Linda Bassett (Iris),
Nicholas le Prevost (Ralph Lumsden), Frances de la Tour (Dorothy Stacpoole)
and
Selina Cadell (June Stacpoole). Photo by Catherine Ashmore
Reviewed by James Karas
People, Alan Bennett’s
latest play, is a richly textured work, humane, mordant, farcical, wise and
simply funny. It is set in a large, stately home that has gone to seed and is
about to be sold to the National Trust or private interests. The fate of the
house and the old women who occupy it is an obvious parable about England past
and present but that is not why the play is so enjoyable.
For my money, the most enjoyable part was watching and listening to
Frances de la Tour as Dorothy Stacpoole. De la Tour has a deep, mellifluous
voice and she delivers perfectly round vowels in an impeccable, aristocratic
English accent that is almost operatic. In the first act, she is dressed in a
moth-eaten fur coat with socks and hairdo that make her look frumpy to the nth
degree. She resembles the grand house in Yorkshire whose fate is in her hands
and has been around for half a millennium but, like her, it has seen better
days.
Aside from the two competing interests for the house, Dorothy has to put
up with her companion Iris (Linda Bassett), a woman who may not have seen
better days. Iris knits most of the time and walks crouched over. She makes a
good foil for Dorothy and does get a punch line near the end of the play.
There is additional conflict from Dorothy’s sister June (Selina Cadell),
a moralistic, lesbian Archdeacon who wants to sell the house to the National
Trust. A fine performance by Cadell.
Add to all that a crew that wants to film a pornographic movie and have
the Bishop (Andy de la Tour) walk in at the most inopportune time and you get a
hilarious scene from a farce.
In the second act we see a different Dorothy, dressed elegantly and
recalling her past as a model as she inadvertently appears in the making of the
porno flick. Dorothy displays aristocratic disdain, delivers perfect deadpan
put-downs and still retains her humanity. A grand performance by de la Tour.
The two sides that want to buy the house, the National Trust and private
investors are represented by Ralph (Nicholas le Prevost), a garrulous deliverer
of twaddle and Bevan (Miles Jupp), a smooth and sleazy salesman, respectively. Very
well done.
The main character is the house with the estate on which it was built.
It has a long and colourful history from billeting soldiers during the English
Civil War to housing Canadian troops during World War II. It was at the centre
of a coalmine and it now rests creakily on what remains of the coal underneath
it.
Nicholas Hytner directs a funny and moving production that plucks all
the right chords.
Designer Bob Crowley gives us a huge and decaying stateroom that is
turned back into its glorious past appearance near the end of the play.
The direction for the movie screen is mostly intelligent and well done.
There a number of mishaps where the director seems to forget to change camera
angles and he is a bit too enamoured of close-ups but not too seriously. The
sound is an issue because all the voices come though the same speakers and
there is very little perspective. It is the price of seeing it in the movie theatre
instead of watching the real thing on London.
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