The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

August: Osage County drips with glorious black humour

- Dawn Geddes

Gather all the members of any family together in one house and there’s bound to be friction. Turn up the heat a notch or two and there may even be fireworks.

Explosive is the perfect descriptio­n of the Weston family’s reunion in Dundee Rep’s production of Tracy Letts’ epic play, August: Osage County.

It is the first time that the dark comedic show has been performed on a Scottish stage or by a UK cast, making it an ambitious debut project for new artistic director Andrew Panton.

Set during a blistering hot summer in Oklahoma, the play centres on acid-tongued Violet Weston, played by Ann Louise Ross, whose alcoholic husband Beverly, played by John Buick, has mysterious­ly gone missing.

When her sister and three daughters flock to her side, along with their respective broods, it’s only a matter of time before home truths are aired and family secrets and lies are uncovered.

Filled with sharp, witty dialogue, this mesmerisin­g play is dripping with a glorious black humour that had the audience roaring with laughter.

While the male actors do a fantastic job, it is the women that absolutely steal the show.

Angela Darcy is hilarious as the delightful­ly dippy Karen, Beth Marshall sympatheti­c as Ivy, and Emily Winter is captivatin­g as eldest sister Barbara..

But it is Ross who makes this production with her electrifyi­ng portrayal of the feisty, foul-mouthed, terrifying head of the family.

The impressive, revolving set helps build on the already tense and claustroph­obic atmosphere that’s been skilfully created by Dundee Rep Ensemble.

Intense, deeply moving and hysterical­ly funny, August: Osage County runs at Dundee Rep until September 16.

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