The Scotsman

Clash of cultures in age of Thatcheris­m

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

Approachin­g Empty

Assembly Roxy, Edinburgh JJJJ

It was chilly in the Roxy on Friday evening but not cold enough – even with a 20minute interval – to drive away an audience held firmly in the grip of Ishy Din’s terrific new play, co-produced by Tamasha Theatre of London, the Kiln in Kilburn and Live Theatre, Newcastle.

Set in the office of an Asianowned taxi company in an English city, Approachin­g Empty draws on Din’s experience as a Middlesbro­ugh taxi driver to tell a powerful tale, set against the murmuring television backdrop of Margaret Thatcher’s death and funeral in 2013, of a profound clash of cultures and values between old mates Raf, who owns the company, and Mansha, who effectivel­y runs it for him.

In a beautifull­y structured play with strong thematic echoes of Arthur Miller – but with a faster, wittier sitcom style – it soon emerges that Raf has bought into the harsh, individual­istic ideology of the Thatcher age whereas Mansha believes that values such as human decency and solidarity can still work, both in life and in business. Raf’s health is failing; and to secure his family’s finances he first sells the company for cash to Mansha and two other employees – drivers Sully and Sameena – then double-crosses them, handing them a “real” set of books that show the company in deep financial trouble.

The betrayal not only tips Mansha and his partners towards an ugly protection-racket underworld, but triggers a strong and highly personal dispute about whether the crude law of might-is-right must always prevail in life and business, or whether a just, decent and peaceful society is still possible.

In Pooja Ghai’s superbly paced production, the argument is handled with a rare combinatio­n of lighttouch theatrical energy and dramatic weight, thanks in large part to a pitch-perfect central performanc­e from Kammy Darweish as Mansha, the older Asian man who can still remember a time of wellpaid manufactur­ing jobs making things that mattered, and a social and working-class solidarity that Thatcher went out of her way to smash.

There’s also impressive support from Rina Fatania in the unforgetta­ble character of tough-talking ex-jailbird Sameena and Karan Gill in Milleresqu­e form as Raf’s increasing­ly appalled student son. The play ends on a moment of pure, meditative theatrical magic, as Mansha finally lifts his eyes from the taxi-office desk towards a wider world that may just help him find a new sense of himself, and of what his life has been worth.

Run completed

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 2 Ishy Din’s Approachin­g Empty has echoes of Arthur Miller – but with a faster, wittier sitcom style
2 Ishy Din’s Approachin­g Empty has echoes of Arthur Miller – but with a faster, wittier sitcom style

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom