Tag Archives: MASTERCLASS

MASTERCLASS

★★★

Jack Studio Theatre

MASTERCLASS

Jack Studio Theatre

★★★

“The play is deft and sufficiently funny”

There is an old anecdote about Sir Laurence Olivier and Dustin Hoffman on the set of Marathon Man. The story goes that, to prepare himself for the part of frazzled Thomas Levy, Hoffman went for nights without sleep.

“Why don’t you try acting, my dear boy,” commented old-school thesp Sir Laurence.

This is the stuff of Masterclass, a natty two-hander from the pen of Tim Connery.

In this version, the conflict is literally spelled out. On the whiteboard of the primary school setting, brash pretender Gary Brock writes his Method philosophy: “Be who you are.”

To which old-school luvvie Roger Sutherland adds the word “not”. Be who you are not is the most obvious definition of acting, he says, astounded anyone might think otherwise.

And so the clash is established. Brock (Kurt Lucas) and Sutherland (Alex Dee) rage across the generations. In a short play, this quickly becomes a tired refrain, going nowhere particularly original.

We crave more from Brock and Sutherland, and it is slowly teased out to great effect. Why are Sutherland, once a contender for Bond, and Brock, a former ten-year veteran of an Aussie soap, holed up in an £85-an-hour masterclass in a rented classroom?

They both have issues. Ah. Here it comes.

Sutherland is old (ie, overlooked by the profession), making a meagre living doing ads for funeral payment plans, with the money heading straight to HMRC. More than that, though, he is becoming forgetful.

“Do you know who I am?” he bellows, with an actor’s penchant for self-aggrandisement.
“Do you?” replies Brock.

Brock has immersed himself so far into his method that he has become a liability on set, violent and unpredictable. Besides, who wants a child actor who grew up?

Under Luke Adamson’s careful direction, they begin to see commonalities where before there were only differences.

To carry this through, Lucas, playing Brock, has a gleeful pseud’s intensity, sucking in his cheeks and going effortfully to his core essence. On occasion, he has the air of a David Brent.

Alex Dee is conveniently a Peter Graves look-alike. He presents Sutherland as stately, suave and imperturbable. It is only under duress that he peels away layers to reveal an ultimately tragic reality.

The play is deft and sufficiently funny and, while its initial pitch lingers too long, it remains for the most part sharp and inquiring. Towards the end, one wonders how the writer will find a fitting resolution. He does so with some heavy-handed heart-tugging that comes a little too easily, especially after so much effort has been expended priming the pumps.

However, as a swift exploration of life’s capricious tendency to burst balloons, the Bridge House Theatre production is nicely done and well packaged.

And let’s just hope its success gets Brock and Sutherland back on their feet.



MASTERCLASS

Jack Studio Theatre

Reviewed on 22nd January 2026

by Giles Broadbent

Photography by The Bridge House Theatre


 

 

 

 

MASTERCLASS

MASTERCLASS

MASTERCLASS

MASTERCLASS

★★★★

Southbank Centre

MASTERCLASS at the Purcell Room, Southbank Centre

★★★★

“Rachel Bergin’s creative production packs a well-staged punch aimed squarely at the patriarchy”

You will recognise the stage set up from any “A Conversation With…” events you have attended in the neighbouring Royal Festival Hall. Two opposing casual chairs either side of a coffee table, prominent copies of a ‘great work’, and a historically accurate cognac bottle: Ellen Kirk as set designer gets the tone just right.

However, the sincerity lasts for mere seconds before Feidlim Cannon and Adrienne Truscott start unravelling the form with silliness, physical comedy and rat-a-tat dialogue. Over the course of an hour they unpick the work of many of the greats stubbornly taking space in the literary and theatrical canon.

Feidlim Cannon plays the interviewer, entering the stage to smooth jazz (Jennifer O’Malley on sound design), ready to cosily interrogate a great man and his body of work. A moustachioed and body suited Adrienne Truscott is introduced as a writer, director and costume designer whose work allegedly surfaces themes of truth, gender and power, but as unrehearsed readings of one of his scenes demonstrate, are more often channels for misogyny and violence against women.

 

 

Quickly, the artifice is revealed, with Cannon’s seventies wig falling off during farcical movement sequences (well designed by Eddie Kay, movement director). This escalates throughout the piece as lines between the characters and the artists playing them are increasingly blurred; they appear to break scene to demand self-examination of themselves. In places the threads of the devising are still visible, though they are mostly welcomed (I am a sucker for a juxtaposed dance sequence). Costumes are shed nearly all the way; which as we are reminded is Truscott’s calling card from previous shows, and extensively examined.

There are some great one liners in the first half of the script from writers Cannon and Truscott, along with Gary Keegan of Irish theatre company Brokentalkers, which jab at well-known theatrical productions that have frankly audacious premises. The exploration of why genius and passion never seems to express itself in calm and considered behaviour when violence is available was another point persuasively demonstrated.

Then as the fourth wall fully breaks, we move into a fairly explicit lecture on feminism, allyship and taking up space. It feels like most of the flair disappears for too long before the ambiguous ending restores the playfulness that has underpinned the majority of the piece. I felt like the stripped back truth-telling felt a bit too much like a classroom and the commentary slightly too surface level to justify the lack of theatricality.

Despite this, the vast majority of Masterclass is creative, gnarly, and cathartic for many a practitioner. Rachel Bergin’s creative production packs a well-staged punch aimed squarely at the patriarchy.


MASTERCLASS at the Southbank Centre

Reviewed on 9th May 2024

by Rosie Thomas

Photography by Ste Murray

 


 

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:

FROM ENGLAND WITH LOVE | ★★★½ | April 2024
REUBEN KAYE: THE BUTCH IS BACK | ★★★★ | December 2023
THE PARADIS FILES | ★★★★ | April 2022

MASTERCLASS

MASTERCLASS

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