Abigail’s Party by Mike Leigh
After a triumphant West End run, Lindsay Posner’s revival of one of the most popular plays ever written is touring the UK and landed in Brighton last night.
Donna Summer is playing on the stereo. Dishes of cheese and pineapple are on the coffee table… the social get-together from hell is about to begin..
However from the packed house on opening night it was clear that most of the audience had seen the film, and rather a few times if the muttering of lines and cackles of glee were to be judged. This was one of the gayest audiences I’ve seen in a long time, Abigail’s Party has a huge cult following and it was out in force tonight, Beverley’s Battalions filled the stalls.
Hannah Waterman was an excellent Beverley with good crisp comic timing, folding in a lot of physical comedy to convey multi-layered messages dredged out the shallows of Beverley’s character. She was a warm and fun personality with the cold lethal glimmer of the undertones of a bored frustrated and ultimately unfulfilled housewife. My companion (who had not seen the film) felt she acted brilliantly.
Martin Marquez was ok as Laurence but was locked in a performance that came cross as something from ‘only fools and horses’ and I’m not sure if that’s a compliment or not, but he won the audience over and with his nasal whining voice and air of superiority got the part nailed down from the off. His heart attack was a bit underplayed, the only bit which was.
The audience laughed a lot, they appeared to know all the in jokes and laughed a touch to early on occasions, how irritating are those queens who want to show they know everything, sigh… Although some people left during the interval the applause at the end of the night was very loud, I’m not sure if folks left early due to the play being a bit slow to start and the freezing weather outside or just that they were bored, the cast got a rousing applause to end though.
To be honest I was a bit bored by it, and I love the play, not sure why that was either as there are no obvious faults with this production, my companion didn’t enjoy it much, was unsure about the motivations behind Toni’s endless assault on Angela and thought the Heart attack/leg cramps ludicrous, but she’s young and thought it was all a bit silly.
As with all Mike Leighs’ work this is about the minute dissection of a certain type of triumph of self delusion and the spearing of pretension and on this level it wins.
It’s ironic that a play rooted and born from improvisation has become such a lip-sync fixed formula for the diehards.
So, one for the fans, but a good one.
(Anyway, sod ‘im, let’s all have another drink. Come on, Ange.)
For more information or to book tickets see the website here:
Until Saturday 6th April
Theatre Royal
New Road
Brighton