The Dog Walker
Jermyn Street Theatre
Reviewed – 14th February 2020
β β
“despite flashes of real humanity, clever staging and spirited performances, we risk feeling underwhelmed by a narrative that feels easy to predict”
The Dog Walker brings us two characters at sea in the lonely but oppressive expanse of New York. We meet our pair during a heatwave, but by the end, the storm has broken β in more ways than one.
Victoria Yeates is Keri; bitter, drunk, raging. Herbert Doakes (Andrew Dennis) is the unsuspecting dog walker who comes to collect her Pekingese, Wolfgang. Wolfgang is, it transpires, an ex-Pekingese. So begins a torrid ride, as we see these lost souls navigate around and towards one another.
Writer Paul Minx is focusing on the brokenness of so many people and so much of city life, and the flows of the power dynamics between – and grief of β Keri and Herbert are cleverly handled, ebbing tidally through the production. Minx tells us that the character of Keri is based on someone he recalls from his time living in New York in the 90s, a woman who βlived in a sleeping bag under the stairs leading up to my local Chinese laundry… Every morning sheβd get up, fold her sleeping bag, and begin her dayβs screamingβ. This perhaps explains some of the complexity of Keriβs character, and the challenges too; we see her behaving erratically but the play misses a chance to really scrutinise mental illness, grief and loneliness in lieu of a female character who lacks shades of grey until the closing scenes.
Keri shouts – a lot. She cusses and rages at Doakes, who, at first at least, accepts her treatment with an implacability born of his devout faith. Both characters, who are hard to like at the start albeit for very different reasons, melt into softness and vulnerability; without a doubt, the final act is the most affecting. This is helped by a twist or two, where it becomes clear that neither party has been telling the whole truth. The verve of these revelations animates the production and would benefit from being paced a little earlier, to avoid what can feel like a hollow shouting match in the first half.
The performances are strong, with a real sense of these actors claiming the characters in this new writing as their own. Dennisβ Jamaican accent is excellent when he hits his stride, evening out through the performance after risking being distractingly wobbly at first. And, as ever at the Jermyn, despite the compact space the set design (Isabella Van Braeckel) is evocative and the sound and lighting (Fergus OβHare and Tom Turner) are exceptional. The effect of hearing people calling up to Keri from the street level βbelowβ is especially clever, as are the flickering lights when we shift into the almost supernatural closing scene.
The ending, though, feels a little too pat, with a fragile promise of redemption that comes unconvincingly hot on the heels of a trauma in the closing moments. Ultimately, The Dog Walkerβs odd couple narrative is not a new one; there are plenty of precedents of city oddballs finding each other in theatre, tv and film. As such itβs hard for this world premiere to carve out much thatβs new, and, despite flashes of real humanity, clever staging and spirited performances, we risk feeling underwhelmed by a narrative that feels easy to predict.
Reviewed by Abi Davies
Photography by Robert Workman
The Dog Walker
Jermyn Street Theatre until 7th March
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
Miss Julie | β β β | April 2019
Pictures Of Dorian Gray (A) | β β β | June 2019
Pictures Of Dorian Gray (B) | β β β | June 2019
Pictures Of Dorian Gray (C) | β β β β | June 2019
Pictures Of Dorian Gray (D) | β β | June 2019
For Services Rendered | β β β β β | September 2019
The Ice Cream Boys | β β β β | October 2019
Allβs Well That Ends Well | β β β β | November 2019
One Million Tiny Plays About Britain | β β β | December 2019
Beckett Triple Bill | β β β β β | January 2020
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