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| Fence and sensibilities |
The story is certainly entertaining. A couple of reformed addicts, Kenny and Sharon, move next door - and into the lives of - a straight, surburban couple, Mary and Ben, who are as fragile as they clapboard house they call home. As the four begin a friendship over the barbeque, the tension slowly increases. What is really going on here? It's spooky and uncomfortable and sometimes very funny.
There is a whiff in the air of Jez Butterworth's Jerusalem, but where Butterworth shone light through his anarchic anti-hero, the mood-changing couple in Detroit are a murky grey. Perhaps it's the peculiarly American setting that makes Mary the only knowable character. Once out of the theatre - the Cottesloe has been cleverly configured so the action happens on a central strip into which we're all peering - all four slip from the mind.
In conclusion: Director Austin Pendleton keeps events moving and there is great acting - particularly Justine Mitchell as up-tight Mary and Will Adamsdale as chaotic Kenny - and a wonderful set. It's a fun evening out, yet not a must-see.
References
Cottesloe Theatre and tickets
Michael Billington review in The Guardian

Great review! What does the set do at the end? Sounds like a coup de theatre?
ReplyDeleteIt's fabulous, but can't be given away as it's the denouement:( There are some really fantastic sets around at the moment - the Wild Swans and Chariots of Fire sets, both by Miriam Buether, are original and ambitious and really prop up plays that are in part (or whole) clunky.
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