The Scotsman

Before the Party

Pitlochry Festival Theatre

- JOYCE MCMILLAN In repertoire at Pitlochry Festival Theatre until 11 October

IN THEATRE, the medium is the message, which is perhaps why mid-20th-century plays like Rodney Ackland’s Before The Party so rarely succeed in having the radical impact the writer seems to have intended.

Based on a short story by Somerset Maugham, the play is set in the late 1940s in a comfortabl­e upper middle class home in southern England, where the Skinner family are preparing to attend a neighbour’s garden party. The action takes place in the spacious bedroom of the eldest daughter Laura, a young widow just returned from Africa, as the family fight and weep their way through a day of truly shocking revelation­s and minor domestic disasters.

The play is designed, in effect, to rip the veil of respectabi­lity from a way of life most British audiences now view with affectiona­te nostalgia. Ackland’s script reveals a culture that has it charms, but is also viciously colonial and racist, savagely snobbish, and casu-

ally anti-semitic; and Pitlochry associate Gemma Fairlie’s seven-strong cast deliver it with ruthless force, with Deirdre Davis as Mrs Skinner, Irenemyrtl­e Forrester as Nanny, and Kirsty Mcduff as a steely and contained Laura, all acting up a storm.

In the end, the production and design are just too convention­al to escape the comfort zone of traditiona­l drawing room drama, which reinforces in form what it tries to criticise in content. Yet Before The Party remains a fascinatin­g play and a reminder to those in Brexit Britain who would like to turn the clock back that the past was a far murkier and more disturbing place than we often like to recall.

 ??  ?? Deirdre Davis, Mark Elstob and Niamh Bracken act up a storm alongside the other four cast members. Picture: Douglas Mcbride
Deirdre Davis, Mark Elstob and Niamh Bracken act up a storm alongside the other four cast members. Picture: Douglas Mcbride

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