The Independent

GRIPPING DEMENTIA DRAMA WITH HEART

Old Fools, Southwark Playhouse, London

- REVIEW BY JOE VESEY-BYRNE

The especially cruel element of Tristan Bernays’ Old Fools, a one-hour play on dementia, is that it understand­s how much memories constitute romance. In the intimate setting of the Little Theatre at Southwark Playhouse, we are introduced to musician Tom and linguist Vivian. Told out of sync, the better

to place us in Tom’s position, unguided by coherent narrative memory, Bernays’ play is a simple boy-meets-girl yarn, but with this cruel twist: Tom will eventually remember none of it. Despite the downbeat premise, this play neverthele­ss rejoices in the “living in the moment”, here and now truth of love.

Bernays, previously a sci-fi high-concept writer, in this dramatic setting uses human frailty and Tom’s inevitable alteration into dementia as his romance high concept. Much like intrepid galactic explorers on a new planet, Tom and Vivian are shown to travel to new worlds, which nonetheles­s have their own internal logic – what happens when one half of a partnershi­p is going to forget the other?

Frances Grey and Mark Arends are spectacula­rly genuine as Vivian and Tom. Grey turns what could be a dull “straight-laced girlfriend of the artist” into the living, breathing, beating, screaming, heart of the play. Grey carries many of the scenes when Arends as Tom remains muted, warped into silence by his disease, and she similarly slides between doctor, daughter, and wife characters without disrupting the story’s emotional narrative. Arends meanwhile never tips over into caricature as he shows Tom in later life, while as the youthful, cheeky Tom, and ageing “cool” Dad, he exudes adorable charm that makes their romance feel all the more real.

Bernays is toying with our hearts, yet never relishes in the pain caused by knowing Tom’s fate

And yet, the cruelty of dementia’s deteriorat­ing effect on romance is rammed home in the memory-based set pieces of their relationsh­ip – learning the steps of the foxtrot, Tom flirting in his intentiona­lly misremembe­red French. Even their first meeting is based on phony confusion. Bernays is toying with our hearts, yet never relishes in the pain caused by knowing Tom’s fate.

One qualm with this loveable piece is that because of the constraint­s Bernays puts into making it a one act, one-hour play, told out of linear order, it prevents us from getting an in-depth view of the characters on stage. He has created a dementia parable of sorts. Moreover, a plot developmen­t that reveals Tom is no saint, despite providing realism, neverthele­ss makes necessary scenes of discord that feel unoriginal compared to the authentici­ty of the rest of the drama.

This terribly sad play is nonetheles­s worthy of a place in your memory. Bernays’ script and the performanc­es of Grey and Arends present a better than expected take on dementia, providing entertainm­ent and enough investment and conscienti­ous interpreta­tion of the subject matter that you feel the gut punch of moments when Tom forgets who Vivian is, or when their youthful romance foretells a later tragicomic moment. Bernays sees that so much of intimacy is shared memories – and when these suddenly lose permanence, what is left of love?

Until 7 April (southwarkp­layhouse.co.uk)

 ?? (Nat James) ?? Frances Grey and Mark Arends are spectacula­rly genuine as the leads
(Nat James) Frances Grey and Mark Arends are spectacula­rly genuine as the leads

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