新闻滚动条
REVIEW: Anatomy Of A Suicide, Royal Court Theatre ✭✭✭✭
发布日期
2017年6月11日
由
markludmon
Hattie Morahan, Kate O’Flynn and Adelle Leonce. Photo: Stephen Cummiskey Anatomy of a Suicide
Royal Court
8 June 2017
Four stars
BOOK TICKETS The past is the present, it's the future too, as Mary Cavan Tyrone says in Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night. All three take place simultaneously in Alice Birch's accomplished new play, Anatomy of a Suicide, telling the stories of three generations of women in the 1970s, 1990s and 2030s. Carol has been troubled since her teens but suffers deeper depression after the birth of her daughter, Anna, which later drives her to suicide. In turn, Anna struggles after losing her mother at a young age and falls into a life of drug abuse until she settles down and has her own baby. Anna’s suicide haunts her daughter, Bonnie, who grows up to become an A&E consultant, spurning relationships out of fear of following the same path as her mother and grandmother.
Hattie Morahan and Sophia Pettit. Photo: Stephen Cummiskey Each of these are played out next to each other on the same stage, with lines intertwining and words echoing each other like a symphony of language. This bold approach cleverly demonstrates the legacy of a suicide and how it can resonate down through the generations. For the audience, the experience is an intense two hours as attention flits constantly between the three narratives, often overlapping. Directed by Katie Mitchell, the interaction between the three is technically brilliant and meticulously timed, sometimes to the point of distracting from the anguish being enacted. But the cast are phenomenal, from Hattie Morahan's ethereal Carol to Kate O'Flynn's mercurial Anna to Adelle Leonce’s emotionally self-contained Bonnie.
Kate O’Flynn, Jodie McNee and Adelle Leonce. Photo: Stephen Cummiskey They are well supported by Paul Hilton as Carol's strong, caring but bewildered husband who develops into a broken man frustrated at being unable to help his daughter as she looks set to follow his late wife's trajectory. Jodie McNee stands out in a number of roles including Bonnie's on-off lover along with Sarah Malin as Carol's uptight sister-in-law and Anna's plain-speaking cousin. A series of doors with hospital-like handles make up the striking set, designed by Alex Eales, broken up by period props and spot-on costumes designed by Sarah Blenkinsop. The power of the play is heightened by the atmospheric and often unsettling soundscape designed by Melanie Wilson with music by Paul Clark. The play may not be saying anything new about the inheritance of suicide but Birch has found an effective way to explore how the trauma of suicide eats into every moment of the lives that follow. The staging is ambitious but pays off although its intensity may leave you feeling shattered. Running to July 8, 2017
BOOK TICKETS TO ANATOMY OF A SUICIDE AT THE ROYAL COURT
© BritishTheatre.com 1999-2024 版权所有。
BritishTheatre.com 网站的创建旨在庆祝英国丰富多样的戏剧文化。我们的使命是提供最新的英国剧院新闻、伦敦西区评论,以及地方剧院和伦敦戏剧票的见解,确保戏剧爱好者可以及时了解从最盛大的伦敦西区音乐剧到前沿的边缘戏剧的一切。我们热衷于鼓励和培养各种形式的表演艺术。
戏剧的精神生生不息,而BritishTheatre.com位于前沿地带,向戏剧爱好者提供及时、权威的新闻和信息。我们敬业的剧院记者和评论家团队不懈努力,报道每一场制作和活动,使您能够轻松获取最新评论并预订必看的伦敦戏剧票。