Rope
Queen’s Theatre Hornchurch
Reviewed – 17th February 2018
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“George Kemp is entrancing as the amoral, braggadocious Brendan”
Rope, written by Patrick Hamilton, debuted on the London stage in 1929 and this revival at The Queenβs Theatre, Hornchurch transports the audience back to those hedonistic days with verve. It is based on the real-life case of Leopold and Loeb, two wealthy American students whose aspirations to prove their intellectual superiority executed what they hoped would be βthe perfect murderβ. Hamiltonβs version transports the duo across the pond, becoming Brendan and Granillo, two Oxford undergraduate students driven by the same Nietzschean ideals to βlive dangerouslyβ. The arrogant swagger of privileged Oxford by-way-of public school boys portrayed here will be familiar to those who have seen Posh or itβs cinematic adaptation, The Riot Club, highlighting the enduring fascination of playwrights and audiences with this sect.
George Kemp is entrancing as the amoral, braggadocious Brendan, revelling in the feat heβs masterminded. His reluctant accomplice Granillo (played by James Sutton) is much less excited by it all, drinking to excess to calm the nerve he often comes close to losing. Rather than following the machinations leading to the murder, the audience instead meet the pair stuffing the body into a chest in Brandonβs Mayfair apartment as they discuss that nightβs dinner party which will use the same chest as a buffet table. Guests include the murdered boyβs mother and aunt; two vacuous friends representing the average man and woman; and an artist friend, Rupert Cadell, played with gusto by Sam Jenkins-Shaw, who Brandon sees as his intellectual equal and therefore the most thrilling to evade.
The divide between what the audience and the guests know keeps tensions high and is enhanced by the clever lighting, designed by Mark Dymock, that’s opening red glow conveys the mood and enables just enough light to observe the murderous pair.
At times, some of the dialogue feels clumsy and lacking sophistication for contemporary audiences – particularly when Brandon tells the audience via Granillo the βfactsβ of the murder theyβve just committed. There are also jokes which belabour the gag so as to feel like filler. However, this is all delivered with style by the cast and is a fault of Hamiltonβs script, rather than this production. There was, however, an unfortunate technical issue which spoilt the final moments of the piece, resulting in ripples of laughter from the audience which can only be assumed not to have been the desired effect. Despite this damp squib, the skillful exploitation of dramatic irony and resulting macabre humour, makes for a thoroughly gripping night of theatre.
Reviewed by Amber Woodward
Photography by Mark Sepple
Rope
Queen’s Theatre Hornchurch until 3rd March
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