Coming Clean
Trafalgar Studios
Reviewed – 10th January 2020
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“Adam Spreadbury-Maherβs production is atmospheric, moving and hugely enjoyable”
Screamingly funny and surprisingly moving, Coming Clean is an eighties anthem to love, friendship and the pain of infidelity. The play premiered in 1982, at the end of the more carefree pre-AIDS era when gay men didnβt have to think about that kind of danger. Itβs a domestic drama, centred on the life of Tony and Greg, a couple who have what appears to be a stable non-monogamous relationship. Their neighbour and friend William is a party animal and disco queen, cruising and fucking his way round Londonβs gay scene. He is played with a glorious camp panache by Elliot Hadley, who also manages to convey the warmth and vulnerability beneath Williamβs outrageous surface. Hadley also makes a hilarious appearance, at the end of the play, as Jurgen, a leather clad German who Tony has brought home for sex. Tony and Greg, played by Lee Knight and Stanton Plummer-Cambridge, are a believable couple who live in Gregβs Kentish Town flat. Their fifth anniversary is coming up and all seems to be well until Tony hires a cleaner. When the cleaner arrives he turns out to be Robert, an attractive out of work actor. And we are on our way to a love triangle.
Lee Knight is superb as Tony, deeply in love with Greg but frustrated by his role as the one who does the housework and his problems with his writing. He is butterfly-like in his subtle mood shifts, becoming a little different depending who he is with, enjoying Williamβs camp bravado and Gregβs stable strength. Stanton Plummer-Cambridgeβs Greg is focussed and taciturn; he canβt tell a joke and is irritated when things donβt go his way. But the two men are OK together, despite some sexual issues, until Robert arrives in their lives. Jonah Rzeskiewicz gives Robert a young, almost puppy like, enthusiasm and a pinch of endearing nervousness. He seems too sweet to be the cause of the pain to come.
The action all takes place in the flat, a perfect reincarnation of an eighties pad, created by designer Amanda Mascarenhas. From the rug on the floor to the Thriller poster on the wall itβs an evocation of a world when a pint of beer cost 90p and Kentish Town was an affordable place to live. The eighties music, and the classical records on the record player keep us firmly in the right time and place. Adam Spreadbury-Maherβs production is atmospheric, moving and hugely enjoyable. It is also nostalgically sad, because from our twenty-first century viewpoint we can see the looming shadow of the coming AIDS epidemic and the terrible suffering it brought to the gay community.
Kevin Elyotβs writing is sharp and witty and, although he uses some standard tropes, a partner returning home early, only to find his lover βat itβ with someone else, there is also a depth and understanding of the pain of infidelity that, with credit to Knightβs portrayal, is almost visceral. There is surprisingly little reference to the difficulties of being gay in 1982, Tony and Gregβs relationship being seemingly undisturbed by the outside world. It is only Williamβs attack that introduces a harsher societal context to the work.
Reviewed by Katre
Photography by Ali Wright
Coming Clean
Trafalgar Studios until 1st February
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
A Hundred Words For Snow | β β β β β | March 2019
Admissions | β β β | March 2019
Scary Bikers | β β β β | April 2019
Vincent River | β β β β | May 2019
Dark Sublime | β β β | June 2019
Equus | β β β β β | July 2019
Actually | β β β β | August 2019
The Fishermen | β β β Β½ | September 2019
A Day In The Death Of Joe Egg | β β | October 2019
The Girl Who Fell | β β β β | October 2019
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