BritishTheatre

搜索

自 1999年

值得信赖的新闻与评论

二十五

英国戏剧精选

官方
门票

选择
您的座位

自 1999年

25年

官方戏票

选择座位

REVIEW: Queers Part 2, Old Vic Theatre ✭✭✭✭

发布日期

2017年7月31日

markludmon

Queers Part 2

The Old Vic Theatre

31 July 2017

Four stars

In the first set of monologues curated by Mark Gatiss under the banner of Queers at the Old Vic, we were given insights into the gay lives of three men and a woman over the past century as they sought happiness against the odds. In the second set, we go down the pub to meet four more people who each show us other aspects of being gay over the past seven decades, with several again finding unexpected pleasures in spite of society’s disapproval and hate. In The Safest Spot in Town, Fredrick tells us how he became part of the hedonistic bohemian world of Bloomsbury and Soho before World War Two after arriving from the West Indies. Keith Jarrett’s monologue gives us a glimpse of the underground world of London where gay men could have some semblance of freedom and dance together in the jazz hangouts such as the legendary Shim Sham Club. Sat in a pub, like all the characters in this second quartet, Kadiff Kirwan is wickedly funny as Fredrick, playfully telling us of his exploits in the build-up to the Blitz. We have a fresh perspective in Missing Alice in another beautifully crafted monologue, written by Jon Bradfield. We see gay experience during the 1940s and 1950s through the eyes of Alice who discovers she has become the respectable cover for her husband’s affairs with men. Sara Crowe is poignant and very funny, presenting us with a woman who appears sweet and demure but has an inner steeliness that allows her to survive. Brian Fillis’s More Anger takes us back 30 years to the time when Brookside and EastEnders introduced out gay characters and film makers were beginning to respond to HIV. Russell Tovey brilliantly plays Phil, an actor who has been typecast in gay roles, most of which mean his character rarely makes it to the end of the script. He reminds us of the evolution of stereotypical gay storylines in the 1980s and 1990s, from tragic Aids-related deaths through to coming out. The funniest of the monologues, More Anger makes us laugh out loud but catches us unawares with its passion and anger. Another landmark in gay history features in Michael Dennis’s funny and touching A Grand Day Out. Teenager Andrew from Nottingham joins demonstrators outside Parliament on the day in 1994 when MPs voted to lower the age of consent to 18 but stepped back from dropping it to 16 in line with heterosexuals. Like Phil, he is angry but, as in many of the other monologues in the Queers programme, he manages to find reasons to be cheerful despite disappointment and discrimination. Fionn Whitehead is excellent as a young man tentatively exploring his identity as the inequalities of the previous decades continue to crumble. Safe in the knowledge that the age of consent was lowered to 16 seven years later, we are again reminded of the joys of being gay even when the law was against it. TV versions of all eight monologues are being broadcast on BBC4 from 10pm from Monday to Thursday this week, starring Ben Whishaw, Alan Cumming and Rebecca Front as well as the Old Vic cast of Fionn Whitehead, Russell Tovey, Kadiff Kirwan, Ian Gelder and Gemma Whelan. These short films will also be available at BBC.co.uk/iplayer Read our review of Queers Part One

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

剧院新闻

票务

剧院新闻

票务