The Week

Theatre: The Southbury Child

Bridge Theatre, London SE1 (0333-320 0052). Until 27 August Running time: 2hrs 30mins ★★★★

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“Blissfully funny and ineffably touching”, Stephen Beresford’s new play about an Anglican vicar wrangling with his “mutinous” flock would have “worked wonders” with audiences had it reached the stage when it was supposed to, in 2020. Now, after two years of “biblical upset”, it feels almost “heaven-sent”, said Dominic Cavendish in The Daily Telegraph. Alex Jennings plays David, a vicar in Dartmouth who has dug in his heels over a request from a grieving family to decorate his church with Disney balloons for their little girl’s funeral. His apparently “snobby callousnes­s” enrages locals, leading to a stand-off “so tightly enwoven with competing principles and conflictin­g emotions”, it creates “an almost Ibsenite intensity”. Yet the play’s wry tone, and its “dexterous” mix of light and dark, “puts you more immediatel­y in mind of Alan Bennett”. It’s beautifull­y acted and profound, and has a “tearstirri­ngly cathartic” ending: it’s “my play of the year so far”.

The piece is deftly directed by Nicholas Hytner, and three-time Olivier winner Jennings is “majestic” as David, who turns out to be a more complex and flawed figure than he first appears, said Clive Davis in The Times. Indeed, there are first-rate performanc­es from the entire cast, including Phoebe Nicholls as David’s disenchant­ed yet dogged wife, and Sarah Twomey as the bereaved mum. At times, the writing becomes too “cluttered”, as if you are “watching a soap opera at warp speed”. But the whole adds up to a “rare and heartfelt” portrait of postChrist­ian Britain; it is one of those plays that “keeps you talking well into the night”.

Alas, the piece has a fatal flaw: the central dilemma just isn’t entirely credible, said Ryan Gilbey in The Guardian. Jennings is “delightful­ly witty and urbane” as David, and you just can’t quite believe that this equable man would be so intransige­nt in the face of devastatin­g grief. Agreed, said Patrick Marmion in the Daily Mail. This is a good play, but with “fewer gags” and tighter plotting, it could have been even better.

 ?? ?? Alex Jennings excels in a play that is “heaven-sent”
Alex Jennings excels in a play that is “heaven-sent”

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