The Scotsman

Winter Solstice

Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh

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WHY are liberals in the west so bad at standing up to fascism? That’s the question posed in Roland Schimmelpf­ennig’s acclaimed 2013 play Winter Solstice, now at the Traverse in its British premiere production by ATC London and the Orange Tree.

And although we might argue with the premise – Germany’s much-vaunted farright party AFD actually only won 13 per cent of the vote in last year’s election – Schimmelpf­ennig makes a brilliant, witty and chilling job of exploring some of the reasons why far-right thinking has been gradually returning to the political mainstream.

Using a powerful mix of Brechtian rehearsal-room distance and hyper-realistic social satire in the style of Ayckbourn or Mike Leigh, Winter Solstice follows the response of a well-off bourgeois German couple, Albert and Bettina, when Bettina’s mother Corinna arrives for Christmas with an elderly gentleman caller, a chap called Rudolph who combines a benign manner with some distinctly unpleasant views, notably about all shades of foreigners.

Albert, an expert in the history of Nazism, soon recognises Rudolph for what he is; but with his marriage in bitter adulterous tatters, and his mother-in-law besotted with the stranger, Albert is just too alone, politicall­y and personally, to act effectivel­y on his conviction­s.

There’s something slightly too slick about this premise, in Alice Malin’s clever and

eloquent production; it’s too easy to laugh at these “relatable” bourgeois types, too difficult to map the path we need, from cleverly-observed helplessne­ss to worthwhile resistance.

There’s no faulting Malin’s fine cast, though; and with Felix Hayes in terrific form as the clever and compromise­d Albert, and Marian Mcloughlin acting up a storm as the wickedly complicit Corinna, Winter Solstice makes for a riveting two hours of theatre, for those minded to look beyond its satirical surface to the troubling questions beneath.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

Final performanc­es today

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