The importance of being gay: National Theatre delivers on a Wilde classic
“The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde has always been a camp classic since it premiered in 1895, but the new production at the National Theatre in London takes that to new heights. It features out actors Ncuti Gatwa (the new Dr. Who) and Hugh Skinner as Algernon and Jack — both in great … Read More
Jasper Britton, Richard Pepple, and Sule Rimi in "The Purists."Marc Brenner[/caption]
The women in the play — Tiffany Gray as Val Karo and Emma Kingston as Nancy Einstein — are more practical, both aspiring hip hop performers but from Black and white perspectives. It’s a lively evening directed by Amit Sharma, the artistic director of the Kiln. And nothing is as black or white as it seems. Through Dec. 21. (There was a funny aspect to opening night with Imelda Staunton and her husband Jim Carter on hand as the old man made at least three references to roles and shows Staunton is shown in: Queen Elizabeth II (“The Crown”), “Gypsy,” and “Sweeney Todd.")
There’s a real gem of a show at the Finborough, a pub theatre in Earl’s Court: “Lies Where it Falls” was written and performed by actor Ruairi Conaghan, whose uncle, Judge Rory Conaghan, was famously assassinated by the IRA in Belfast in 1974 when young Ruairi was just eight years old. In a riveting one-man 75 minutes, he takes us through how that trauma got unearthed after taking on the role of Patrick Magee, the IRA bomber who tried to assassinate Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher at the 1985 Conservative Party conference in Brighton and did kill five of her colleagues. When he subsequently is cast as the Player King in a “Hamlet” led by Benedict Cumberbatch, his crippling psychic pain comes to the surface and threatens his ability to go on.
A hit at the Edinburgh Festival, this is the English premier of Conaghan’s play — a uniquely personal take on “The Troubles.” Through Dec. 21.
Just closed at the King’s Head Theatre but deserving of another life is BBC journalist Jonathan Maitland’s autobiographical “How to Survive Your Mother,” which of course he did since he is on stage with Emma Davies playing his mother Bru and three actors playing him as a little boy (Brodie Edwards, who I saw, alternating with Howard Webb) and younger man (Peter Clements). Think Auntie Mame without the money or morals.
Bru is a piece of work and then some — a combination of sexy, outrageous, vulgar, and hilarious from her failed marriages to her dicey enterprises: running a gay disco in a small town and a shady old people’s home one step ahead of the law. (Since it was played on a thrust stage in this intimate theatre, I could watch audience reactions and there were four older women in the front row who sat stone-faced throughout while laughter was bubbling around them. Never cracked a smile — though at the curtain they somehow lit up. We never know what people are thinking.)
Check out the King’s Head in Islington for frequent LGBTQ-themed theater.
A NOTE TO THE HEARING IMPAIRED: I’ve had to rely in recent years on theatre-provided listening devices or t-coils that transmit to my hearing aids. Most Broadway houses have good devices. Off-Broadway is hit-and-miss. For me, at least, the technology used in most theatres in London — large and small — is outdated and inadequate, so I’m not reviewing several shows that I saw where that was true. Kudos to the National Theatre, which always had decent devices (except in their smaller Dorfman theatre which they are now renovating and upgrading) and who have invested in state-of-the-art Williams Sound devices that — combined with rewiring their theatres (and actors!) — deliver crystal clear clarity. I’m having to avoid theatres that have stuck with Sennheiser devices that work for some, but not me.
ALSO IN LONDON AND COMING UP:
- Lucian Msamati and out Ben Whishaw are starring in Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot” through Dec. 21 at the Haymarket.
- At the National Theatre’s Olivier through Feb. 22 is "Ballet Shoes," a re-imagining of Noel Streatfeild’s beloved novel, in a new version by Kendall Feaver (The Almighty Sometimes)."
- Out Mike Bartlett’s new play "Unicorn" at the Garrick stars Nicola Walker, Steven Mangan, and Erin Doherty from Feb. 4 - Apr. 26.
- Sigourney Weaver makes her West End debut as Prospero in “The Tempest” at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane Dec. 7 - Feb. 1 directed by Jamie Lloyd.
- Out Jonathan Bailey (star of “Fellow Travelers” on TV) takes the title role in “Richard II” at the Bridge Theatre from Feb. 10 to May 10.
- Rupert Goold has just been named artistic director of the Old Vic Theatre — a position once held by Kevin Spacey. Goold has been the director of the Almeida — a powerhouse small theatre in Islington that last year produced Paul Mescal in “A Streetcar Named Desire,” which is coming to Broadway, and “Tammy Faye,” the Elton John musical that was a hit in London and bombed in New York (closing Dec. 8). Goold takes over from Matthew Warchus in 2026.
- In art, The National Gallery: “Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers” is a blockbuster show with works by the tortured genius from all over the world including some private collections. And The Courtauld Gallery: has “Monet and London. Views of the Thames" which brings together the master’s many views of London bridges and Parliament shrouded in a fog that, while a health hazard, sure made for some colorful, iconic pictures of the city.
Mark