“You are an Irish summer of a man”
Having spent most of his life fulminating behind his civil service desk in
small-town Ireland, Desmond Drumm is forced to re-evaluate everything when he
is given just six months to live in this fiercely moving and funny play from
Hugh Leonard - A Life. Aware he has frequently sacrificed people for his principles, he
attempts to make his peace with his oldest friends. But old scores from the
past must be dealt with first and so as he struggles to get his emotional
affairs in order in the current day, reminiscences of his younger days play out
at the same time, shedding light on how Drumm has become the man he is. A
commission from the Finborough Theatre, Eleanor Rhode’s production is the first
UK showing for this Tony-nominated play in 30 years.
Rhode’s previous work here has clearly encouraged her to explore the boundaries
of how this intimate theatre can be used, creating an extraordinary sense of
openness and space. James Turner’s design is stark simplicity, just crashing
surf daubed on the wall behind and a single chair – a neat nod to the play –
with props being kept to a bare minimum, to enhance the feeling of fluid
timelessness. And scenes are played out from unexpected places - the extreme
sides, the steps amidst the audience –popping up like fragments of memory that
cannot be ignored either by us or by the older versions of the characters.
And it is these, whose lived-in experiences and long-held emotions are
undeniably drawn in beautifully rounded performances, who really make A Life as
captivating as it is. Hugh Ross relishes the scathingly sharp humour of Drumm –
his Canadian grandchildren are described as looking like “pygmy lumberjacks” –
and the fiercely burning intelligence which has corroded into a self-assured
arrogance, but layers in a crucial tinge of regret of how life has unfolded and
how unable to change he feels. An utterly enthralling portrayal of an
engagingly complex character.
Ross is superbly complemented too by the two women in his life: Judith Coke’s
sweetly daffy wife Dolly and Kate Binchy’s Mary, the one that got away. Dolly
is the ever-dutiful and deferent partner but Coke subtly suggests a keen
astuteness about her, which may not be recognised by her husband, but is one
which speaks volumes about the lengths to which some women go to keep their
marriages stable, yet maintain their own lives. And in a similar way, Binchy
beautifully plays the deep understanding of men that Mary possesses,
recognising the importance of her role in Drumm’s life and possible redemption
and also in that of the man she chose over him, Neil McCaul’s feckless Kearns.
Wrapped in an unassuming persona, it is a remarkable nuanced strength,
completely free from any cloying sentiment, that emerges from Binchy which
counterpoints Drumm’s abrasiveness most effectively.
The younger incarnations of this foursome weave in and out of the drama to play
out scenes from their shared past, Mary Mullen and David Walshe particularly
good at tracing Mary and Drumm’s early relationship without overdoing
behavioural parallels, and the overlapping of time-streams is realised with a
sensitive, elegiac grace which builds to a climax of shattering emotional
intensity. At the risk of sounding like a broken record, the Finborough have done it again
with a stunning revival of this minor-key comic masterpiece.
Running time: 2 hours 30 minutes (with interval)
Playtext cost: £3
Booking until 27th October
Labels: David Walshe, Finborough, Hugh Leonard, Hugh Ross, Jenny Fennessy, Judith Coke, Kate Binchy, Mary Mallen, Neil McCaul, Robert Lonsdale