“There is violence and cruelty and bigotry and plain old
crushing boredom but there is also nature and animals and art and sport, beauty
and Virgil van Dijk!”
Rosalind Blessed’s two plays are packed full of sharp emotional
relief, violent turns and bitter love turned shallow but nothing prepared me
for the out of context mention of Liverpool FC’s greatest defender in thirty
years. Van Dijk does indeed exemplify the best of the beautiful game and may
well be a favourite of the playwright’s mother Hildegard Neil who makes a recorded
yet highly impressive appearance in the first of tonight’s plays.
Two plays over something close to three hours is a lot to
take in and for Rosalind along with Duncan Wilkins, a huge emotional
undertaking, especially during the two-handed second play, The Delights of Dogs and the Problems of People, which involved a sequence of monologues and audience interactions,
culminating in some of the rawest emotional displays you’ll see in any London
theatre this winter.
Rosalind combines fierce charm with delicate emotional
control and is a joy to watch in those soliloquies as she looks to audience, including
us in imagined exchanges and even accusations; I was pointed at and called a pervert
at one point and that’s the first time this year! Duncan Wilkins also has this
playful confidence and plays off one audience member, “Steve” as his character –
Ash - attempts to convince his soon to be ex-wife, Robin (Rosalind) that he has
“mates” ready to help him recover from the dual blows of separation and pet-death.
“He might love me sure, but he certainly hates me…”
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Rosalind Blessed and Duncan Wilkins, Delights of Dogs, photo courtesy of Natalie Wells |
Dogs are a running theme across both plays – I hesitate to say
“walking” – and exemplify the unconditional, pure and simple love that is
seemingly beyond the most sentient of species. These characters are struggling to
love themselves let alone their partners and relationships turn rancid in
complex ways that we barely understand and yet which are clear enough if we
would only look. The couple’s dog in
Lullabies vomits in the back of
their car and by the time they stop his bile has drenched their clothes much in
the same way their relationship ends up soaking through their flat and their
lives.
Food is also a common theme and in Lullabies Ash, prepares a
meal for Robin as a peace offering whilst he recalls killing a fledgling crow
by over-feeding it. The similarities between his lover and the stray animals
Ash has always been attracted to are clear even to him but he can’t seem to
think his way past it as she can. “No man is ever interested in what is on the inside…”
exclaims Robin at one point before twinkling the briefest of apologies to half the
audience before doubling down on what is an almost undeniable fact. Lads: we
have work to do.
The direction of Zoe Ford Burnett – who is associate director of the Lehman Trilogy – is emphatic and clear, using the
confined playing area almost as punctuation between the action.
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Boxed in? Photo courtesy of Adam Trigg |
The narrative is spread across a further six actors in the
first play,
Lullabies for the Lost, which sees a
group in long-term therapy for eating disorders. Each gets to relate their
story in a group session that will see them either come to terms and leave or
extend their stay in an institution which seems as much a representation of
their inner turmoil as a cure. Or rather, and not knowing Rosalind’s background
in this area, it seems they need to choose to be cured, it’s not something that
can be imposed on them.
We start off with the very engaging and all too relatable character
of Larry (Chris Porter) as he struggles with himself over whether to go through
with an invite he has accepted to meet with friends for dinner. If he leaves
within five minutes he’ll be on time but he has a thousand worries – who will
he sit next to, who he likes, who even likes him… he racked with doubt and
worried his fragile recovery will be ruined by the evening.
Soon he finds himself in a room full of others and only gradually
do we realise the connections between himself, the “Brothers Grim” – Jez (Nick
Mulvey) and Tim (Liam Mulvey) – two men who just can’t connect beyond the
surface, Sarah (Helen Bang), a neurotic who is too frightened even to tackle
the mice in her flat and Nerys (Kate Tydman), a more confident woman who cannot
let anything go after having her heart broken once too often.“I began to see the value in everything… I think things
should have a value…” including, no doubt herself and the relationships that
disappoint.
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Kate Tydman (front) with (left to right) Duncan Wilkins, Rosalind Blessed, Chris Porter, courtesy of Adam Trigg |
It’s like an emotional escape room in which the clues are obscured
mostly by our own fears. Only scouser Andy (Chris Pybus) is able to come to
terms with himself through the aid of a rescue dog called Millie who gave him a
reason to get up and frame his active life around this most willing of partners.
Before the Staffie came into his life, he was all but destroyed by his ex-, a “knock-off
Kate Bush”;
“the flesh is weak and the spirit envies the flesh’s strength…” and
he wasted his life on corrosive social media, box sets and the illusory security
of the bed.
Andy is able to leave but when anorexic James (Duncan
Wilkins again) takes centre stage, the situation is put most eloquently as a
trap of their own making: there comes a point when not everyone wants to escape. It is then that “Mother” appears projected onto the plain
whiteness of the scenery, extoling the value of love and, indeed, Virgil Van
Dyke.
Director Caroline Devlin moved the players around very effectively and the play is devastating,
funny and so bravely personal from Rosalind.
IThankYou Theatre Rating: **** The year gets off to a flying start with complex and raw emotion delivered with so much humour and brutal charm.
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Rosalind Blessed and cast, Lullabies for the Lost, courtesy of Adam Trigg |