Tag Archives: Ethan Doyle

Far Away

★★½

 Donmar Warehouse

Far Away

Far Away

 Donmar Warehouse

Reviewed – 14th February 2020

★★½

 

“hits its most climactic point with a whole third of the script still to go”

 

If you ever did an A-Level in Drama in sixth form or college, chances are you already know Caryl Churchill’s work quite well, and had probably exhaustively analysed every detail of her scripts through waffling and meandering essays. For those for whom Far Away was one of those plays (like myself), actually seeing it performed in the Donmar Warehouse’s new production directed by Lyndsey Turner will no doubt be an exhilarating experience, although the extent to which it stands up to those reams of analysis, especially in our current socio-political climate, is arguable.

Far Away happens in three distinct sections. The first sees a young Joan (Sophie Ally and Abbiegail Mills) disturbing her aunt Harper (Jessica Hynes) late at night, unable to sleep after having seen something shocking and violent outside. The scene carries tension masterfully as Harper tries to weave a false narrative that explains away what Joan saw, only for Joan to drop a series of atom bomb revelations about what she experienced. The second section builds on the deceit of the first by portraying Joan now as a young adult (Aisling Loftus), starting a new job designing hats for a forthcoming parade alongside seasoned hat-maker Todd (Simon Manyonda). Todd slowly starts to disrupt the worldview that Harper’s lies had entrenched in Joan, as the true nature of the hat parade is unveiled in the most breathtaking moment of whole play. Which, if you’re keeping count, is an issue because Far Away hits its most climactic point with a whole third of the script still to go.

The final section jumps forward in time once more, while also jumping stylistically from straightforward realism to nigh-on absurdism, as the characters explain how enemies in the all-out war that’s erupted have weaponised the likes of mosquitoes and light, but that Latvian dentists can be trusted. Perhaps it’s an exploration of mankind’s tendency towards destruction and violence and how it will eventually embroil everything with it. Perhaps it’s a comment on paranoia and conspiracy theorists. Or perhaps it means nothing at all. It feels so much like stepping into a completely different play rather than a continuation of the one that’s just preceded it that it practically renders the previous two sections irrelevant. The complete abandonment of the momentum that had been built prior also grinds the final scene down to what is essentially a ten page exposition dump – the characters are indiscernible, the inter-relationships are meaningless, and the dialogue is filled with sluggish lists.

Every aspect of Far Away which had previously been stellar falls to the wayside at this point – Lizzie Clachan’s striking and ominous design that reveals more of its world as the script does finds itself with nothing to do; likewise with Peter Mumford’s foreboding lighting. Where Hynes and Manyonda at first carried driving undertones of dark, shady deeds being done just out of sight juxtaposing with Loftus’ innocence, the play’s conclusion leaves them directionless as Turner can’t successfully find the connective sinew between the final scene and the first two. The result is a deeply anticlimactic play, that offers as much dystopian insight as the likes of The Hunger Games – that’s not a knock against The Hunger Games, but without its thrills and action, Far Away delivers pretty much the same experience as just turning on the news.

 

Reviewed by Ethan Doyle

Photography by Johan Persson

 


Far Away

 Donmar Warehouse until 28th March

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Appropriate | ★★★★ | August 2019
[Blank] | ★★★★ | October 2019
Teenage Dick | ★★★★ | December 2019

 

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Republic

Republic

★★★★

VAULT Festival 2020

Republic

Republic

Cavern – The Vaults

Reviewed – 8th February 2020

★★★★

 

“a unique and and exciting experience”

 

Ever look at the corrupt, greed-driven hellscape that it is modern society and think, ‘I really wish we could just start over?’ If the answer is yes, then luckily for you Republic at the VAULT Festival will be right up your alley – though it might not fully restore your hope in humanity.

The audience are siphoned off into the eight different nations that form the colonies of Mars in 2119, and you are tasked with designing a new civilisation. It is up to you in your groups of ten or so to decide what ideals and industries you will build your society on; you’ll have to make initial choices such as whether to invest in weapons or medicine, which then branch out into how you spend your resources over time. Do you pour money into food at the expense of security? Or do you risk famine to prevent foreign attacks? The decisions you make will directly impact on the ways your nation develops through Upstart Theatre’s futuristic AI tablets (that look suspiciously like iPads) which calculate how well your industries are doing and what kind of headlines your leadership is making.

The decisions that have to be made can also spark some fiery debate with your fellow leaders – you will get the most out of Republic by being as active a participant as possible. Occasionally unexpected events will arise such as an incoming storm or a virus infecting your technology, and one particular highlight saw a refugee ship from Earth seeking asylum on Mars, and all eight nations had to vote together to decide whether to accept or reject them, considering Earth’s threats of attack if we chose the former. Moments such as these that brought together the whole room had an electric and dynamic atmosphere, and leaves you wishing there were a few more instances of connectivity between the different nations that tested your moral compass in this way.

That said, Republic is a unique and and exciting experience that lets you work with others to develop something that you feel proud of by its conclusion – success requires conversation, unity, and compassion; ideals that we could always do with more of.

 

Reviewed by Ethan Doyle

 

VAULT Festival 2020

 

 

Click here to see all our reviews from VAULT Festival 2020