Theatre Record

 

This Edition

 

Issue 3, 2009

Prompt Corner Theatre Record Issue 3, 2009

We see what we want to see. I'm not talking about the power of the critic, but about the general way in which human perception works. Sometimes we simply fail to notice things that we're not prepared for: witness how few reviewers have anything to say about the reunification of Germany with regard to Marius von Mayenburg's The Stone, writing only about the Nazi-era injustices, when his entire point is that the reunification has, if not led to a comparable number and extent of iniquities with regard to property, then at least perpetuated and compounded a number of such wrongs, and that the German national psyche is as reluctant to address these continuing problems as it is to exhume some of the everyday nastinesses of Nazidom. But we aren't primed to spot such an issue, so we don't register it.

The strange, perverse thing is that sometimes what we want to see is something that we don't like. This issue contains at least two spectacular examples: the alleged racism of Richard Bean's England People Very Nice and the alleged anti-Semitism of Caryl Churchill's Seven Jewish Children. Now, I have to admit right at the start that I'm on very shaky ground here, since I have seen neither play (the National Theatre, perhaps with deliberate caution, has programmed the repertoire schedule of England People so erratically that the first time it's performed on an evening when I'm not already booked is a month or so hence). But each has generated a remarkable brouhaha, and every so often the two have been linked.

Polarised

To take Churchill's play first, it seems that she has at the least been guilty of a rash act of metonymy, by using the word "Jewish" in her title when what she is criticising is the current Israeli government policy. It's easy to use this terminological sloppiness to claim that her point is not political but anti-Semitic. I don't for a minute believe that's actually the case. However, those who say that the play is an example of how anti-Semitism is becoming more tolerated and thus legitimised are, in a way, addressing what I think is Churchill's real point, which is that the mainstream of political discourse on the subject of Israel and Palestine has become increasingly polarised. Her script consists of a number of suggestions to "Tell her..." or not to tell her, the "her' being an imaginary child in, one presumes, Israel, possibly under attack as the adult characters are speaking. These proposals grow more extreme through the play, just as the debate has grown more extreme rather than less in recent years. Still, I despaired when I saw the moderate unionist and nationalist parties in my native Northern Ireland being eclipsed by the more extreme DUP and Sinn Féin, but within a very few years we saw what had previously seemed absurdly implausible, a power-sharing government headed by Ian Paisley and Martin McGuinness in such an affable combination that they became irreverently known as "the Chuckle Brothers". There may yet be hope for the Middle East.

The kerfuffle about England People Very Nice has been the other side of the same coin. The Quote of the Fortnight opposite gives a quick sketch of the objections of Hussain Ismail, apparently a theatre practitioner from Bethnal Green, the district of east London where Richard Bean has set his play; Ismail's Guardian blog article seemed to suggest that Bean's play insults all other nationalities ever to have settled in Britain as a pretext in order that he might also insult contemporary Muslims. That strikes me as a bit extreme. The meeting with Nicholas Hytner, which Veronica was anticipating, was reported after the fact in terms of Ismail's outrage at being patronised and at the NT's refusal to apologise or to allow him to complain that the play is racist (even as he proceeded to make that very same complaint at some length on various newspaper pages). The account I heard from sources close to the National suggest a rather different picture. I'm told that Ismail and his delegation (which included a representative from the Respect political party, a grouping which seems to rely increasingly on east London sectarianism for its appeal) turned up demanding a public debate about the play, only to be told by Hytner that one had already been scheduled. Slightly nonplussed, they demanded that it be held sooner; on being told that it couldn't be rearranged and publicised in time, they then affected to be aggrieved. (I can't help thinking at this point of the peasant in Monty Python And The Holy Grail shouting, "Help, help, I'm being repressed!")

Disturbing

And yet, look at the totality of the coverage of each play, and compare them, and it makes for some disturbing reading. One blog commenter keenly juxtaposed Michael Billington's comments about each: "Bean's new work... leaves a sour taste in the mouth. Far from rejoicing in London's ethnic diversity, it manipulates a series of comic stereotypes like a misanthropic 1066 and All That' versus "But Churchill also shows us how Jewish children are bred to believe in the otherness of Palestinians and how, for generations to come, they stand to reap the bitter harvest of the military assault on Hamas." Arguably these are extreme examples of his view of each play, but I fear it's not entirely misconceived to suggest that he seems to be straining at a humorous gnat whilst swallowing a polemical camel.

As I say, we see what we want to see. Quentin Letts, for instance, sees in England People a cowardly reluctance to come out and indict the idea of multiculturalism as the root of our current communal unrest, because that's the viewpoint he expects from the NT; most other reviewers, in contrast, reckon that that's precisely what the playwright is saying. And elsewhere, Tim Walker sees in Alan Bennett's Enjoy another example of what he condemned in his Be Near me review (reprinted last issue) as an excess of plays with homosexual themes. I wonder what he would consider the right amount of such plays? I don't know Tim's sexual orientation, but wouldn't it be wonderful if he turned out to be gay and closeted? The rank hypocrisy would be too, too delicious for words.

