Redlands (Festival Theatre, Chichester)
Verdict: Gets the 60s swinging
You might expect a play about Mick Jagger and Keith Richards getting fitted up by the News Of The World in a 1960s drugs bust to centre on the Stones’s front man and famously mind-expanded lead guitarist.
And yet, you’d be wrong. It isn’t even clear that Charlotte Jones’s rowdy and entertaining new play, Redlands, is about the man who (eventually) got the rockers acquitted — one Michael Havers QC, later Attorney General.
A major role for that other star of the Swinging Sixties, Marianne Faithfull, is less surprising.
And yet, incredibly, it’s the fringe figure of a teenage Nigel Havers who turns out to be the story’s unlikely hero.
Jasper Talbot and Brenock O’Connor’s roles as Jagger and Richards are almost decorative
The 1967 saga started when the police raided Richards’s 15th-century baronial bolthole in Sussex after a tip-off from a vindictive hack
Incredibly, it’s the fringe figure of a teenage Nigel Havers who turns out to be the story’s unlikely hero
The 1967 saga started when the police raided Richards’s 15th-century baronial bolthole in Sussex after a tip-off from a vindictive hack.
Havers senior reluctantly took the case and initially failed to keep Messrs Jagger and Richards out of jail.
It was only on finding evidence of the NoW’s skulduggery that he secured their release. Happily for Nigel, it meant that Faithfull, distressed by her sexist treatment in court, drifted into his dreams as a jaw-dropping mentor.
Jasper Talbot and Brenock O’Connor’s roles as Jagger and Richards are almost decorative. Talbot cavorts in buttock-hugging bell-bottoms as Jagger; while O’Connor mugs around as a strangely manic Richards. Both lay on excellent vibrations covering Stones songs, though.
It is Anthony Calf who steals the show as Michael Havers. His story is that of an improbable transformation from pompous QC to paragon dad. His inquisitorial boom, glacial contempt and sense of mischief more than fill the theatre.
Emer McDaid’s Faithfull sings a sweetly melancholy As Tears Go By. She’s deployed as a fantasy figure for our Nigel. Louis Landau wins hearts as Havers the younger — a disoriented teen in need of his emotionally absent father’s love.
Justin Audibert’s production is jaunty and good-natured. And thanks to covers of songs including Satisfaction and Jumpin’ Jack Flash, the evening turns out to be a gas, gas, gas.
Talbot cavorts in buttock-hugging bell-bottoms as Jagger; while O’Connor mugs around as a strangely manic Richards
Justin Audibert’s production is jaunty and good-natured. And thanks to covers of songs including Satisfaction and Jumpin’ Jack Flash, the evening turns out to be a gas, gas, gas
Should you fancy something lighter... much lighter... look no further than The Cabinet Minister, a stunning-looking revival of a ditzy Victorian comedy by the largely forgotten Arthur Wing Pinero.
Being about a Cabinet minister drifting into trouble for insider trading, thanks to his spendthrift wife, you might suppose it had some satirical bite.
Wrong. It’s a blissfully brainless production, abridged and expurgated by Nancy Carroll — who also plays the persuasively profligate Lady Twombley, wife to Nicholas Rowe’s lean and haughty Right Hon Sir Julian Twombley, who is being held to ransom by unscrupulous Cockney social climbers.
Add to that young debutante Imogen Twombley (Rosalind Ford), whose betrothal to a nervous Scottish laird has been secured by a busybody dowager (Sara Crowe) in league with a fearsome Scottish matriarch (Dillie Keane of Fascinating Aida) and you have a deliciously frothy comic soufflé.
Paul Foster’s lavish production presents an encrustation of Victoriana, yielding to a draughty Scottish castle in the second half — and a parade of period frocks that would make the National proud.
- Redlands until Friday; The Cabinet Minister until November 16.
Two classics — but only one’s worth the trip
Roots/Look Back In Anger (Almeida Theatre, London)
Verdict: MOT pass & fail
Classic cars more than 40 years old may be exempt from an annual MOT, but I wonder if the same should apply to classic plays.
These two examples, in rep at Islington’s Almeida Theatre, are not equally roadworthy.
Arnold Wesker’s 1959 drama, Roots, about starry-eyed Beatie (Morfydd Clark) returning from London to her family of farm labourers in Norfolk, isn’t too much of a liability.
But John Osborne’s 1956 gas guzzler Look Back In Anger, about young Jimmy Porter (Billy Howle) bullying his pregnant wife (Ellora Torchia), belches out toxic fumes.
Wesker’s play is a generational drama looking at the rift between over-educated townies and struggling farmers after World War II. It works best as social history.
Arnold Wesker’s 1959 drama, Roots, about starry-eyed Beatie (Morfydd Clark) returning from London to her family of farm labourers in Norfolk, isn’t too much of a liability
Wesker’s play is a generational drama looking at the rift between over-educated townies and struggling farmers after World War II. It works best as social history
Could Clark have packed more hurt and frustration into her slightly delusional Beatie, over-fond of quoting her mansplaining boyfriend (widely supposed to be based on the author)? Perhaps. And Diyan Zora’s frugal production could be more fastidious in its domestic details.
For me, though, Look Back In Anger should be taken off the road. The ‘hero’ Jimmy Porter is even more boorish, bullying and gaslighting than I remember.
There’s a strong seam of misogyny in all Osborne’s writing — and Howle does little more than lend this sullen, self-pitying exponent a babyish whimper. The play has little to teach us, and does less to amuse.
- Until November 23.
Youll weep at this raw take on the ravages of dementia
A Tupperware Of Ashes (National Theatre, Dorfman)
Verdict: Home is where the heart is
Theres a saying that you can take a person out of the place, but you can’t take the place out of the person.
It’s one of many fascinating ideas Tanika Gupta explores in her rich, raw family drama about the ravaging impact of dementia on an individual — and on those trying to care for them.
It’s the story of Queenie, who came from Kolkata to Britain as a newlywed in the Seventies.
Widowed young, life is tough; but even so she becomes the first Indian chef to win a Michelin star, raises three children and proudly drives a Mercedes.
And everything is rosy until the children, now working hard as a teacher, lawyer and doctor, notice that their capable and competent mother is losing her grip.
Meera Syal as Queenie who came from Kolkata to Britain as a newlywed in the Seventies.
Alzheimer’s gets the better of Queenie in every sense. Her decline — forgetfulness, shattered moral filter, explosive temper — is rapid and desperately distressing, not just to her family, but to herself as well
Burning the rice may be carelessness, but plunging into the North Sea when she can’t even swim is more worrying. Worse, saying precisely what she thinks, with no expletives deleted, may be funny — but also uncharacteristically unkind.
Alzheimer’s gets the better of Queenie in every sense. Her decline — forgetfulness, shattered moral filter, explosive temper — is rapid and desperately distressing, not just to her family, but to herself as well.
Gupta amplifies the tragedy with echoes of Shakespeare’s King Lear, another family pulled apart when an ego-maniacal parent loses the plot.
But it is what survives in Queenie’s scrambled mind that makes this study of dementia so moving: the ghost of her beloved husband reciting smutty limericks; the smell of mangoes; the desire to have her ashes scattered into the Hooghly River.
Washed by Nitin Sawhney’s haunting Indian music, Pooja Ghai’s atmospheric production will strike a chord. And Meera Syal’s heartbreaking, and surely award-winning, performance will make you weep.