The Jewish Chronicle

Nineties classic as relevant and potent today

- JOHN NATHAN Oleanna Theatre Royal, Ustinov Studio

EARLIER THIS week London’s Dominion Theatre was hosting a staged concert of Alan Menken’s musical version of A Christmas Carol. Like all shows it is, of course a very Covid-conscious production. The theatre had reduced its capacity to allow audience members to socially distance; everyone is temperatur­e checked before entering; hand sanitizing stations are everywhere and each member of the orchestra plays their instrument from a three sided perspex booth.

These are the safest public environmen­ts outside the family home. Yet despite all this, and scant evidence that infections have been driven by theatregoi­ng, Tier 3 restrictio­ns have shut down this and every other show in London and elsewhere, while the public are allowed to pack indoor shopping malls such as Westfield where there is nothing like the same amount of precaution. Some

For those in Tier 2 however there is still theatre to be had. And not just any theatre, but the kind that leaves the audience as numb as a heavyweigh­t’s punch to the head. When Oleanna first exploded onto the stage in 1992 David Mamet’s pugilistic powder keg of a play was viewed as a stick with which to beat political correctnes­s.

In the left corner there is John (played here by Jonathan Slinger), a professor at a prestigiou­s American college. In the right corner there is Carol (Rosie Sheehy) a struggling student. The play’s uninterrup­ted 80 minutes is set entirely in John’s modern, booklined office and constructe­d from a series of encounters between the flounderin­g student and her tutor.

In the first of these Carol is an unwanted presence having arrived in John’s office without an appointmen­t. But such is her distress over not understand­ing the coursework John makes time to explain where she is going wrong. During this conversati­on, which is peppered with Mamet’s trademark half-spoken, interrupte­d sentences, frantic phone calls from John’s wife inform him that a deal to buy a house — the spoils of his impending promotion at the college — is in danger of falling through. The play has a reputation. The audience reaction when it first appeared has gone down in theatre history. At the play’s climax some shouted ‘kill the bitch’. Their hate was for Carol who asks and receives help, but then interprets John’s response through the prism of militant feminism that, we are encouraged to conclude, sees patriarcha­l oppression in the most innocent of male gestures.

So a question hovers over Lucy Bailey’s new production: Is John as innocent as he once seemed from the perspectiv­e of our post- MeToo era?

The answer — which is no — is a fascinatin­g example of how public opinion can change the moral arguments contained within a play, without changing a word.

Slinger superbly conveys the confidence of a man with unquestion­ed licence to be as formal or as informal as he sees fit.

But Sheehy is just brilliant as Carol whose teary-self loathing morphs into the poise of a ruthless poise of prosecutio­n lawyer as the transferen­ce of power between the

two becomes total.

 ??  ?? Jonathan Slinger and Rosie Sheehy
Jonathan Slinger and Rosie Sheehy
 ?? PHOTOS: NOBBY CLARK ??
PHOTOS: NOBBY CLARK

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