The appearance and success of
Shelagh Delaney’s A Taste of Honey became a theatrical legend almost from the
beginning. A 19-year old woman from a working-class background, with little
education and almost no knowledge of theatre wrote a play about people on the
bottom rung of the social ladder. She sent the script to the legendary Joan
Littlewood and the play was presented by the Theatre Workshop in Stratford. Not
Stratford-upon-Avon but the suburb of London.
It was a smashing success and was
made into a film. Delaney continued writing but she never duplicated the success
of A Taste of Honey. She died in 2011.
The play has been revived by the
National Theatre in a superbly acted production that also contains some
interesting choices by director Bijan Sheibani.
The plot involves the lives of
Helen (Jodi Prenger), a buxom, crude woman described by Delaney as a
“semi-whore,” her daughter Jo (Gemma Dobson) and several men who enter their
lives. They live in a dump in Manchester, near a slaughterhouse and a smelly river.
The two women show contempt for each other but there are suggestions of
affection. There are indications of artistic talent that was quashed by poverty
and life choices.
Gemma Dobson, Tom Varey and Jodie Prenger. Photo: Marc Brenner
There are three men in their
lives. Peter (Tom Varey), a car salesman, is one of Helen’s customers. Jimmie
(Durone Stokes) is a black sailor who promises marriage and leaves Jo pregnant.
Geoffrey is a decent young man who happens to be homosexual.
It is a richly textured play with
numerous undertones in its description of the horrors and degradation of
poverty and the strength to survive it however by any means available.
The issue of the production is
the choices made by director Bijan Sheibani. The play begins with Helen and Jo arriving
at the cold and dreary apartment in a slum of Manchester. Sheibani does not
find that satisfactory and he has the play open in a pub. There is a band
playing jazz music and Helen drinks and sings. When she finishes her song, a
large crew rushes on the stage with the furniture for the apartment and Delaney’s
opening lines are heard. The stage crew is used several times to move props on
and off the stage.
There are many references to
music in the play but there is no mention of a band staying on the stage
throughout the performance. This is what Sheibani does. The musicians do
nothing most of the time, but they do play a few bars here and there. In one
scene change, Geoff does a sizeable song and dance routine for which I can find
no explanation. The musicians add nothing, but they do change the tenor of the
play which you may classify as slightly annoying or ridiculous.
The production is saved by
outstanding performances. Jodie Prenger delivers a Helen who is sluttish,
selfish, crude and odious. Her maternal instinct, to the extent that it exists,
appears infrequently and it is rebuffed by her daughter. A stellar performance.
Gemma Dobson’s Jo is a pathetic
teenager who hates her mother and is looking for something or someone that she
is not even sure of. We feel sorry her for her without liking her and are never
quite sure why or if we dislike her. Dobson’s finely balanced performance is a
pleasure to watch.
Tom Varey as Peter is a drunk
cad, the type of slimeball that brags about his conquest of women, lies about
his prowess and descends to proposing marriage to a woman like Helen. She
probably could be had for a few bob.
Durone Stokes as Jimmie the
sailor is a “nice guy” who is looking for sex and finds the eternal formula for
getting it: offer love, promise marriage, have sex and disappear. Stuart
Thomson is excellent as Geoff who befriends Jo and is basically the soul of
decency in an indecent situation.
The actors speak in a thick
Manchester accent that is not always comprehensible to the untuned ear. There
were times when I had to strain to understand what was being said and looked
for surtitles.
The creation of A Taste of
Honey is a marvelous story of an almost instantaneous eruption of
talent in a most unlikely of places that results in marvelous theatre
generations later.
__________
The Taste of Honey by Shelagh Delaney continues
until February 29, 2020 at Trafalgar Studios, 14 Whitehall,
James Karas is the Senior Editor -
Culture of The Greek Press
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