At the Back

At the back does not appear this issue

Reviewed in issue 3, 2009:

London

AIRSWIMMING Revival of play by Charlotte Jones

Courtyard

29 Jan

15 Feb

95

ARISTIDES – THE OUTCAST HERO New play by Alice de Sousa (Galleon TC)

Greenwich Playhouse

29 Jan

22 Feb

91

THE CARAVAN New play by Liam O'Driscoll, Mimi Poskitt and Ben Freedman (Look Left Look Right)

Royal Court

11 Feb

28 Feb

133

CASANOVA Transfer of musical by Philip Godfrey

King's Head

4 Feb

8 Mar

113

COMPANY ALONG THE MILE New play by Tom Dalton Bidwell

Arcola

3 Feb

21 Feb

95

DAMASCUS New play by David Greig (Traverse Th)

Tricycle

9 Feb

7 Mar

125

DEFENDING THE CAVEMAN Revival of play by Rob Becker

Leicester Square

6 Feb

5 Apr

124

DUET FOR ONE Revival of play by Tom Kempinski

Almeida

29 Jan

14 Mar

88

ENGLAND PEOPLE VERY NICE New play by Richard Bean (NT)

Olivier

11 Feb

 

140

ENJOY Revival of play by Alan Bennett (Peter Hall Co)

Gielgud

2 Feb

16 May

97

ENTERTAINING MR SLOANE Revival of play by Joe Orton

Trafalgar Studio 1

30 Jan

11 Apr

92

FUCHSIA New play by Matthew Westwood (Smejicki)

White Bear

3 Feb

22 Feb

126

GIRLS.AND DOLLS Revival (revised) of play by Lisa McGee

Old Red Lion

5 Feb

21 Feb

139

HOTEL MEDEA New trilogy by Marc von Henning (Zecora Ura / Urban Dolls Project)

Arcola

30 Jan

14 Feb

110

KING LEAR Revival of play by Shakespeare (Y Vic / Headlong / Liverpool Everyman & Playhouse)

Young Vic

4 Feb

28 Mar

109

THE LIFESAVERS New play by Fraser Grace

Theatre 503

30 Jan

21 Feb

96

OTHELLO Revival of play by Shakespeare (RSC)

Hackney Empire I touring

10 Feb

14 Feb

132

THE PITMEN PAINTERS Return of the play by Lee Hall (NT / Live Theatre)

Lyttelton

31 Jan

17 Feb

100

ROMEO & JULIET DOCKLANDS Revival of play by Shakespeare

Space

29 Jan

14 Feb

104

SEVEN JEWISH CHILDREN New play by Caryl Churchill

Royal Court

10 Feb

21 Feb

129

SHADES New play by Alia Bano

Royal Court Upstairs

2 Feb

21 Feb

103

SHUN-KIN New piece by Simon McBurney based on works by Jun'ichiro Tanizaki (Complicité)

Barbican

4 Feb

21 Feb

111

SPRING AWAKENING New musical by Duncan Sheik and Steven Sater

Lyric Hammersmith

3 Feb

14 Mar

105

THE STONE New play by Marius von Mayenburg

Royal Court

9 Feb

28 Feb

127

THE TEMPEST Revival of play by Shakespeare, adapted by Simon Beyer

Cock Tavern

6 Feb

7 Mar

131

THREE DAYS OF RAIN Revival of play by Richard Greenberg

Apollo

10 Feb

 

134

TOUCHED... FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME New play by Zoë Lewis (ILW Prods)

Trafalgar Studio 2

10 Feb

14 Mar

138

TRACES New piece by Les 7 Doigts de la Main

Peacock

4 Feb

14 Mar

115

UNBROKEN New dance/theatre piece by Alexandra Wood, inspired by La Ronde by Arthur Schnitzler

Gate

10 Feb

7 Mar

124

UNTITLED New play by Lena Farugia

Finborough

6 Feb

14 Mar

115

A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE Revival of play by Arthur Miller

Duke Of York's

5 Feb

 

116

THE WATER'S EDGE New play by Theresa Rebeck, based on Agamemnon by Aeschylus

Arcola

6 Feb

28 Feb

120

WOMAN IN MIND Revival of play by Alan Ayckbourn

Vaudeville

6 Feb

 

121

Regions

BABY BABY New adaptation from novel by Vivian French (stellar Quines / Perissology / Shetland Arts)

Glasgow, Tron / touring

4 Feb

7 Feb

153

DEFENDER OF THE FAITH New play by Stuart Carolan

Glasgow, Tron

10 feb

28 Feb

154

DOLLS New adaptation by Jenny Worton from film by Takeshi Kitano (NTS / Hush Prods)

Glasgow, Tramway

29 Jan

31 Jan

152

GLAMOUR New play by Stephen Lowe

Nottingham Playhouse

10 feb

21 Feb

150

THE HOUNDING OF DAVID OLUWALE New adaptation by Oladipo Agboluaje from book by Kester Aspden Leeds, WYP Courtyard I touring

4 Feb

21 Feb

 

149

Manipulate festival See review pages for full production details

Edinburgh, Traverse

3 Feb

7 Feb

155

THE MERCHANT OF VENICE / A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM Revivals by Shakespeare (Propeller)

Liverpool Playhouse / touring

30 Jan

31 Jan

146

NAKED NEIGHBOUR (TWITCHING BLIND) New play by Nick Underwood (Press To Play)

Glasgow, Tramway

28 Jan

31 Jan

151

PALACE OF THE END Three monologues by Judith Thompson

Manchester, Royal Exch Studio

5 Feb

21 Feb

148

THE PILLOWMAN Revival of play by Martin McDonagh

Leicester, Curve

11 Feb

17 Mar

151

THE PRICE Revival of play by Arthur Miller

Liverpool Playhouse

11 Feb

28 Feb

151

SABBAT New play by Richard Shannon

Lancaster, Dukes

2 Feb

21 Feb

149

SIGHT IS THE SENSE THAT DYING PEOPLE TEND TO LOSE FIRST New piece by Tim Etchells

Bristol, Amolfini

31 Jan

31 Jan

147

TAM O'SHANTER New adaptation by Gerry Mulgrew from poem by Robert Bums

Perth

30 Jan

14 Feb

152

TRUE LOVE LIES New play by Brad Fraser

Manchester, Royal Exchange

2 Feb

21 Feb

148

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