Happy Days
The Tower Theatre
Reviewed – 17th April 2019
β β β β β
“Jones and Sullivan have done Beckett justice β a daunting achievement of which many have fallen short”
If youβre not familiar with this Samuel Beckett play, first staged in New York in 1961, it follows the daily routine of Winnie, a woman buried up to her waist in a mound of earth. She has a bag of little things that help her get through the day: a toothbrush, a hand mirror, makeup, a hat, a music box. She does her best to maintain her cheery demeanour in spite of everything. Winnieβs husband, Willie, is ever-present, but mostly hidden behind the mound. A masterpiece of absurdism, Happy Days is essentially an hour and forty-minute monologue.
To say the play is challenging, both technically and dramatically, is an understatement. An exercise in anti-theatre, it purposefully breaks all the rules: itβs static, without plot, quiet, adagio, and abstruse. These are all pitfalls for theatremakers, but Robert Pennant Jonesβs production with Ruth Sullivan (Winnie) transcends. Jones and Sullivan have done Beckett justice β a daunting achievement of which many have fallen short. Theyβve beautifully expressed his insight into empty lives, and people starving for genuine connection. The play feels as relevant today as it was sixty years ago.
The set design (Max) is striking β immediately impressive when you enter the space. Where soft earth or sand is normally used for the mound, Max has crafted a dramatic mountain of sharp shale. The ominous black rocks emphasise the harsh and unforgiving nature of Winnieβs imprisonment. The design leans somewhat into the interpretation that the playβs setting could be Hell.
Peggy Ashcroft, a famous former Winnie, once described the role as βthe Hamlet for female actors.β Ruth Sullivanβs performance is as exceptional as the part demands. She expertly plays the veneer of chipper positivity over a profound sadness β the desperate strain beneath Winnieβs apparently breezy attempts to communicate with Willie (Ian Hoare). With the lightest touch, she allows us glimpses into the vastness of Winnieβs loneliness. Tears pool in her eyes before she pulls back with an apologetic smile and sigh: βOh wellβ¦ Mustnβt complainβ¦β Sullivan portrays an intellectual, curious, loving woman deprived of stimulation. Neglected. Her joy at the smallest shred of acknowledgement is heart-breaking. Her vulnerability is devastating.
Sullivanβs flawless timing shows a deep sense for the rhythms of Beckettβs language. Her characterisation is so natural it ideally contrasts with the bizarreness of her situation. A dense, enigmatic, nearly two-hour monologue dares an audience not to be bored. But Sullivan is captivating. She lifts the lines, bringing out the poetry in Beckettβs writing. Winnie is delightful, silly, and endearing. She is also acutely suffering, and holding back oceans of anguish. Sullivanβs ability to communicate all of this, while stuck in place from the waist (and later neck) down, is marvellous.
If youβre a Beckett fan, do not miss this show. If youβre new to Beckett, grab this opportunity to discover his genius. Sullivanβs superlative performance deserves a packed house. Itβs one you wonβt forget.
Reviewed by Addison Waite
Photography by David Sprecher and Robert Piwko
Happy Days
Tower Theatre until 20th April
Previously reviewed at this venue:
To Kill a Mockingbird | β β β Β½ | October 2018
Table | β β β β | November 2018
The Seagull | β β β | November 2018
Talk Radio | β β β Β½ | March 2019
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