Two Bennett gems at Coventry theatre
TWO gems from Alan Bennett are wrapped up in this quintessentially English evening, even though one play is set in a squalid Russian flat and the other partly in Buckingham Palace.
In the second play, A Question of Attribution, Anne-Marie Greene pops a plum in her mouth and makes a wonderful job of being Her Royal Highness, chatting to her official advisor on pictures, Sir Anthony Blunt - even though he’s long been identified as a spy.
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Hide AdAmazingly it’s not until 1979 that Blunt is named, at first anonymously, as the fourth man in a book about how he, Burgess, MacLean and Philby were all recruited as potential double agents at Cambridge.
It’s Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher who officially ‘outs’ the knight - though in his play Bennett suggests the Queen certainly had a clue or two about what was going on under her own palace roof.
Good to see Mark Wiszowaty back on stage at the Criterion in the scholarly role of Blunt, who offers the audience the bonus of a lesson in art as well as espoinage.
Peter Brooks is also convincing as the representiave of the law who regularly turns up to offer Blunt the chance to save himself from public disgrace if he’ll only help with some picture viewings of his own.
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Hide AdI couldn’t help thinking this play could have done with a little pruning in dialogue – though please don’t let Alan Bennett hear me say that.
The first play, An Englishman Abroad, is simpler, and based on the details of a genuine meeting between Guy Burgess and the Australian actress Coral Browne, who visited Moscow in 1958 with a touring production of Hamlet.
Burgess was desperate for news of England – and some new suits from his London tailor.
Phil Reynolds has great fun as the mischievous, homesick, Burgess with a good singing voice, and I particularly admired Cathryn Bowler’s timing as Coral, switching between boredom, sympathy and anger.
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Hide AdI was also glad of director Jane Railton use of real film from the time which helped set these two plays in their politcally idealistic, some would say, naive, context.
Verdict: A funny and educational evening.
Barbara Goulden