The Censor
Hope Theatre
Reviewed – 27th June 2019
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“As much as round RoundPeg tries to revitalise this unsettling play, it feels heavy handed and melodramatic”
Art or porn? That is the question. Anthony Neilsonβs controversial play The Censor, makes a London comeback to explore all things taboo. Female-driven RoundPeg Theatre, responsible for its return, try taking a feminist stance on the workβs gender power play. Yet itβs difficult to tell if the fault lies with the writing, the performances or direction in not fully achieving the desired affect, making this production quite unbearable at times to watch (and thatβs not the extremely close-up explicit content).
A female film director finds herself in the office of a censor, a man whose decision determines whether her work will be given the green light for release. Due to the film’s highly pornographic nature, the censor point blank writes it off as a no go, but can Miss Fontaine convince him to see beyond the images and at its artistic dissection of humanity instead? As she tries to educate him past the black and white and into the grey areas, more unravels about the censorβs personal life and the repressed feelings heβs held back.
The two female roles, Miss Fontaine and the censorβs wife, in particular, feel very one dimensional. As mentioned previously, itβs difficult to tell whether itβs the writing or the performances that donβt quite work. I feel itβs a little of both. Chandrika Chevli as The Wife is far too underused and whose brief moments on stage with Jonathan McGarrity seem fruitless. It would be more interesting to see their relationship developed further. Suzy Whitefieldβs turn as the allusive Miss Fontaine can often come across forced whilst McGarrity as the censor lacks a sense of authority to initially clash and then be overruled by Miss Fontaineβs dominance.
The twenty-two year old play does feel aged in certain ways. Due to the growth of explicit images surrounding us and being easily accessible, the βscenes of a sexual natureβ in The Censor seem to have lost their potency. Undeniably there is still a certain frisson in having such acts simulated live, particularly the infamous defecation scene, but overall our desensitisation to the like, has made it far less shocking than back in 1997 when first staged.
The projection screens to the corners of the space, showing the erotic, semi-graphic scenes from βthe filmβ could have been used with far more powerful intention. It does help to set the dark, ambiguous atmosphere but ends up feeling monotonous and ineffectual as generally the same brief clip repeats for denoting transitions or sexual acts on stage.
As much as round RoundPeg tries to revitalise this unsettling play, it feels heavy handed and melodramatic. Although there are certainly problems with the writing itself, such as questionable character actions or improbable situations that occur, the more interesting questions that Neilson does raise feels undeveloped and not presented clearly enough by the company.
Reviewed by Phoebe Cole
Photography by Lidia Crisafulli
The Censor
Hope Theatre until 13th July
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Gilded Butterflies | β β | November 2018
Head-rot Holiday | β β β β | November 2018
Alternativity | β β β β | December 2018
In Conversation With Graham Norton | β β β | January 2019
The Ruffian On The Stair | β β β β | January 2019
Getting Over Everest | β β β | April 2019
Thrill Me: The Leopold & Loeb Story | β β β β β | April 2019
Uncle Vanya | β β β β | April 2019
True Colours | β β β β | May 2019
Cuttings | β β β Β½ | June 2019
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