HIR at the Park Theatre
β β β β
“Felicity Huffman making her UK stage debut is mesmeric as Paige”
HIR pronounced βhereβ is a story about place, and in Pulitzer and Tony-nominee Taylor Macβs darkly absurdist play it is about home, in this shockingly good production. The brilliant cast is led by the multi award winning American actress Felicity Huffman.
The prodigal son, Isaac (Steffan Cennydd) returns home from the Afghan war. Home is the place that Isaac couldnβt wait to leave when he joined the marines. Home is the place he sent dead soldiers back to in a box. Home is the place he dreamt about, and home is the place he is desperate to return to. But everything about his home is different.
Not him, not her, but hir is the preferred gender pronoun of his teenage younger sister, Max (ThalΓa Dudek), who is no longer his sister but his transgender / genderqueer sibling. His father (Simon Startin) is no longer his abusive father, but a dribbling stroke victim in a nightie, with a clown face and neon pink wig. And his mother (Huffman), who calls Isaac simply I, has become a not so batty, woke and merciless woman. Their quickfire chat and actions in this claustrophobic home knows no bounds as they try to look to a future.
Felicity Huffman making her UK stage debut is mesmeric as Paige from the moment the lights go up on their filthy, messy, shabby box of a house, menacingly built over landfill. Making her husband βshut the doorβ is torturous, made hilarious by the amount of times Huffman can make those three words sound so different. Paigeβs deep set and sadistic revenge cruelty on her now pathetic husband is at times monstrous; as Huffman sprays him with a water bottle, like he is a disobedient dog, but still you laugh – to begin with. Huffmanβs timing is faultless.
“more than yet another play about a dysfunctional family”
The cast play their roles with absolute conviction as: toxic masculinity, identity, mental illness, PTSD, raging hormones, disability, gender fluidity, emasculation, abuse and drugs, somehow all get their moment without being preachy in this firecracker four hander.
ThalΓa Dudek as the titular Hir is all testosterone and bravado, as hir convincingly proves that the Mona Lisa is transgender. Dudek also shows the characterβs vulnerability and desperation to have hir brotherβs traditionally masculine approval, again as the audience laughs β to begin with.
Masterfully directed by Steven Kunis who brings Hir to life, making it more than yet another play about a dysfunctional family. Hir might not quite have the shock value regarding identity, that Taylor Mac intended, when it first opened nearly a decade ago, but it still packs a punch. Set and costume designer Ceci Calf creates an extraordinary theatrical moment at the end of act one as the set closes ranks, as the 1960s pop song Little Boxes plays. And letβs not forget the hard working stage management team, who have a massive change to handle during the interval.
Thereβs no place like home but in Hir everything and everyone is broken.
HIR at the Park Theatre
Reviewed on 21st February 2024
by Debbie Rich
Photography by Pamela Raith
Previously reviewed at this venue:
LEAVES OF GLASS | β β β β | January 2024
KIM’S CONVENIENCE | β β β β | January 2024
21 ROUND FOR CHRISTMAS | β β β β | December 2023
THE TIME MACHINE – A COMEDY | β β β β | December 2023
IKARIA | β β β β | November 2023
PASSING | β β β Β½ | November 2023
THE INTERVIEW | β β β | November 2023
IT’S HEADED STRAIGHT TOWARDS US | β β β β β | September 2023
SORRY WE DIDN’T DIE AT SEA | β β Β½ | September 2023
THE GARDEN OF WORDS | β β β | August 2023
BONES | β β β β | July 2023
PAPER CUT | β β Β½ | June 2023
HIR
HIR
Click here to see our Recommended Shows page