Mating in Captivity
King’s Head Theatre
Reviewed – 31st July 2019
β β β β
“an incredibly unlikely but somehow believable mess of misunderstanding, miscommunication and mishap”
We begin with Annie (Jane Christie) and Rob (Rowland Stirling) at their flat door, drunkenly fumbling for keys and clothes. Annieβs quickly down to her underwear, pouring drinks and readying to finish off what has clearly already been a big night out. But as she draws the sheets back, she finds a strange naked man in her bed.
This, it transpires is Jacob (George Rennie), an old school friend of Robβs, or rather, they used to be βfriendly with a chance of meatballs.β
Thus ensues a chaotic game of βpass the hysteriaβ, each character desperately trying to find their footing in what is an incredibly unlikely but somehow believable mess of misunderstanding, miscommunication and mishap.
In a lot of ways this is a typical bedroom farce, moving through unlikely plotlines, various sexual pairings, and deteriorating and rebuilding relationships. But whilst the script (Oliver Page) is relentlessly farcical, itβs clear the narrative is rooted in something more sincere.
Normally with a bedroom farce, the bulk of the play consists of attempts to hide the various pairings from one another, but in this case, we begin with the discovery. You might think there couldnβt possibly be enough meat on this to last an entire play, but somehow the narrative keeps unfolding, causing the audience to actually gasp in unison on more than one occasion. The sexual chemistry on stage is palpable, and it’s very difficult to decide who the audience is vying for.
Jane Christie strikes a perfect balance between wanting to be understanding of a very weird situation, and wanting to punch everyone twice. Sometimes she manages to communicate both in one facial expression.
Rowland Stirlingβs rollercoaster of a performance takes us from quiet, close affection to shrill fits of panic, and George Rennie is perfectly understated, that is until the understandably contagious hysteria gets to him too.
With the title in mind, itβs hardly a surprise that the staging consists of a big pile of bedding and not much else (Ioana Curelea). The plot requires bottles of alcohol and a knife (donβt worry, it doesnβt get nasty), but thereβs no need for the distraction of a full kitchen. Instead everything is neatly stored in a pillow case. Scene in a toilet? Donβt fret, thereβs a bucket in the aisle. Rather than being a fringe show necessity, this lack of frills seems more of a choice. The script and acting are funny and bold enough not to require high production.
Director Ed Theakston brings us confessional grit combined with well-timed slapstick- a surprisingly brilliant pairing. Mating in Captivity is both exceedingly entertaining and unabashedly earnest.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by Jack Whitney
King’s Head Theatre – winner of our 2018 Awards – Best London Pub Theatre
Mating in Captivity
King’s Head Theatre until 4th August
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
The Crown Dual | β β β β | March 2019
Undetectable | β β β β | March 2019
Awkward Conversations With Animals β¦ | β β β β | April 2019
HMS Pinafore | β β β β | April 2019
Unsung | β β β Β½ | April 2019
Coral Browne: This F***Ing Lady! | β β | May 2019
This Islandβs Mine | β β β β β | May 2019
Vulvarine | β β β β β | June 2019
Margot, Dame, The Most Famous Ballerina In The World | β β β | July 2019
Oddball | β β β Β½ | July 2019
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