The Jewish Chronicle

Tells like teen spirit

- Theatre | National Theatre | Reviewed by John Nathan

How does Alecky Blythe follow her groundbrea­king show London Road, which in 2011 pushed the boundaries of what a show could be? The answer is the epic yet intimate sweep of

Our Generation, which ambitiousl­y attempts to unlock the most closely guarded secrets known to mankind: the thoughts, feelings and opinions of teenagers.

Using methods similar to previous verbatim works, Blythe dispatched five “collectors” to record interviews and conversati­ons with 12 children from six schools across the length and breadth of the UK, over a period of five years. The result is 656 hours of recordings which have been whittled down at a captivatin­g show of three hours and 45 minutes.

That huge task completed, each teen is allocated a talented actor who replicates voice, accent and inflection of his or her real life character.

From Robyn (Anna Burnett) in Glasgow, who grows into a onewoman counter culture who refuses to conform to snapchat and insta vanity, to Luan (Hélder Fernandes), the bad boy of a Kosovan

family of refugees from the Balkan war, who develops into a focused basketball player of pro potential.

Then there is the self doubt of sweet Ierum (Rachelle Diedericks) who worries about her weight, and the fragility of posh Lucas (Joe Bolland) who has every advantage (and knows it) but which makes his breakdown during lockdown no less touching.

Verbatim theatre is a technique which has had diminishin­g dramatic returns since The Tricycle Theatre (now Kiln) used it to recreate important courtroom proceeding­s and official enquiries. But Blythe’s methods — directed here by Daniel Evans — unveil the dramatic potential of everyday conversati­on. This is the stage equivalent of photoreali­stic paintings. Similarly, what is fascinatin­g here is the way in which the tiniest details of real life are replicated. Pauses, laughter and snorts are all part of the appeal. The great exponents of realistic dialogue — Mamet, Pinter, Shepherd — are nowhere near as real as this. That’s not to say that great plays can be made by pressing a record button.

But when filtered through the skills of Blythe and Evans, and performed by actors who allow the personalit­ies of real people to take possession, but without mimicking or making fun of them, the result puts the audience within touching distance of the human condition. It can also be very funny. Bookish Callum from Belfast (Connor Gormally) is reassessin­g his ambitions. “For years I’ve been thinking ‘wrestler, wrestler, wrestler’. But now I think ‘Yes, that would be good as a sideline…’” For parents with restricted access to how their teenage children think, it is a must. The same is true for teens who think their fears and hopes are unique to them.

The actors allow the personalit­ies of real people to take possession

 ?? PHOTOS: JOHAN PERSSON ?? Anushka Chakravati and Gavi Singh Chera (right)
PHOTOS: JOHAN PERSSON Anushka Chakravati and Gavi Singh Chera (right)
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