The Trial Of Jane Fonda, Park Theatre
Jul 15, 2016 10:19:59 GMT
mallardo, Nicholas, and 1 more like this
Post by Steve on Jul 15, 2016 10:19:59 GMT
It's nice to see Anne Archer in a play, but the drama is so plodding and predictable, so binary and patronising, that I felt nothing for the characters.
Some spoilers follow. . .
This play is about Jane Fonda meeting with Vietnam war veterans, who picketed her movie, "Stanley and Iris" in 1989, in protest of her anti-war activities. The meeting is a trial of sorts. . .
Rather than talk about this play, let me talk about a fictional play that is like it, called "7 Angry Brexiteers:"
"We open in a Sunderland pub on the eve of the Referendum. The Remainer (played by Johnny Flynn), saunters in and, despite the fact that 6 angry Brexiteers are bitterly downing pints of bitter, boldly orders a babycham in a creepy mockney accent. The Chief Brexiteer (played by David Morrissey), irate and irrational, aggressively and deliberately spills babycham on his Cockney customer's Moss Bros sky blue linen jacket. The Remainer, cool as a cucumber, retorts "I can see you're voting Brexit."
At which point, all 6 Brexiteers round on The Remainer, and start shouting. One by one, they put their cases for Brexit: one growls that foreigners should go home, the next screeches about the EU being unelected, the next moans about bendy bananas, the next makes no sense at all in a thick Geordie accent, until we get around to David Morrissey's Chief Brexiteer, who growls about the jobs immigrants are stealing.
Johnny Flynn's composed Remainer nods, through tirades of irrational craziness and fury, patronising them with a beatific smirk. Once they are exhausted, he effortlessly and efficiently takes down each of their arguments. He exposes the pent-up resentment and denial of the lives of these unthinking northern brutes, and one by one, they swing round to his way of thinking, appreciating the slowness of his speech that allows their turtle minds to catch up with his grand thoughts.
David Morrissey's Chief Brexiteer is the last to crack, and he only does so after Johnny Flynn's Remainer concedes how hard it is for Cowboy Builders up North to deal with expert Polish competition. This show of compassion for Cowboy builders breaks Morrissey's heart, and he provides a round of babycham on the house for everyone.
All present have a group hug, and the next day, Sunderland proclaims for Remain, leading to an overwhelming victory for togetherness and the EU."
Great play, right? If you are a misery guts, and fancy a different ending, check out Martin McDonagh's "Hangmen," or alternately, watch the News.
"7 Angry Brexiteers" is coming to a theatre near you. But until then, "The Trial of Jane Fonda" offers many of it's delights, although in the latter play, the performances are actually good, and Anne Archer is one of them, so that's another plus.
2 stars
Some spoilers follow. . .
This play is about Jane Fonda meeting with Vietnam war veterans, who picketed her movie, "Stanley and Iris" in 1989, in protest of her anti-war activities. The meeting is a trial of sorts. . .
Rather than talk about this play, let me talk about a fictional play that is like it, called "7 Angry Brexiteers:"
"We open in a Sunderland pub on the eve of the Referendum. The Remainer (played by Johnny Flynn), saunters in and, despite the fact that 6 angry Brexiteers are bitterly downing pints of bitter, boldly orders a babycham in a creepy mockney accent. The Chief Brexiteer (played by David Morrissey), irate and irrational, aggressively and deliberately spills babycham on his Cockney customer's Moss Bros sky blue linen jacket. The Remainer, cool as a cucumber, retorts "I can see you're voting Brexit."
At which point, all 6 Brexiteers round on The Remainer, and start shouting. One by one, they put their cases for Brexit: one growls that foreigners should go home, the next screeches about the EU being unelected, the next moans about bendy bananas, the next makes no sense at all in a thick Geordie accent, until we get around to David Morrissey's Chief Brexiteer, who growls about the jobs immigrants are stealing.
Johnny Flynn's composed Remainer nods, through tirades of irrational craziness and fury, patronising them with a beatific smirk. Once they are exhausted, he effortlessly and efficiently takes down each of their arguments. He exposes the pent-up resentment and denial of the lives of these unthinking northern brutes, and one by one, they swing round to his way of thinking, appreciating the slowness of his speech that allows their turtle minds to catch up with his grand thoughts.
David Morrissey's Chief Brexiteer is the last to crack, and he only does so after Johnny Flynn's Remainer concedes how hard it is for Cowboy Builders up North to deal with expert Polish competition. This show of compassion for Cowboy builders breaks Morrissey's heart, and he provides a round of babycham on the house for everyone.
All present have a group hug, and the next day, Sunderland proclaims for Remain, leading to an overwhelming victory for togetherness and the EU."
Great play, right? If you are a misery guts, and fancy a different ending, check out Martin McDonagh's "Hangmen," or alternately, watch the News.
"7 Angry Brexiteers" is coming to a theatre near you. But until then, "The Trial of Jane Fonda" offers many of it's delights, although in the latter play, the performances are actually good, and Anne Archer is one of them, so that's another plus.
2 stars