Angry Alan
Soho Theatre
Reviewed – 8th March 2019
β β β β
“this saw me laughing out loud – but itβs an uneasy and short-lived laughter”
Reams of scrolling comments with an incel flavour loop down a screen as we take our seats for Angry Alan. βIs there a bigger waste of time and money than pursuing a female?β asks one, concluding that βif it wasnβt for their pussies it would be open season on themβ. Nice. So begins our all-too credible glimpse into the menβs rights movement.
As the play opens, weβre also told that the YouTube clips weβll see throughout are all real. I sincerely hope this is dramatic license. Theyβre nothing more than nonsense, and hard to watch. Amusing, certainly, and this engaged audience at the Soho Theatre crack up at the more ridiculous moments (the allegedly βgynocentricβ White House topped by an enormous breast, anyone?). But this narrative of a βnormalβ, even affable, American man falling into the dark side of masculinity in crisis leaves the audience suitably uneasy.
Donald Sage Mackay masterfully (if the gendered language can be overlooked) offers up entertainment as well as depth in this solo performance. Roger could be so many men; divorced, estranged from his son and adjusting to life post-redundancy. Hints of his #everydaysexism flicker early on – he ignores his long-suffering partner, Courtney (whoβs studying feminism in her community college course, of which Roger takes a dim view), only to pipe up to request a sandwich. Later he criticises her cooking and grumbles when she starts her washing up mid-argument. The seeds are sown. But the world of menβs rights activist Angry Alan in which Roger finds kinship in is a different league. Sage Mackay brings Rogerβs sense of much-missed belonging alive so acutely itβs almost touching.
However, each time our feelings soften, Penelope Skinnerβs deft writing resets us. His earnest enjoyment of feeling βsafeβ acceptance at a menβs rights conference could even be seen as sweetly vulnerable – but lines like βshe was quite attractive – for a feministβ remind us of just how deep in the mire our protagonist is.
Rogerβs absent son Joe has something he wants to share with his dad, and itβs in this denouement we finally see the extent to which Rogerβs exposure to Angry Alanβs material has affected his ability to be open-hearted. The results are dramatic, and the clever use of sound (Dominic Kennedy), light (Zak Macro) andΒ Stanley Orwin-Fraser’sΒ projection (a strength throughout here, with really skilful use of digital) indicate that this at first light performance, has taken a dark turn.
Angry Alan is a deep dive into the underbelly of the community of unhappy men, and weβre left reminded that this is a brotherhood that it harms as much as it supports. On International Womenβs Day, this saw me laughing out loud – but itβs an uneasy and short-lived laughter.
Reviewed by Abi Davies
Photography by The Other Richard
Angry Alan
Soho Theatre until 30th March
Last ten shows reviewed at this venue:
There but for the Grace of God (Go I) | β β β β | August 2018
Fabric | β β β β | September 2018
The Political History of Smack and Crack | β β β β | September 2018
Pickle Jar | β β β β β | October 2018
Cuckoo | β β β | November 2018
Chasing Bono | β β β β | December 2018
Laura | β β β Β½ | December 2018
No Show | β β β β | January 2019
Garrett Millerick: Sunflower | β β β β | February 2019
Soft Animals | β β β β | February 2019
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