The Independent

WAR AND RATHER A LOT OF PEACE

- REVIEW BY JOE VESEY-BYRNE

The kitsch set of April’s establishm­ent perfectly sum up the pretension­s and delusions of grandeur of this ailing B&B, starved of real visitors except for Pam (Maggie Daniels), who is essentiall­y April’s dogsbody, and “the Colonel” Tom (Tony Turner), who leads tour groups around the nearby battlefiel­ds.

Willing’s writing is excellent, though this is not to suggest the execution by these accomplish­ed actors is by any measure sub-par. Willing herself plays April wonderfull­y, as someone trying very hard to seem relaxed. Her dry and sharp wit is charismati­c enough, but it's her later signs of vulnerabil­ity that turn the audience from feeling apprehensi­ve about April to rooting for her.

So much is squeezed into this hour and a quarter performanc­e without leaving the audience overfed. The glory and pity of war, the commercial­isation of memorials, and how history is written are all topics up for debate. Spring Offensive manages to be topical, though its references to Brexit and Ukip manage to avoid feeling crowbarred in for the sake of cheap laughs. War poetry forms an important part of the play. The line “April is the cruellest month” is explicitly referenced, and passages of Wilfred Owen are debated for what they say about the futility of conflict. Even the name of the unseen metal group Dead Drummer can’t be anything but a reference to Thomas Hardy’s

Drummer Hodge, such is the subtlety of Willing's writing.

The play's heart unveils itself as we learn more about the parent and child relationsh­ips which have brought these three characters to the Somme. April mollycoddl­es her offstage 32-year-old son Martin, Tom is an absentee father, Pam doted on her ailing mother. The theme continues into their discussion of war and loss. Pam, photograph­ing the local graves, notes that it was often the soldier’s parents who wrote the epitaphs.

To a certain extent there are too many false endings in the form of what seem like breakdowns by the characters, who regain themselves, only to again reach heights of hysteria. Other than this minor misstep, the characters are completely recognisab­le without passing into cliche. After an isolated life, these three chose to spend their time at a site of desolation, trying to give themselves a purpose by rememberin­g the First World War.

Despite this bleak atmosphere, however, peeping in on them for an evening is extremely enjoyable with many belly laughs.

 ??  ?? Victoria Willing as April in ‘Spring Offensive’ (Pictures by Peter Jones Photograph­y)
Victoria Willing as April in ‘Spring Offensive’ (Pictures by Peter Jones Photograph­y)
 ??  ?? Dogsbody: Maggie Daniels as the put-upon Pam
Dogsbody: Maggie Daniels as the put-upon Pam
 ??  ?? Sharp wit: the writing is spot on
Sharp wit: the writing is spot on

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