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Post by cavocado on Sept 13, 2023 15:38:22 GMT
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Post by imstillhere on Sept 13, 2023 15:58:10 GMT
What a horrible title and even worse artwork!
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5,138 posts
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Post by TallPaul on Sept 13, 2023 17:20:51 GMT
Never mind Alun Armstrong, Adrian Hood's in it! This will be his his second Richard Bean world premiere in less than two years.
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5,688 posts
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Post by lynette on Sept 13, 2023 18:41:57 GMT
If this is going to be better than a titter titter joke about getting old but remaining sarky, coming to terms with old age etc…please let me know.
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Post by talkingheads on Sept 13, 2023 22:28:22 GMT
Never mind Alun Armstrong, Adrian Hood's in it! This will be his his second Richard Bean world premiere in less than two years. I remember him in dinnerladies - I'm agriphobic, fell off a diving board in Guernsey!
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1,345 posts
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Post by tmesis on Oct 28, 2023 17:27:25 GMT
This is a hard one to sum up.
First of all I would have to say it’s terrifically entertaining - for most of the play there’s a laugh on average every 10 seconds - and I’m really pleased I saw it this afternoon but really it doesn’t go anywhere and any depth, which I think Bean was striving for, doesn’t really happen. Most of the laughs are provided by the razor-sharp delivery of the double act between Alun Armstrong and Marion Bailey; also Adrian Hood as Rhubarb Eddie is fabulous. I found Hermione Gulliford and Christopher Fulford as the son and daughter much less convincing.
There is an important plot development at the end but it’s all a bit lame.
Maybe Bean needs the structure of an existing play, as in One Man and Jack Absolute, upon which to hang his sparkling dialogue.
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Post by seasider on Oct 28, 2023 19:38:28 GMT
I saw this this afternoon and am also unsure about the whole thing. Yes it was funny but I actually found a lot of the laughter off putting - yes I know it’s funny but is it really that funny? The two elderly parents were superb but I just felt the whole thing was lacking something. It is obviously selling well which is good for the Hampstead given their funding issues but I think my overall feeling was one of disappointment that I had made the trip into London to see something that left me dissatisfied.
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1,470 posts
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Post by mkb on Oct 29, 2023 11:06:47 GMT
I was also at the Saturday matinée, and concur with the previous two posts. The whole is lacking a narrative structure, and, despite the title, the play is less about a bickering old Yorkshire couple who tolerate one another but may or may not still have mutual affection but certainly have mutual dependency, and more about how neighbours can provide the support mechanisms that absent and less caring grown-up children who have moved away fail to provide. Well almost. There is a decidedly unconvincing turn of events in the shorter second act that upends this in a rather unsatisfying manner. The feel is more Ayckbourn than anything Bean has written before. The humour is at the level of ITV sitcom (and that's a bad thing, in case it's not clear), and the odd chortle is only because the lines are expertly delivered by Marion Bailey and Alun Armstrong as the ageing seniors. Adrian Hood as a caring local also excels. As the cantankerous, 91-year-old, former copper, Armstrong has a number of monologues to deliver that recount his exploits in the Constabulary of this village of Wetwang -- yes it really exists -- and the nearby town of Driffield. These are meant to provide fascinating and poignant glimpses into human foibles, but, despite being perfectly performed, they drag in act one and only come alive in act two. I notice that Richard Wilson and Terry Johnson are now billed as co-directors. If I'm not mistaken, the latter and Richard Bean were comparing notes as we exited. I hope ill health does not account for Wilson's absence. With some major surgery to the first half, the injection of more jokes, and a further twist that reveals that all of the locals are acting with altruistic intentions, I would have come away feeling considerably more sated. Three stars. Act 1: 14:36-15:48 Act 2: 16:10:17:01 Note: this preview was running 11 minutes longer than advertised. Note 2: the Hampstead is to be thoroughly commended for offering a free drink to everyone who booked before this performance was re-categorised as a preview. Other theatres should take note.
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Post by cavocado on Nov 4, 2023 15:59:38 GMT
As others have said, it's a sitcom-style play, recognisable characters, familiar situation, and I think better written than other recent plays with similar sitcom style like The Unfriend, Frank and Percy, Kerry Jackson.
It had some moments of poignancy for me, having experienced parents' ill health, and taking care of elderly relatives long distance. I didn't find it uproariously funny, but it was entertaining with some laugh-out-loud moments. I'm not sure it was aiming for any more depth.
Obviously Alun Armstrong is great, and a good double act with Marion Bailey. It was good to see them at the curtain call suddenly looking so much younger without the stoop, unsteady movement, etc. AA is one a bunch of actors who first got me hooked on theatre in the 80s/90s at RSC and NT, and he's always worth seeing on stage, but I wish someone would cast him in something more substantial - King Lear? Waiting for Godot?
Great to see Hampstead Theatre full - I could only see 4 empty seats from where I was sitting.
