Homos, or Everyone in America
Finborough Theatre
Reviewed – 14th August 2018
β β β β
“McEntire and Huntley as the two leads give incredible performances”
Jordan Seaveyβs βHomos, or Everyone in Americaβ, receiving its European premiere at the Finborough Theatre, is a whirlwind of a play, full of love, intelligence, mystery and warmth.
Told in scenes that leap around between 2006 and 2011, βHomosβ¦β is the story of βThe Writerβ (Harry McEntire) and βThe Academicβ (Tyrone Huntley), two twenty-somethings living in Brooklyn, NY. They meet over Friendster, the social networking site that appears to have been the next big thing before Myspace and Facebook arrived on the block, and from a drunken first date onwards, the play charts their highs and lows, their arguments, make-ups, break-ups and everything in between, until one life-changing event unsettles and rearranges everything they had before. βHandsome, and sort of strappingβ Dan (Dan Krikler), a friend of The Academic, becomes a key player in the coupleβs downfall, whilst Laila (Cash Holland), an enthusiastic and kind Lush worker, does what she can to help a stranger in a time of need.
A play about well-educated New York gay men talking about being gay can hardly be called ground-breaking, but Seaveyβs script, stylistically built up on half-sentences, interruptions and people talking over each other, is moving, truthful, and feels real. The structure means each scene is sort of a guessing game as to when and where we are in the relationship, and the neat movement sequences (simply effective work from Chi-San Howard) work with the script to foreshadow a darker event on the couplesβ horizon.
McEntire and Huntley as the two leads give incredible performances, sitting into the characters convincingly, and seeming free and at ease with each other and the space. Both actors display an impressive ability to snap out of emotional fraught scenes and move into lighter ones (and vice versa) at the drop of hat, and in a play so filled with arguments, they make the most of the kinder, funnier moments to give the audience a sense of why they are together.
Josh Seymourβs direction keeps the action varied, even when the script begins to feel a little repetitive (argue β make-up – repeat), and by giving us physical milestones at the beginning to keep an eye out for, gives a strange sense of emotional dΓ©jΓ vu, as if itβs somehow our relationship up on stage. A word of warning though: those with sensitive noses beware, this production contains Lush products, and lots of them.
βTo see a World in a Grain of Sandβ¦β Williams Blake once wrote, and on the Finboroughβs luscious, sand-covered stage, this relationship works hard to be the one grain representing many. It seemed odd at first to be taken back to Bush and Obama, but that time frame, and the shock and drama of the finale, suggest now more than ever is a time for vigilance and action. Has the world become (to use a word hated by The Writer) less tolerant, less safe? We hope not, but in the meantime, letβs celebrate love, kindness and what individuals can do for each other.
Reviewed by Joseph Prestwich
Photography by Marc Brenner
Homos, or Everyone in America
Finborough Theatre until 1st September
Related
Previously reviewed at this venue
The Biograph Girl | β β β | May 2018
Finishing the Picture | β β β β | June 2018
But it Still Goes on | β β β β | July 2018
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