Tag Archives: James Finnegan

DUDLEY ROAD

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Union Theatre

DUDLEY ROAD

Union Theatre

β˜…β˜…

“we are left with a mix of uncertainty and anticlimax”

Paul Corcoran has a lot of kids. It’s hard to keep up – there are at least eight, possibly nine. We only meet four of them during the two hours of Cameron Corcoran’s new play, β€œDudley Road”. Even Paul’s long-suffering wife is absent. She’s busy producing another child down in the maternity ward, while hubby’s at home swigging whisky. Barely leaving his armchair he desperately tries to cling onto the remaining members of his family: not so much birds leaving the nest, but rats leaving a sinking ship. Not everyone gets out alive.

The premise is enticing. Paul (James Finnegan) left County Sligo in Ireland for London a decade or so previously. We know this because he repeatedly admonishes his daughter Anne (Anna Georgina) for aspiring to return. β€˜There is nothing there’ we are frequently told, as though we are unaware of the sharp increase of Irish emigration in the 1980s, which is the context for Corcoran’s play. Against this backdrop, the family saga plays out over the next decade and a half in chronological fits and starts. Although the style is classic kitchen sink realism, it is not always easy to believe in the characters portrayed. Finnegan’s alcoholic patriarch dips predictably into bullyish rage, yet we never really see the despair and vulnerability behind his behaviour that would have drawn us in. An intimidating presence, it is how his children react to him that forms the backbone of the narrative.

Anne is the defiant elder sister using marriage to escape, even though she has already been kicked out of home. Georgina’s portrayal has a good grip of her dichotomy; torn between the desire to reject her father and the innate need to protect him – the latter constantly losing the battle. Then there is Michael. The characters need to age by over a dozen years, but when we first meet Michael, he is still a schoolboy. Cameron Corcoran (the writer is also cast in his own play) struggles to illustrate the initial youthfulness, adopting mannerisms completely at odds with his physicality. He redeems himself in the second act as an adult, silently strong and credibly dealing with the scars that his father inflicted on him.

Director Simon Pilling does little to drive the action. The slow pace of the delivery is further hindered by the scene transitions. The arrival of Padraic (Daragh Cushen) from Sligo, who claims to be an illegitimate son of Paul’s, is a spanner in the works but the subplot has little impact. The intended cliffhanger as we reach interval leaves us confused, and temporarily unsure whether it’s time to go to the bar yet.

The second act, though, picks up the pace. The baby’s cries we heard at the beginning of the play have now become twelve-year-old Claire (Charlie Culley). She has become the sole carer for her father, who is bedridden of his own volition, and still self-medicating with whisky. Culley is a breath of fresh air, skilfully portraying an ingenue forced to deal with issues beyond her years and depicting an astute survey into the often impossibly contradictory dilemmas of dealing with the disease of alcoholism.

Another chronological shift, however, brings the show into extra-time with an overlong scene tacked onto what we had assumed was quite a poignant finale. Loose ends are not quite tied up and, despite tragedies being revealed, we are left with a mix of uncertainty and anticlimax. Corcoran’s play touches on quite a few issues without really deciding which to focus on. There is a fine piece of writing in there, waiting for that decision.



DUDLEY ROAD

Union Theatre

Reviewed on 14th January 2025

by Jonathan Evans

 

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

NOOK | β˜…β˜…Β½ | August 2024
WET FEET | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | June 2024
THE ESSENCE OF AUDREY | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | February 2024
GHOST ON A WIRE | β˜…β˜…β˜… | September 2022

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Stags

Stags

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Network Theatre

Stags

Stags

Network Theatre

Reviewed – 17th May 2021

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“moves like a large truckβ€”slow to get going, but once on the moveβ€”impossible to stop”

 

Cameron Corcoran’s Stags, presented by Off Main Stage Productions at the Network Theatre, Waterloo, is an intense, gritty drama exploring all the unfinished business between a dead father and his two sons. Younger son Tony (Blake Kubena) returns home to find his father (Da, played by Tim Molyneux) dead in an armchair and surrounded by broken furniture. Tony’s older brother Conn (James Finnegan), just released from prison, is nowhere in sight.

In sixty minutes, Stags covers familiar territory made famous in the dramas of American playwrights Arthur Miller and Sam Shepard, but Corcoran gives it a decidedly Irish twist by setting the play in Dublin. Stags is a pressure cooker play, always hovering on the edge of violence, no matter how much civility smart blue suit Tony attempts to bring back to the wreckage he left behind. For starters, he’s still renting space in his memories to the abuse he suffered from his father and brother, and possibly his mother as well. The first half of Stags deals with all that as Tony confronts his father’s corpse in a memory play. The two rekindle, in bitter recriminations, the wary circling around that characterized their relationship when Da was alive. But Da is dead and confined to his armchair, so the resentments on both sides simmer along without resolution until the second half when Conn returns home. By now we know enough about Conn (and the way Da has nurtured violence in the home) to know it is only a matter of time before the brothers come to blows.

Playwright Corcoran handles this material with confidence. Stags moves like a large truckβ€”slow to get going, but once on the moveβ€”impossible to stop. It smashes everything in its path. The play is a great piece for actors, and it gives Molyneux, Finnegan and Kubena plenty to do. Molyneux is particularly impressive, since he has to work from that armchair. Finnegan deftly handles the promise of violence fulfilled as Conn goads his younger brother into shedding his veneer of education and civility. Kubena holds the play together with a difficult role that requires him to shift between playing nice and exploding into nasty. Director Naomi Wirthner uses the space economically, and well. This is a bare bones production that focuses on the acting, and rightly so.

If you have a taste for this kind of drama, you’ll find Stags well worth your time. The Network Theatre space can be a challenge to find, but keep searching even if the location seems unlikely. The space, and this play, are well suited to one another.

 

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

 


Stags

Network Theatre until 22nd May

 

Reviewed this year by Dominica:
Public Domain | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Online | January 2021
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice | β˜…β˜…β˜… | Online | February 2021
Adventurous | β˜…β˜…Β½ | Online | March 2021
Tarantula | β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… | Online | April 2021

 

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