouth to Mouth, receiving its premiere at the Royal
Court (where My Night with Reg also originated), is no exception; but
it is also an altogether exceptional work, revealing the author to be
writing with astonishingly heartfelt grace and heartbreaking maturity about
grave and personal matters: illness and loss, friendship and unrequited
heartache, love and work.

These are familiar and recurring themes in his work, and he once again
employs similar dramatic techniques to before, such as a highly accomplished
use of shifting time frames between scenes. On this occasion, these work to
not only layer but also fracture the action, with the opening and closing
scene taking place in the present and the rest of it working as a flashback
from that moment. The play that results is full of intricate patterns, quiet
suspense and gathering revelation. It earns its power and charge from being
always understated but carefully revealing, as tender as it is truthful, and
ultimately as shocking as it is searing.

The play concerns Frank, a middle-aged and physically ailing gay playwright
(Michael Maloney) and his best friend Laura (Lindsay Duncan),
around whom an everyday family reunion – with the return of her adored
teenage son Phillip (Andrew McKay>) from a holiday in Spain and that
of her husband’s younger brother (Barnaby Kay) and wife (Lucy
Whybrow
) from living in Australia – turns ultimately to tragedy.

As beautifully directed by Ian Rickson, who did similarly sterling
work on Elyot’s last play, The Day I Stood Still at the National’s
Cottesloe Theatre, it feels true throughout. And Rickson’s exemplary actors
– who also include Adam Godley as Frank’s doctor friend and Peter
Wight
as Laura’s emotionally spurned husband – respond to it with
performances that ache with the intensity as well as banality of real life.

Mark Shenton