Tag Archives: Golden Goose Theatre

Howerd's End

Howerd’s End

★★★½

Golden Goose Theatre

Howerd's End

Howerd’s End

Golden Goose Theatre

Reviewed – 29th October 2020

★★★½

 

“merges a fascinating exploration into a secret and devastating relationship with an exciting throwback to classic comedy”

 

Frankie Howerd is no doubt one of Britain’s best loved comedians, his comic career spanning six decades in the twentieth century. Most Brits can’t help but titter (pardon the pun) at the comedian’s endless stream of double entendre, and his distinctive cries of ‘no missus’ and ‘please yourself’ are instantly recognisable.

However, despite his incredible notoriety, Howerd led an extremely private life, hiding his potentially career-destroying homosexuality from both his audience and his mother. Recent documentaries have shed a light on his personal relationships, most notably, his four-decade-long love affair with his manager Dennis Heymer. Howerd’s End, directed by Joe Harmston, explores their tumultuous relationship through the eyes of Heymer, whilst also affording a glorious opportunity to encounter Howerd in full-flight stand up mode.

The play begins with Heymer (Mark Farrelly), now well into his 80s, welcoming the audience to their tour of Wavering Down, the Somerset home Heymer shared with Howerd until his death in 1992. Heymer laments the unspoken words between him and his late partner and wishes they had had more time together. Luckily for Heymer, the ghostly spirit of Howerd (Simon Cartwright) soon appears before him, cracking jokes and delivering bumbling prose as in his prime.

What follows is a selection of key moments in their relationship, from the pair’s initial meeting at the Dorchester Hotel where Heymer was a Sommelier to Howerd’s therapy room where he was plied with LSD to cope with his depressive state. The audience is shown a very different side to Howerd’s stage persona, instead encountering a man who is deeply unhappy and the consequent destruction he wreaks on those close to him.

Cartwright does a fantastic job at mimicking Howerd’s iconic mannerisms, from his pursed lips to his twitching hands. The snippets of stand-up that he delivers are some of the best scenes in the show, and his playfully teasing back and forth with the audience is excellent. Farrelly is compelling as the conflicted but devoted partner, and moves between several different roles, including Howerd’s therapist, with ease.

After a whistle stop tour of the pair’s relationship, the play dissolves into philosophical musings about life’s purpose and the tired trope of the unhappy clown. Though clearly applicable to the situation, these conclusions are brought to the forefront with no degree of subtlety and would have been better received had they naturally arisen from scenes between the clashing couple. Furthermore, it would have been a welcome contrast to see Howerd and Heymer in private, when their relationship was young, to invest the audience fully in their downward spiral.

The set is nicely decorated, with a red chair and pouffes placed around a fireplace and a portrait of a young Howerd decorating the overmantel. The sound design is very well-done, with sound effects of lighters flicking over and drinks being poured perfectly timed to the action on stage. The lighting is strong too, cycling through different colours and intensities to match the mood of any given moment.

Howerd’s End merges a fascinating exploration into a secret and devastating relationship with an exciting throwback to classic comedy. However, the addition of more personal scenes, rather than grand philosophical musings, would not go amiss.

 

 

Reviewed by Flora Doble

Photography by Steve Ullathorne

 


Howerd’s End

Golden Goose Theatre until 31st October

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Living With the Lights On | ★★★★ | October 2020

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Living With the Lights On

Living With The Lights On

★★★★

Golden Goose Theatre

Living With the Lights On

Living With The Lights On

Golden Goose Theatre

Reviewed – 15th October 2020

★★★★

 

“His energy is ferocious and we are galloped through the narrative at breakneck speed

 

Mark Lockyer’s one-man show is an extended story; one from his own life, told in episodes of ascending dramatic intensity. It is, simply, the story of his descent into severe manic depressive illness. At the show’s beginning, we see him as a successful young actor in the 90s, performing Mercutio for the RSC in Stratford. By the show’s end, he has spent time in Belmarsh Prison. It is, at one and the same time, both an extraordinary story and an ordinary one. Severe mania leads to extraordinarily dramatic behaviour, well beyond the parameters of everyday life, and yet the 2014 UK-wide Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing’s findings gave the figure as 1.3 million bipolar sufferers in the UK. That’s 1 in 50 of us. So not so extraordinary after all.

Lockyer is a brilliant technician, and was clearly shaped as an actor in a different time. He has a rich, clear, sonorous voice, which could reach the far corners of the Olivier with no problem whatsoever, and is a true shape shifter, adjusting his voice, face and physicality on the turn of a dime to embody the numerous characters who people his personal drama: doctors, lawyers, prison guards, travel agents, girlfriends, etc. etc. His energy is ferocious and we are galloped through the narrative at breakneck speed; 75 minutes passes in a flash and there simply isn’t time to be bored. He has us securely in his hands throughout and gives a performance of enormous dexterity and skill. There is plenty of laughter too.

And yet. And yet somehow that consummate performative confidence slightly takes away from the power of his story. It never really penetrates the audience, or moves us in our gut. Perhaps this is how it has to be, when recounting such a profound level of personal trauma; perhaps the artifice of the performance enables it to be told without triggering that trauma all over again. Which is something that must be respected. But this reviewer couldn’t help wanting a bit more intimacy, in keeping with the small space.

That said, it was an enormous pleasure and privilege to see a performance of such quality in a brand-new local theatre. Opening a new theatre in 2020 is a hugely courageous and optimistic act; its opening couldn’t have been better served than by Mark Lockyer’s brave and hopeful personal odyssey.

 

Reviewed by Rebecca Crankshaw

 


Living With The Lights On

Golden Goose Theatre

 

Recently reviewed by Rebecca:
The Fourth Country | ★★★★★ | The Vaults | February 2020
The Tin Drum | ★★★★ | The Coronet Theatre | February 2020
Henry V | ★★★★ | The Barn Theatre | March 2020
Superman | ★★★½ | The Vaults | March 2020
Fanny & Stella | ★★★★ | The Garden Theatre | August 2020
C-o-n-t-a-c-t | ★★★★ | Monument | September 2020
The Tempest | ★★★ | Turk’s Head | September 2020
Antony & Cleopatra | ★★ | Theatro Technis | September 2020
Visitors | ★★★½ | Online | October 2020
The 39 Steps | ★★★ | The Maltings | October 2020

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews