What’s in a Name?
Theatre Royal Windsor
Reviewed – 4th November 2019
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“very funny with a great cast served up in a pleasing package”
Whatβs in a Name? In this case itβs the motor for an evening of smart, snappy comedy about a dinner party that spirals hopelessly out of control when a daft joke about a babyβs name leads to some devastating family revelations.
With over 100 productions since 2010 in 22 languages and 30+ countries, this play by Matthieu Delaporte and Alexandre de la PatelliΓ¨re is big box office, with a string of awards to its credit. Itβs also a successful film, under its French title Le PrΓ©nom. The five characters β a brother and sister, their partners and one secretive childhood friend β all get big moments in this tight ensemble piece thatβs full of witty one-liners.
Joe Thomas (best known as Simon in E4βs The Inbetweeners) is the first on stage with a rapid commentary on the action thatβs about to unfold. He gives a high energy performance as Vincent, a cocky, Daily Mail reading wide-boy who’s made a packet out of property. Heβs a perfect foil for his earnest professorial brother-in-law (RADA-trained Bo Poraj, Mike in Miranda). Laura Patch turns things up a notch when she gets her own back on the sparring males, who are too busy arguing to pay attention to her struggles with the tagine. Alex Gaumond is a quiet trombonist who gets to spring the biggest surprise, to the consternation of the rest of the cast including the stylishly pregnant Summer Strallen as Vincentβs wife.
The home truths served up at this spicy dinner party gone wrong kept the audience amused last night, but was there any meat on the elegant bones? The production premiered at the Birmingham Rep in 2017 and is here directed, with a new cast, by its translator, Jeremy Sams. Heβs anglicised a particularly Parisian text (everyone here knows Benjamin Constantβs 1815 novel Adolphe) thatβs peppered with just the kind of philosophical wordplay that French intellectuals love. But heβs set it not in the 20th arrondissement but in a Peckham warehouse conversion. Thereβs more swearing and class differentiation than youβd expect among Parisian academics, and the play occupies a slightly uneasy space somewhere between Yasmina Rezaβs Art and one of Alan Ayckbournβs social satires.
Whatβs in a Name is very funny with a great cast served up in a pleasing package (a clever and satisfyingly detailed set by Francis OβConnor). But this light soufflΓ© of a play ultimately left me wanting a bit more substance.
Reviewed by David Woodward
Photography by Piers Foley
What’s in a Name?
Theatre Royal Windsor until 9th November then UK tour continues
Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Trials Of Oscar Wilde | β β β β | March 2019
Octopus Soup! | β β Β½ | April 2019
The Mousetrap | β β β β | October 2019
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