Daily Express

Cox shines as monstrous father...again

- NEIL NORMAN

LONG DAY’S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT

Wyndham’s Theatre ★★★★

THE big pull here is Brian Cox. Fresh from his role as Logan Roy in Succession, the veteran actor returns to the stage for the first time in 10 years.

And, as Eugene O’Neill’s monstrous paterfamil­ias James Tyrone, he is a shoo-in.

O’Neill’s searing autobiogra­phical masterpiec­e was never intended for performanc­e but rather to be read 25 years after his death.

Sorry, Eugene, but you can’t keep a great play down.

Set during one day and night in 1912 in the summer house of the Tyrone family, it is a shattering portrait of a family held together by toxic secrets and bottled deception: the family that denies together, stays together.

Greatest

Tyrone Snr is an actor who sold his artistry for Mammon.

There is no greater burden than a great potential and James Tyrone was considered the greatest classical actor of his generation – until he acquired the rights to The Count of Monte Cristo, which was his ticket to commercial success but ruined his career.

His pathologic­al fear of poverty has turned him into a Scrooge-like skinflint and, sequestere­d in the only place they can call “home”, he and his two messed-up sons spend their time drinking, whoring and attempting to deal with their self-destructin­g mother, whose addiction comes in a needle rather than a bottle.

At three-and-a-half hours it’s a long haul, but Jeremy Herrin’s clean, uncluttere­d production is constantly engaging.

Cox is a mesmerisin­g presence although it’s a game of two halves at the moment.

The one-note bluster of the first act fails to convey Tyrone’s wheedling self-pity. Overcompen­sating for his shaky grip on the lines, Cox doesn’t find his feet until the second half, especially in the extended monologue with his youngest son, Edmund, who has been diagnosed with consumptio­n.

Until then all eyes are on Patricia Clarkson, as Mary Tyrone, who delivers a forensical­ly detailed performanc­e of a woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown.

She drifts through her scenes like a wraith and the sudden switches from doting mother to spitting cobra as the morphine kicks in are scarily authentic.

Ably supported by Daryl McCormack and Laurie Kynaston, as sons Jamie and Edmund, and a delicious turn by Louisa Harland as the maid Cathleen, it is a sturdy production of a drop dead masterpiec­e. A long but rewarding night in the theatre.

● A Long Day’s Journey Into Night runs until June 8 at Wyndham’s Theatre, London. Book tickets on 0344 482 5151.

 ?? ?? Family mess...Laurie as Edmund with Patricia as his mum. Left, Daryl as Jamie
Family mess...Laurie as Edmund with Patricia as his mum. Left, Daryl as Jamie
 ?? ?? Shoo-in...Brian as Tyrone Snr. Below with Patricia as his wife, Mary
Shoo-in...Brian as Tyrone Snr. Below with Patricia as his wife, Mary
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom