1,471 posts
|
Post by mkb on Oct 9, 2022 0:09:20 GMT
It's a weird feeling coming out of a production you have thoroughly enjoyed to discover you're on your own. There is a plethora of mainly two-star reviews from the critics and I see negative comments on the Hampstead thread. Really? Did we see the same play?
This tale from Richard Eyre, both as writer and director, concerns a dysfunctional, middle-class, Northern family ravaged by politics and wildly differing perspectives on life, coming together for a celebratory meal.
Brexit, Covid and climate change are name-checked, but the play is less about those divisive issues and more about the pain that comes from female characters being suppressed in different ways by the needs of the patriarch of the family. The gay son, a fascist-lite SPAD in the Department for Education is not spared from damage.
Florence, the manager or owner -- it's not clear which -- of the catering company, is the sole sympathetic character, and the revelation of her story serves to shine a spotlight on the father, the consequences of actions and the need for redemption.
In Act 2, I found tears pouring down my cheeks. The resonance was all too real. I recognised these people and their sentiments. Eyre's dialogue is piercingly realistic, and the performances, without exception, are expertly realised.
It's an old-fashioned contemporary drama, but the issues are timeless.
Four stars.
Act 1: 14:35-15:22 Act 2: 15:42-16:26
|
|
|
Post by theoracle on Oct 14, 2022 7:55:25 GMT
Didn’t enjoy this very much. There seemed to be a sort of arrogance about it all that as Richard Eyres name was attached, we should take this very seriously even though the characters were very 2 dimensional and struggled to be compelling in any way. The script tries to make us think about too much without gaining the audience’s trust first. Reading the programme - I was shocked to see the titles initial name was Zero Hours - originally supposed to be about the catering staff on zero hours contracts, and how it managed to turn into a play about the family politics of a wealthy doctor… I felt cold toward this unfortunately. We’ve seen Hampstead do better and we’ve seen Richard Eyre do better.
|
|
|
Post by thistimetomorrow on Oct 15, 2022 22:20:29 GMT
This was fine? I didn't love it, but I didn't hate it. Probably the most full I've seen the Hampstead this year and the first time I've gone this year and seen people actually in the Circle.
|
|