1,245 posts
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Post by joem on Oct 8, 2017 10:09:03 GMT
Ignorance can be bliss. I turned up at the Orange Tree (the small sushi round the corner - Hanana - is possibly the finest value for money sushi currently in London, astonishingly good quality) with the vague idea I was going to see some epic politico/historical theatre stuff only to be confronted with a fine piece of observational writing on old age, families, love and affection and the secrets all families have.
The intimate nature of this space - at least if you're seated in the front row - brought me into the family home in a way which made me forgive how often I found myself staring for long periods at the back of one of the actors' heads.
Storey's writing here, especially in the first half, is uncannily spot-on, especially in the marital sparring which survives the dimming of passion, the point at which joy becomes laughter. The constant bickering between the old couple, a sparring which can be affectionate but also turn sour at a moment's notice, was captured perfectly. Ian Gelder and Sue Wallace, as the elderly Pasmores, were both perfect in their roles. This is a very funny but also poignant and bittersweet piece.
Regrettably I attended the last performance, so my recommendation to everyone to go and see it is entirely academic.
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1,861 posts
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Post by NeilVHughes on Oct 8, 2017 10:59:13 GMT
If the play gets a transfer would also highly recommend.
The bickering seemed entirely natural for a couple who knew how to rile each other perfectly after 60 years together, along with their underlying feeling they wasted their lives by doing the right thing.
The only time the father felt alive was as a kid in Crimea hence the title.
The Orange Tree Theatre is on a good run and on my list of must see Theatres.
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3,557 posts
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Post by showgirl on Oct 8, 2017 16:46:52 GMT
I booked to see this entirely on the strength of all the rave reviews but was bitterly disappointed and left at the interval. The acting and production may have been fine but that's beside the point if the (in)action doesn't engage you, as I found. Still wondering what everyone else saw in it that passed me by, but I'll never know.
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1,245 posts
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Post by joem on Oct 8, 2017 22:53:47 GMT
I booked to see this entirely on the strength of all the rave reviews but was bitterly disappointed and left at the interval. The acting and production may have been fine but that's beside the point if the (in)action doesn't engage you, as I found. Still wondering what everyone else saw in it that passed me by, but I'll never know. Sometimes it helps to go with low or no expectations, which was my case. But some plays click for some people and not for others. What I saw in this was a truthfulness in the love/hate relationship between the two old-timers based on my experiece of old people I know/have known.
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423 posts
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Post by dlevi on Oct 9, 2017 13:53:54 GMT
I caught this in its last week as well and while I found it engaging and impecably performed and staged, I also found it to be a minor play. I think Mr Storey covered much the same material more effectively with In Celebration. A worthwhile evening just not a great one. I can sort of understand why the play has been neglected for these past 30 years or so.
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