The Scotsman

Whirlwind show in need of a few moments of stillness

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

THEATRE

Red Ellen

Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh JJJ

The Bookies

Dundee Rep JJJJ

Absolute Bowlocks Oran Mor, Glasgow JJJ

When the Labour cabinet minister Ellen Wilkinson died in 1947 – felled at 55 by a combinatio­n of lifelong bronchial asthma, the barbiturat­es she took to treat it, pneumonia and exhaustion – rumours soon began to circulate that she had taken her own life. The chances that she did so deliberate­ly must, in truth, be close to zero. Dedicated since her Manchester childhood to fighting tirelessly for social justice, Wilkinson would never willingly have laid down arms; and as a lifelong feminist, she would also have scorned the narrative which turns all unmarried women into tragic suicidal cases.

Nearer the mark, though, was the criticism that she exhausted herself by always trying to fight on too many fronts at once; and it’s this image of Ellen as a woman in a frantic hurry, dashing from pillar to post, from her constituen­cy in Jarrow to Spain to Berlin, that seems to inform the fragmented structure of Caroline Bird’s play Red Ellen, which pursues a roughly chronologi­cal line from the early 1930s to Wilkinson’s death, but avoids settling on any theme or issue for long enough to achieve any real dramatic momentum or depth.

The themes themselves are both vital and full of contempora­ry resonances, ranging from the position of women in politics to the danger of infighting on the left in a time of resurgent fascism. Instead of exploring them, though, Wilson’s fine seven-strong company are always rushing along to the next comicstrip scene, a few drawn in brief but powerful emotional detail, others caricature­d to the point of embarrassm­ent. At the centre of this whirlwind, Bettrys Jones delivers an intense and touching performanc­e as Ellen Wilkinson, without ever quite having time to capture the woman’s full glamour and grandeur; in a play that would have benefited from a clearer focus on the serious passion for a better world at the heart of her politics, and from a little more stillness and eloquence, in contemplat­ing why that passion still matters.

If Red Ellen often baffles with its switches of tone, Dundee Rep’s new show The Bookies belongs squarely in the tradition of pitch-black farce. Set in a Leith Walk betting shop threatened with closure, this new comedy by Mikey Burnett and John Mccann features four characters on a collision course, ranging from brutal motormouth­ed shop manager Patrick, through company boss Michelle and young cashier John, to desperate customer Harry, addicted to the shop’s flashing slot-machines.

In Sally Reid’s fast and witty production, their increasing­ly frantic interactio­ns are played out in pitch-perfect ensemble style by Ewan Donald, Irene Macdougall, Benjamin Osugo and Barrie Hunter; and if ugly themes of greed, desperatio­n and incipient racism are the main drivers of the plot, Burnett and Mccann succeed in sustaining them with a boldness and wit that is oddly exhilarati­ng, right to the spectacula­rly bloody end.

At Oran Mor, meanwhile, comedian Graeme Rooney’s debut show, Absolute Bowlocks, also revels in the art of farce, firing off a brief lunchtime comedy about a stuffy north-east of Scotland bowling club that treats ladies’ champion Ailsa so badly that she resolves to disguise herself as a bloke, and demonstrat­e that she can bowl better than all the men.

Cue a veritable whirlwind of ludicrous disguise-shifting and brutal locker-slamming, often at the expense of devoted club assistant Walter, played with great dexterity by James Watterson. Add a tireless Leah Byrne as the desperate Ailsa, Rooney himself as the pompous club President, and a few other dodgy but serviceabl­e comic stereotype­s, and you have a rollicking 45 minutes of traditiona­l comedy, all deftly directed by Becky Hope Palmer. Subtle it is not; but it makes its basic feminist point with energy, and some real theatrical skill.

Red Ellen and The Bookies until 21 May. Absolute Bowlocks is at Oran Mor, Glasgow, until today, and the Lemon Tree, Aberdeen, from 10-14 May

 ?? ?? 0 Red Ellen, from left: Laura Evelyn, Kevin Lennon, Bettrys Jones and Sandy Batchelor
0 Red Ellen, from left: Laura Evelyn, Kevin Lennon, Bettrys Jones and Sandy Batchelor

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