Sunday 3 May 2009

Review - Nocturnal, The Gate


It was a beautiful, sunny day in old London town yesterday, and with the Silver-Fox working to top up that credit card which keeps the dream alive, I indulged in a little theatrical masochism by dropping by The Gate for the matinee of Nocturnal by Spanish ombre Juan Mayorga.


I was there mainly because of Jasper Carrott-look-a-like Amanda Lawrence
who has become a pet project of mine since finding her in Tim Crouch's An Oak Tree at The Soho Theatre and then loving her as scootering Beryl in Kneehigh's Brief Encounter, but the cast was also made up of Justin Salinger, who we saw in Bliss at The Royal Court, Paul Hunter (another Kneehigh regular) and Justine Mitchell (The Stone also at The Royal Court). Great company for 80 minutes, no interval. The audience wasn't without interest either as Sam West and his partner settled into the seats behind me, and I adjusted my posture to catch whatever critical pearls might come my way. So.....

Short Man, council employee/personality vacuum, meets Tall Man, book-loving/sensitive/care worker in old people's home, in a cafe revealing that not only are they neighbours but that he is aware of Tall Man's illegal status in the un-named country and that in order to guarantee his silence Tall Man must become Short Man's new best friend. Nothing sexual you understand, just chatting, playing with his model train, visiting the zoo where he loves to sit in the nocturnal animal enclosure.

Short Man's wife (you're going to love this...Short Woman)meanwhile, suffers from insommnia and has become addicted to a late night phone-in TV show in which a supposed doctor in a dodgy fez (Matthew Dunster) dispenses advice to the sleep deprived. Tall Woman, luckily married to Tall Man, translates pulp Westerns and wears a really nice pair of trousers, while being creeped out by neighbourly visits from Short Man and developing an extra-marital relationship with, unseen, Hat Man. Tall Man becomes increasingly dominated by Short Man, and Short Woman having discovered the real basis for the friendship between the two men shifts from victim to aggressor, demanding the last dance of him at her husband's birthday party, after rejecting Tall Woman's offer of joining her and Hat Man on the last stage-coach out of town.

It's about neediness and alienation and there are quite alot of hats in it. It's billed as a satire, but of what? Neighbours are hell, and Randy Newman got it right about short people? Ben Stiller's underrated 1996 film The Cable Guy has a much darker portrait of friendship and blackmail delivered chillingly by Jim Carrey, the best thing he's ever done.

On a wall there's a poster of a theatrical performance starring Karen Carpenter, which led to thoughts that reports of the death of the seventies superstar may have been greatly exaggerated.

Best moment of the piece, the blinking marmoset-type creatures in the zoo created by Matthew Walker's animation, and out of the corner of my eye the sight of Samuel West resting his head on his partner's shoulder seeming as close to sleep as Short Woman was as far.

The programme notes interestingly that Nocturnal was originally commissioned by The Royal Court, but didn't play there.

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