The Scotsman

A Hero Of Our Time

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C royale (Venue 6) JJJJ

“He has a pompous phrase for every opportunit­y without an ounce of poetry in his soul.” So says charismati­c Russian military man Pechorin of his onand-increasing-off friend Grunshnits­ky in this vibrant adaptation of Mikhail Lermontov’s 19th century novel, which brings to life a passionate story of unrequited love and action-packed adventure, all in a tiny basement.

The direction, by Vladimir Shcherban (of the Belarus Free Theatre) is thrillingl­y well conceived for the small space and, using music, projection­s and Lermontov’s rich, heady language, takes us through a world of dances, debauchery, drinking and illicit romance as the smell of expensive cologne fills the space. He seamlessly stitches together contempora­ry and period references to create an alternativ­e, fantasy world of a bygone era – one where every trust-funded young man was both a fighter and a poet.

Shcherban is also behind the adaptation, along with Oliver Bennett, a dynamic performer, who, with fellow star James Marlowe, brings out the cut-class charisma and devil-may-care attitude of the two friends-turnedriva­ls. Meanwhile, Anastasiya Zinovieva adds some bo-ho chic as the two women Pechorin is torn between: singing sensation Princess Mary and too-cool-care Vera.

“This world isn’t big enough for the two of us,” one of the men says before their final encounter on a cliffside, neither of them prepared to back down over their dispute. In theory this play shouldn’t be big enough for this room either. But it is, and the results are a sugar rush of intrigue and excitement that takes us on a rollercoas­ter ride back to an imagined past full of enlivening energy, kisses behind curtains and the melodrama of the young, superrich of their time.

SALLY STOTT

Until 27 August. Today 5:45pm.

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