Carl’s Story
Tabard Theatre
Reviewed – 14th March 2019
β β β β
“Miller has crafted a fine piece of writing, peppered with Wildean witticisms”
Newspaper journalist, Annie, is in a dilemma. She is on the cusp of a major sting and under pressure from her editor to run with a story based on illegal phone hacking. Taking the moral high ground, she refuses. Meanwhile, on the home front, she is βhackingβ into her husbandβs phone on a daily basis to read his messages. βCarlβs Storyβ is full of contradictions such as this. To be human is to be hypocritical, and vice versa. Writer and director Gavin Miller does not shy away from admitting we are all flawed, as he challenges our views on guilt, fidelity, friendship, family and, most poignantly, truth itself.
Set in an Art Club cafΓ©, the fourth wall is broken from the outset in this hybrid of a show; a mix of monologue, duologue and dialogue. A mix of toilet humour and kitchen sink drama where moments of sharp comedy inform home truths. Miller has a particular knack of handing us the wrong end of the stick and his skill as a writer allows us to piece together the story, and backstories, bit by bit, until we twig. The only drawback, however, is that the sometime slow pace eventually allows us to overtake and to see the plot twists coming.
Annie (Jenny Whiffen) has chosen the art cafΓ© to meet up regularly with best friend Beth (Emma Bernbach) to discuss the nitty-gritty of lifeβs (and their own) affairs. During these, often wine-fuelled tΓͺte-Γ -tΓͺtes, Annie offers up her husband, Carl, for a romantic fling with Beth. But not in front of Annieβs headstrong, moody daughter (Lucia Dean) who uses the cafΓ© to do her homework. When Bethβs ex-husband (Tommy Carter) appears, dark secrets come to the surface and the two womenβs friendship is called into question. βI never lied to youβ quips Annie, βI just didnβt tell you the whole truthβ.
Whiffen and Bernbach both feast on the dialogue and chemistry between these two strong yet vulnerable women, giving perfectly pitched, natural performances; while Dean thankfully avoids the βAb-Fabβ pitfalls with her lively portrayal of the all-knowing, mocking teenage daughter. Carter imbues compassion into the ex-husband who initially appears to have an unsavoury past. It is no give-away to reveal that Carl never shows up in his own story, though he is always in the foreground. His story touches all the charactersβ lives with a poignancy that ultimately touches us.
Miller has crafted a fine piece of writing, peppered with Wildean witticisms for the TV Sitcom era, and fine-tuned by a very watchable cast. Without knowing it we are lured into looking inside ourselves. We are all guilty of blurring the distinction between βtelling a lieβ and βnot telling the truthβ. A subtle differentiation, that we all too often use to our advantage when it suits. But this play goes deeper than that; it looks beyond the dysfunction, the compromises, the divisions and disloyalties that can fracture a friendship or a family in a stroke. Its truth lies in its sad yet unsentimental coda; that life is too short for all that βwhat-is-truthβ nonsense.
Reviewed by Jonathan Evans
Photography by Β Antonia Bordoy and Alastair Hilton
Carl’s Story
Tabard Theatre until 30th March
Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Lady With a Dog | β β β β | March 2018
Sophie, Ben, and Other Problems | β β β β | April 2018
Sirens of the Silver Screen | β β β | June 2018
Sexy Laundry | β β β | November 2018
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