Wesker's play is studied as a lesson in political disillusion with the Kahn family as a metaphor: the battle between ideology and realism in microcosm. A modern audience may find it's the dynamic within the family - the secrets, the lies and the dysfunction, with a desperate woman fighting to hold things together - that provides the more potent narrative with politics as a useful punctuation. There are scenes of domestic dysfunction that bring tears to the eye.
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You'll always find them in the kitchen at Communist parties |
The play spans twenty years ending in a collective gasp from the audience when Samantha Spiro, as Sarah, pulls the strands together using the language of politics in a bid to redeem her son. Spiro is a star - her Dolly in the Open Air Theatre's Hello Dolly is unforgettable - and she is the driving force through this production. As Harry, Danny Webb is beyond brilliant: a study in weakness, apathy, uncertainty, fear... After his extraordinary performance in Blasted at the Lyric, Hammersmith, last year, it's great seeing him centre stage where he belongs.
In conclusion: Dominic Cooke has directed another winner - simple yet complex, convoluted yet true. The lead performances alone would be enough to recommend it, but actually, there is no part of this production that does not hit the mark.
References
Paul Taylor in The Independent
Grab tickets if you can
This was a fantastic play. Loved all the performances. Definitely recommend people see it!
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