Tuesday 2 October 2012

"Lying is the most fun a girl can have without taking her clothes off, but it's better if you do."

Review of Broken Bird Theatre's performance of Closer by Patrick Marber
at The Old Hairdressers



Closer, a play concerning honesty, co-dependency, trust, love as object-obsession and other heady themes, holds some considerable acumen having won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play and New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Foreign Play, as well as being nominated for a Tony after its London premiere in 1997. 

This often comedic romantic drama, made into a film featuring Jude Law, Natalie Portman, Clive Owen and Julia Roberts in 2004, follows the emotional ups and downs of four individuals, each in their own way psychologically dubious, as they fall in and out of each other’s arms, trading partners for love and lust. Dan is cold, Alice is wayward, Anna can’t follow her best interests, and Larry claims the moral high ground while acting out unscrupulous sexual fantasies and taking opportunities in opposition to his values.

Happenstance and sometimes the most unlikely of coincidences brings them together – in one hilarious scene, Dan tricks Larry into turning up for a date after posing as a cyber slut named Anna in an internet chat room, only for Larry to meet the real Anna and begin a romantic relationship with her, much to Dan’s Chagrin. Alice and Larry, the more co-dependents in love, are betrayed. Arguments ensue over who deserves whom and finally happy endings are lost over the desire for candour.

 Sometimes these four carry on a little as though there are only three other people in the rest of the universe, but the writing is consistently high standing - with tight plotting, interesting structure, and occasional flashes of psychological excellence such as the unconscious tie between Larry’s slavish co-dependency in love as a flipside to his sexual violence: he devours his partner in conquest of his slavery. 

The constructive use of a minimal set helps enhance the drama and naturalistic feel.  The merging of two scenes into one stage is ubiquitously well achieved: when one character walks into another couple’s scene only to steal one of them into a flashback of a previous scenario the effect is immersive.

Broken Bird is a company that shows immense competence both in acting and execution, although sometimes a closer reading of the script could yield yet deeper results. For example, Larry makes several references to his working class heritage but his performance does not particularly exploit this as a character point, likewise while Dan’s portrayal is completely consistent internally, he does not seem to exude the cool, detached sexuality wanting of a man whom women involuntarily fall in love with, despite themselves. Still, the company, formed earlier this year by young actors, has the potential to raise the stakes for independent theatre in Glasgow, they emanate professionalism.

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