Tag Archives: Pleasance Theatre

Endless Second

Endless Second

★★★

Pleasance Theatre

Endless Second

Endless Second

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 5th November 2019

★★★

 

“With a touch more dramatisation this would lodge itself in our hearts as well as our heads”

 

It would be interesting to know if one’s reaction to a play like “Endless Second” would be affected by not knowing the gender of the writer. It is difficult to avoid, with a play that explores the breach of consent within a relationship, the fact that this is by a male writer. Theo Toksvig-Stewart, however, manages to outstep the stereotypes with some subtly balanced writing that weighs up the controversy with a sensitive and moral neutrality.

Two characters, known simply as M and W, meet during freshers’ week at Drama College. Their relationship develops into a conventional love story and in the haze of young passion they go through the motions: day trips, evenings out, shared friendships, meeting family, the occasional holiday. They are compatible and respectful. M is outwardly the epitome of the modern liberal feminist. But one evening, in an alcoholic blur, W says ‘no’. M pays no heed. The following day, in the fog of a hangover, they have sex again. Life for a while seems to go on. Yet everything has changed.

Cut the Cord, a London based theatre company, focuses on new Nordic writing that questions what it means to be human. In “Endless Second” they tackle the subject of sexual assault within a consensual relationship. In our #MeToo, post-Weinstein climate the general mood is that there are no grey areas, but Toksvig-Stewart demonstrates otherwise. Through this ambiguous, twilight zone M and W tread carefully. It is a slow dance on broken glass that, as the rhythm quickens, will ultimately cut deep.

Toksvig-Stewart as M and Madeleine Gray as W give energetic and natural performances. Up close in the studio space at the Pleasance, Gray’s skill at demonstrating a sea of emotion in a split-second facial tic comes to the fore. Initially skirting the issues, she repeats the classic leitmotif of “I’m fine” so evocative of those in denial. M’s denial is of a different nature. As the performers circle the stage the questions in our minds spin at a faster rate. They are dangerous questions – we find ourselves asking whether being the perpetrator is as damaging as being the victim. W is the accuser but insists that M play the role of comforter as well as culprit. These questions are among many others, and the shades of grey darken until the word ‘rape’ is finally used.

Toksvig-Stewart takes no sides. The performers narrate their stories from their own perspectives and director Camilla Gürtler skilfully knows where to place them in the space, like a tarantella. The characters come together either for the kiss or the bite. Yet the technique is often in danger of overshadowing the empathy, and despite the commitment and investment of the cast, the overall feel of the piece is that of an exercise or a drama showcase. It certainly hits on an intellectual level and raises many important questions but an emotional connection with the audience is sometimes lacking.

A bold piece that triggers debate and succeeds in its aim in making us think about the issues of consent, responsibility and assault. But therein lies its fault. With a touch more dramatisation this would lodge itself in our hearts as well as our heads.

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

 


Endless Second

Pleasance Theatre until 7th November

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Anthology | ★★★★★ | October 2019
Children Of The Quorn | ★★★★★ | October 2019
Go To Hell! | ★★★★ | October 2019
Murder On The Dance Floor | ★★★ | October 2019
The Accident Did Not Take Place | ★★ | October 2019
The Fetch Wilson | ★★★★ | October 2019
The Hypnotist | ★★½ | October 2019
The Perfect Companion | ★★★★ | October 2019
The Unseen Hour | ★★★★ | October 2019
Heroin(e) For Breakfast XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | ★★★★★ | November 2019

 

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Heroin(e) For Breakfast

★★★★★

Pleasance Theatre

Heroin(e) For Breakfast

Heroin(e) For Breakfast

Pleasance Theatre

Reviewed – 3rd November 2019

★★★★★

 

“ninety minutes of powerful and highly potent theatre”

 

A short way into “Heroin(e) for Breakfast”, the antagonist, Tommy, belligerently breaks down the fourth wall to abuse and accuse us: the audience. We’re watching and judging him, he decries. Tommy is an amalgam of everything that is nasty, brutish, despicable, misogynistic, racist and self-aggrandising. Lee Bainbridge gives us a stunningly uncompromising and fearless portrayal of an anti-hero. We are shocked into laughter. We are safe in our seats, watching and judging him, but the beauty of Bainbridge’s performance cajoles us into judging ourselves too.

We first meet Tommy as he’s indulging in an aggressive sex act with Edie – a young girl. She’s still at school but she’s ‘legal’, although we suspect Tommy really couldn’t care less. Perversely played for laughs it is not quite as graphic as the ensuing barrage of dialogue, during which we meet Tommy’s flatmate and ex-lover, Chloe. The two girls have a history which we discover in one of many twists later on. The love/hate triangle is established, and we know we are in for a rocky ride.

As the title would suggest, this is a play about addiction, and heroin is the heroine of the piece. Philip Stokes’ imaginatively abrasive script presents the drug in human form. Amy-Lewise Spurgeon, as Heroin(e), is a grotesque, Mephistophelian beauty. Again, we watch, powerless, the ravaging effects of her seduction and destruction of the trio. Spurgeon’s chilling performance, strangely sexless yet erotic, is wonderful and frightening in equal measure. “I don’t discriminate” she tells the audience before paraphrasing her own comment with the more pertinent “I don’t give a fuck”. She’s got a job to do; she’s temptress, seductress and mistress and she’s impassive to the body count that lies in her wake.

Kirsty Anne Green, as Chloe, is faultless as the recovering addict. A face chiselled hard with disdain she treats Heroin(e) with initial contempt, while Kiera Parker’s Edie is the ghost of addicts yet to come, ingenuously susceptible. Meanwhile Tommy is firmly in the throes of the love affair, seemingly in control. But it is Heroin(e) who calls the shots, injecting her toxic potency.

Undoubtedly this is, at heart, a study of the effects of heroin, which is still a problem in the UK; and perhaps the play is a little guilty of hammering the message home a bit to forcibly. But Stokes doesn’t moralise. This is a brave, quite surreal depiction of the tragic consequences of unchanneled and untreated addiction. A biting satire that swallows the subject whole and spits it back out at us. The skill of the writing allows a broader social commentary to slip in too, but with us barely noticing. It’s a dark road, pitched with the blackest humour, and ultimately searingly sad.

This is ninety minutes of powerful and highly potent theatre. The characters may be anti-heroes; tragic heroes even. But the cast, with their outstanding and unflinching performances are the true heroes of the night.

 

Reviewed by Jonathan Evans

 


Heroin(e) For Breakfast

Pleasance Theatre

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
Midlife Cowboy | ★★★ | September 2019
Anthology | ★★★★★ | October 2019
Children Of The Quorn | ★★★★★ | October 2019
Go To Hell! | ★★★★ | October 2019
Murder On The Dance Floor | ★★★ | October 2019
The Accident Did Not Take Place | ★★ | October 2019
The Fetch Wilson | ★★★★ | October 2019
The Hypnotist | ★★½ | October 2019
The Perfect Companion | ★★★★ | October 2019
The Unseen Hour | ★★★★ | October 2019

 

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