The Political History of Smack and Crack
Soho Theatre
Reviewed – 6th September 2018
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“Their precise delivery of the fast-paced dialogue is matched by their energetic and purposeful occupation of the in-the-round stage”
If I had a pound for every time I heard that originality is dead, Iβd put the Arts Council out of business. There is a myth that persists which claims are no new modes of expression, that Plato, Shakespeare and Pinter have covered the lot. It persists, in spite of the adventurous new work that challenges such an assumption.
Speaking of adventurous new work, The Political History of Smack and Crack is fresh from Edinburgh and newly in Soho. It arrives with the intent of showing how the introduction of heroin to the streets of Manchester affected a generation. This βlost generationβ of addicts is represented by Neil and Mandy, two friends bound together by love, fate, and opiates. Their struggle to stay clean, as well as their complex personal relationship, provide the emotional backbone of the play. But writer Ed Edwards takes things a step further by exploring not only the addiction of his protagonists, but the addiction of the whole country. The political context behind the rise in heroin addiction is explained; Thatcherβs government is exposed for its role this process; a series of statistics evoke the dissolution of the country before our eyes.
On its own, the story of Neil and Mandy would make for an enjoyable play. This is thanks in part to Neil Bell and Eve Steele, who capture their inner conflicts perfectly. One minute they are infusing dialogue with dry wit β βWhy did you tell me it was good?β βI didnβt want to die aloneβ β the next this humour has given way to the depths of repressed feelings. Their precise delivery of the fast-paced dialogue is matched by their energetic and purposeful occupation of the in-the-round stage.
But the political content of the play is what truly elevates it beyond a straightforward addiction story. The moments when Bell and Steele break character and delve into the facts of the political situation are as captivating as they are shocking. It gives Neil and Mandyβs story new depth; simultaneously, it exposes an important historical event that the audience (or at least ignorant Southerners like myself) may be unaware of. Ultimately, it shows that we are all part of something bigger, that no story can be isolated from its context and expect to be understood.
Perhaps thatβs why this play feels so timely, in spite of the fact that it takes events three decades previous as its subject. In a time where personal stories are championed over political context, Edwardsβ union of these two aspects suggests that individual narratives can be a springboard to understanding rather than a final statements on the subject.
And (for the record) if a situation ever arises where I do get a pound every time someone says originality is dead, I will gladly give every last one to projects like this, and hope that it births more work that explores sensitive issues with the same rigour and poignancy that can be witnessed here.
Reviewed by Harriet Corke
Photography by The Other Richard
The Political History of Smack and Crack
Soho Theatre until 22nd September
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