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In
a recent interview, playwright/adaptor Patrick Marber stated simply
of After Miss Julie that "it's a play about a fuck". Specifically,
as in the Strindberg classic upon which it is based, it's about
one that transcends class and social barriers, as Miss Julie, daughter
of the lord of the manor where the play is set, goes 'below stairs'
to the kitchen where she flirts, and then goes further, with her
father's chauffeur John, while his fiancé, a maid of the
household, looks on. Meanwhile, a society party is in full swing
upstairs, from which the sound of big band jazz is seeping through.
This version, first written for a 1995 BBC TV production, and now
receiving its stage premiere at the Donmar Warehouse in a broodingly
moody production by artistic director Michael Grandage, is according
to Marber, "30 per cent me, 70 per cent Strindberg." Actually,
he left out a majority percentage for Pinter's influence, which
feels pervasive here in the pregnant pauses, dominating silences,
loaded transactions, power games, menacing exchanges and highly
charged atmosphere that prevails throughout.
The result is a highly seductive play about seduction that is also
not a million miles away from a previous Donmar hit, The Blue Room,
with its merry-go-round of sexual encounters that likewise revolved
around people from different social worlds colliding in and out
of bed (and was also, coincidentally, a gloss by a modern playwright,
David Hare, on a European classic by Schnitzler). But it cuts deeper
than that superficial affair, exerting a modern, vice-like grip
in its tale of transgressive sexual desires set here against the
backdrop of the post-Second World War Labour Party win that's ushering
in a new social order.
Three superb young actors power it with a simmering sexuality. As
the dangerously unstable Miss Julie, Kelly Reilly alternates powerfully
between poise and panic, and if she eventually becomes irritating,
that is more the character's fault than that of the actress. But
as the object of her desire, and the reciprocated passion of his,
Richard Coyle is darkly and handsomely persuasive. Best of all,
Helen Baxendale equips Christine - in the smallest role of the maid
and partner to John -- with a steely, no-nonsense practicality.
Played out in one long act on the wide expanse of Bunny Christie's
kitchen set and lit by Neil Austin to gloomy perfection, the evening
has a brittle, bruising intensity that is as restless as it is relentless.
**** (Rated 4 stars out of 4)
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