Dating from 1939, this Noel Coward play could have provided something of a challenge for both the audience and cast alike.
It proves to be complex, multi-layered and ultimately rewarding.
Bringing the past to life was effortless for the company and after the scene-setting of the first act the audience lapped up both the increasingly chaotic situation comedy and the in-jokes for the aficionados of Coward’s work. The humour was served up in a range of guises and varied from the subtle through to farce and even a touch of slapstick.
Yet this was also a thought-provoking production, Questions are asked of who we really are; how much of one’s life is a performance and how we perform differently to our various different personal audiences.
Perhaps the leading man, Garry Essendine – played by Cold Feet’s Robert Bathurst – really is the lonely performer, and despite all his trappings of wealth and success is merely “advancing with every sign of reluctance into middle age”.
If that’s the case then so are the ladies playing opposite him, and their intricate web of relationships must see beyond that performance. Dorothea Myer-Bennett (Dead Man Talking) as Daphne Stillington is blinded by his sophistication while would-be mistress Joanna Lyppiatt (played by Emma Davies who you may know as Anna De Souza from Emmerdale) and Essendine’s kind-of-ex-wife Liz (Serena Evans from Pie in the Sky and The Thin Blue Line) both think they know what’s best for him.
Tim Bouverie, in his first professional role, is another Essendine fan sucked into his circle and plays with such conviction you wonder if he’ll stalk the lead even after the curtain falls. And with Belinda Lang (2Point4 Children) on stage and also directing it’s a formidable line-up.
It works. It’s a play of its time which stands the test of time and is well worth a look
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