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Peter
Gill directs his new play himself and does so successfully. He draws
excellent performances from his three key actors in this poignant
tale of an illegal love affair and captures the speech patterns
of Yorkshire farming folk perfectly. In particular, Lloyd Owen gives
a really moving depiction of the eponymous hero.
Life in a farming hamlet in Yorkshire in the 1960s was hard. Gill
transports us back to what is an innocent time but almost as alien
as that, 1,000 years before when the York Mystery Plays were written.
The love affair that is central to the plot takes place as a direct
result of the coming of the Plays to the city.
The often-monosyllabic George, a mother's boy who will never use
a whole sentence when three words will do, becomes a part-time actor
after his farming day. He soon meets John, the plays' assistant
director and under his mother's nose, in their tied cottage they
begin an affair. Whether this is just a holiday romance or something
deeper is initially hard to tell. This is largely the result of
George's inability to articulate his feelings but the more nervous,
if far more sophisticated John is sometimes little better.
George, beautifully played by Owen comes to life on stage as he
shows his incredible frustration at his inability to express his
feelings. The scenes with both his mother and John speak volumes
through the silence. He deeply loves them both but his first loyalty
is to his home. This is a man who could leave Yorkshire for London
and the chance of a stage career. However, he lacks ambition and
wouldn't consider doing so even when the love of his life would
be there to welcome him. Like many people who will not talk properly
of their love, he is always in danger of paying the price that this
entails and losing out on rare opportunities.
This play works on two levels. First, it is a comic depiction of
Yorkshire farming life in the 60s. This was a time when men worked
hard in the fields or the office for little reward, there was no
unemployment and women willingly acted as their servants. The second
level is the well-judged love story. Gill together with Owen and
Richard Coyle as the often uncertain but equally willing John struggle
for something special that is unlikely to overcome their cultural
and geographical differences.
Anne Reid is very funny as the mother keeping a marvellously straight
face as she innocently battles with ill health and the minor problems
of her life. The other family members are equally blunt but can
be more incisive. There is a scene where they criticise the plays
according to their own values. This can be summed up by two words
from George's sister Barbara. On considering Pontius Pilate's wife
her opinion is that she is "very common".
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