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4,171 posts
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Post by anthony40 on Nov 4, 2023 16:51:32 GMT
Hampstead Theatre is my local theatre and it's only a comfortable 15-20 minute walk away and I was considering seeing this. In fact I actually got a promotional flyer in the post, so all of your reviews have really helped in terms of what to expect.
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Post by G on Nov 5, 2023 22:29:09 GMT
I thought it was endearing and warm. Yes, it is essentially a sitcom, one which I'd happily watch. I probably could have watched the couple go up and down the stairs and lovingly bicker and complain about offers of cups of tea ("do I look like I want tea") and tell copper stories, without the remaining characters (the actors are all very good, but the parents are something else). The plot isn't going pretty much anywhere regardless during most of the play {Spoiler - click to view}(we are, rightly, not shown the most significant plot developments anyway - we just resume after the interval with a radical shift compared to the first half). The Hampstead really is a lovely venue with great front of house staff. Also, just in case someone is after pre-theatre dining suggestions in the area: my go-to spot is Zzang, a Korean restaurant across the road. Excellent food at good prices, always much less busy than it deserves to be.
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3,557 posts
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Post by showgirl on Nov 6, 2023 4:30:17 GMT
The early comments here had given me some idea what to expect when I saw this on Saturday and although I enjoyed it and thought the cast were good, it was indeed like a longer episode of a sitcom, so good as its popularity must be for Hampstead Theatre's finances, I'm left wondering what Richard Bean was aiming for and why the theatre programmed this, which seems quite out of keeping with its usual varied range of more challenging new plays, revivals of modern classics and new work from abroad? Not that they have to adhere to any particular genre or style, but is this a blip or a sign of things to come? And is Richard Bean softening and becoming more sentimental in middle age?
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Post by Jan on Nov 6, 2023 9:01:49 GMT
I'm left wondering .... why the theatre programmed this, which seems quite out of keeping with its usual varied range of more challenging new plays, revivals of modern classics and new work from abroad? Because they had all their ACE funding withdrawn and their AD resigned as a consequence. They need to fill their seats and if this has done that they have achieved their aim.
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2,480 posts
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Post by zahidf on Nov 7, 2023 13:08:07 GMT
Ive seen a review referencing 'homophobic slurs' throughout the show. Is that right? Sounds odd in this day and age
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Post by Jan on Nov 7, 2023 13:43:37 GMT
Ive seen a review referencing 'homophobic slurs' throughout the show. Is that right? Sounds odd in this day and age Richard Bean seems to get a free pass for his unreconstructed 1970s sitcom shtick though, witness England People Very Nice at the NT which was viewed as racist by many and couldn't remotely be revived today for that reason.
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2,480 posts
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Post by zahidf on Nov 7, 2023 14:16:28 GMT
Ive seen a review referencing 'homophobic slurs' throughout the show. Is that right? Sounds odd in this day and age Richard Bean seems to get a free pass for his unreconstructed 1970s sitcom shtick though, witness England People Very Nice at the NT which was viewed as racist by many and couldn't remotely be revived today for that reason. Ah yes, i remember that at the time. I guess that was specifically about immigration, so i guess racist language is part of that story, whereas this is supposed to be a wacky sitcom
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1,470 posts
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Post by mkb on Nov 7, 2023 14:58:06 GMT
Ive seen a review referencing 'homophobic slurs' throughout the show. Is that right? Sounds odd in this day and age It's ten days since I saw it, and I've seen a few other things since, but I've racked my brain and I have no idea what that might be referring to. Of course, casual offensiveness from characters in any play does not make the play itself offensive, if that is what has happened. On the contrary, I get offended by the historical revisionism that one sees so often in dramas where everyone but the obvious villain is an ally of any gay character. It's not the world I grew up in, and airbrushing history won't assuage straight guilt for me, especially when there are still so many, particularly in established religions, who harbour prejudicial views, albeit that they have learned to be careful or nuanced about how they articulate them.
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Post by cavocado on Nov 7, 2023 21:48:31 GMT
Ive seen a review referencing 'homophobic slurs' throughout the show. Is that right? Sounds odd in this day and age It's ten days since I saw it, and I've seen a few other things since, but I've racked my brain and I have no idea what that might be referring to. Of course, casual offensiveness from characters in any play does not make the play itself offensive, if that is what has happened. On the contrary, I get offended by the historical revisionism that one sees so often in dramas where everyone but the obvious villain is an ally of any gay character. It's not the world I grew up in, and airbrushing history won't assuage straight guilt for me, especially when there are still so many, particularly in established religions, who harbour prejudicial views, albeit that they have learned to be careful or nuanced about where they articulate them. The only thing I can think of is when the father says something about you can't use the word 'queer' and the son tells him that it's an acceptable term now. I think it was a lame joke about the elderly not being up to date with terminology rather than a 'homophobic slur'.
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Post by parsley1 on Nov 9, 2023 22:30:37 GMT
It’s far from a perfect play
But I think the acting is very good and it addresses ageing with a lighthearted touch
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