LUCY ELVEN - Cambridge Theatre Review
FIVE STARS
‘What’s one thing to do with another?’ Ben runs headlong into Gus’ worst fear. Though Gus thinks he believes his turn of phrase is correct, that no one is upstairs, and his version of events regarding 'the Villa’s' disputed penalty, he can’t be sure of these or that he is, as he claims, 'an ardent football fan'.
The Corpus Playroom might have been purpose built for ‘The Dumb Waiter’. Two beds can be placed at a right angle as Pinter stipulated they should be, and at the centre, in the nook of the ‘L’, is the dumb waiter itself (built by ‘Master Carpenter’ Leo Parker-Rees). Not being able to see half of the people in the room suits the play, which is lucky and deservedly so. Because I don’t know if Christmas has made me a baying yeasayer, but I am convinced that all of the decisions Harry Michell did make were excellent.
Michell let the text get the laughs, rather than asking JOHNSTON and Krsljanin to deliver some sort of Noel Coward(-ly) repartee, and he didn’t dress either character up as Harold Pinter, as seemed to happen in ‘The Lover’ last term. The more realistic the speech, the more absurd the result: the climaxes of dialogue put pressure on the most mundane of pastries, the Eccles cake. The result is past a joke but it makes you laugh.
Both actors also deserve a song and dance – JOHNSTON played a younger, faltering Gus, whose focus led him to speak so automatically that his lines ran into Krsljanin’s, when Ben dropped his didactic patrician’s manner. The play can veer into two handed poetry in which characters swap one flow of undertext for another, before one of them snaps out of it (Ben puts an end to his inadvertent lesson on plumbing with the definitive ‘Ballcock’). This is able directing, confident acting, and carpentry which I can’t expertly assess, but which seemed more than adequate. It’s only forty minutes long, if that.
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