Radio
Arcola Theatre
Reviewed – 24th June 2019
β β β β
“a performance that convincingly and loyally wrings the emotion from the text”
βMaybe you wanna see an effect? A piece of magic?β Charlie Fairbanks (Adam Gillen) asks us, explaining that magicians prefer to use the term βeffectβ rather than βtrickβ. What they create are illusions by taking advantage of how we perceive and process information. A dove fluttering from a hat is used to draw an audience’s attention away from the actual trick. Just as some believe the moon landing was a trick (fake news half a century before the phrase was coined) by the American Government to distract us from Vietnam and the Cold War. It is this merging of the global and the personal that informs Al Smithβs writing in βRadioβ that enables us to connect instantly to the play.
Smithβs father worked for the US space programme and helped to choose the landing sites on the surface of the moon for Apollo 11. He grew up hearing his stories about that time, and about the highs and lows of that era in the States. By extension, βRadioβ is about fathers and sons, pride and protest, love and war; a kind of love-letter to his own father and to a lost era. Alone on the stage, Adam Gillen treats the writing with reverence in a performance that convincingly and loyally wrings the emotion from the text. It is no small challenge to keep an audience clinging to your words (and thereβs a fair few of them) for eighty minutes. And Gillen does it with style, honesty and subtlety. Director Josh Roche avoids gimmickry and allows the actorβs storytelling to take centre stage.
Charlie Fairbanks was born at noon, in June of 1950 in Kansas, in the dead centre of the 20th century and in the dead centre of the United States. The trouble is that the centre has a habit of shifting. As does the focus of the story. But that is not a criticism; Gillenβs anecdotal flair adds spontaneity so that the flow of the narrative never ebbs as it meanders and side streams. The strands of his story overlap, like fragments of clarity from a continually spinning radio dial, in a performance that crackles with understated energy.
While chasing his own dreams of becoming an astronaut, Charlie navigates the American Dream and the twists and turns of his changing world – from JFKβs assassination, Vietnam, the cold war and, central to the play, the space race. His is a heartwarming story of reaching for the moon, and of the effects of seeing our world from afar. The real achievement of the moon landing, says Charlie at the close of the monologue, wasnβt that we got there but that, in getting there, we realised the value of all we left behind.
And like the cycle of the moon, we are back at the start β with an echo of Charlieβs opening question. But by now we have the answer. It doesnβt take an illusionistβs trickery to know that we have just seen a piece of magic.
Reviewed by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Helen Maybanks
Radio
Arcola Theatre until 13th July
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Elephant Steps | β β β β | August 2018
Greek | β β β β | August 2018
Forgotten | β β β | October 2018
Mrs Dalloway | β β β β | October 2018
A Hero of our Time | β β β β β | November 2018
Stop and Search | β β | January 2019
The Daughter-In-Law | β β β β β | January 2019
Little Miss Sunshine | β β β β β | April 2019
The Glass Menagerie | β β β β | May 2019
Riot Act | β β β β β | June 2019
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