Friday, May 8, 2009

Pinter, Marvellous Pinter

This was a Pinter double bill, of two of his more obscure early plays. I've made a resolution now that, having seen almost all the Pinter canon (bar the Caretaker), I'm going to see some other serious drama. I've finally seen Beckett, there's some Ibsen on at the Barbican right now, and I'm sure I can locate some Chekhov. For the moment, though, Pinter is good fun.

The Lover and The Collection

This Pinter double bill is about sex, captured, trapped and examined. It is the constant undercurrent, the backdrop and the motivating force for accusation and counter-accusation, for lies, and for games turned serious.

In the first of the two plays, ‘The Lover’, a happily married couple (Richard Coyle and Gina McKee) dispel the monotony of suburbia by role playing as adulterers. The game continues on and on, becoming more powerful, until their double characters invade every part of their lives, and pretence and reality become intertwined beyond separation.

The second play, ‘The Collection’, once again deals with truth and sex. An angry husband (Coyle) alleges that playboy Bill (Charlie Cox) has slept with his wife, and as the two men build up a curious rapport, Bill amuses himself by altering his story, delighting in the anguish he causes James. Meanwhile, Harry (Timothy West), Bill’s patron, rushes around trying to resolve the trouble which Bill is determined to cause.

Both plays are extremely well acted; in particular, Gina McKee is gloriously erotic as the wife in ‘The Lover’, and Charlie Cox is charmingly supercilious as Bill in ‘The Collection’. Timothy West is, of course, as good as you would expect as the frustrated, disappointed landlord, half lover, half father to Bill. Both plays are equally well staged, with an overpowering black wall betraying the apparent coziness of the living room, and a set which manages to evoke both moldering Kensington decadence (‘The Collection’) and dull Home Counties suburbia (‘The Lover’) without alteration.

Yet there is something missing. It is not the ending – neither play ends conclusively, but this is Pinter, and you would not expect it to. It is not the language, which is as witty as always. These plays feel somewhere in the middle; they are neither as glaringly intimate as ‘The Dumb Waiter’, nor as aggressive as ‘The Homecoming’. This double bill has all the hallmarks of Pinter, and is most certainly worth seeing – but it is not his satisfyingly brutal best.

8 comments:

  1. I'm shocked at your conversion, especially considering what happened last time we saw Pinter together. :P

    As with most (literary) things I hate, I have a vague feeling I didn't give Pinter enough of a chance. Yes, 'The Homecoming' was abysmal, but it was an amateur production. On the other hand, it's not as though different actors would have changed the implausibility of the plot (what the hell is up with that woman?) and the completely unsatisfactory 'resolution'. 'No Man's Land' was better - more compelling - but still very frustrating to watch. However, given the general negativity surrounding that day, and the state of fatigue and irritation in which we found ourselves even before the thing had started - again, perhaps it's not fair to judge all of Pinter by one annoying experience. Hmmm. I did detest 'The Homecoming', though.

    Family dramas, tensions, awkardnesses, lies, black humour - in my opinion, much better accomplished by the likes of Edward Albee and Alan Ayckbourn.

    (And this is where some theatre critic appears from nowhere and tells me that I 'just don't get' Pinter, or that the genius of the plays is that I'm supposed to feel annoyed and alienated throughout, and/or that the playwrights I mentioned were just imitators of Pinter... *eyeroll*)

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  2. The best of his I've seen is The Dumb Waiter, because the performances (Lee Evans and Jason Isaacs) were fantastic enough that it was less of an intellectual experience, because you were dragged away from your theorizing by what was going on onstage. Rather like Godot in that sense.

    That said, it was nice a little while ago to see August: Osage County, which was just a big, simple, character-driven drama.

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  3. OMG. Jason Isaacs. When was this and why didn't you invite me, you swine!?

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  4. A guy I know offered me a spare seat at the last minute, and it was in the first year.

    Was awesome though.

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  5. Oh, also: I am totally up for coming to Ibsen with you.

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  6. It's a foulmouthed scottish version of Peer Gynt, which they cheerfully translate as Peer Cunt.

    It's at the Barbican. Go ahead and book tickets for us.

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  7. Working out the dates we're free would be a sensible thing to do first.

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