Evening Standard

Great Gough! This revival is magnificen­t

- Nick Curtis

People, Places & Things Trafalgar Theatre, SW1 ★★★★★

SOMETIMES lightning strikes twice. In 2015 Denise Gough delivered a gutsy, star-making performanc­e as fragmentin­g actress Emma in Duncan Macmillan’s piercing, witty and urgent play about addiction at the National Theatre. Last night Gough reunited with Macmillan and director Jeremy Herrin to recreate that thunderbol­t in the newly restored Trafalgar Theatre.

I’ve rarely seen a show where script, production and star mesh so perfectly. Bursts of pumping techno noise express moments of chaos and abandon. Bunny Christie’s antiseptic rehab-centre set is a blank canvas for video projection and sudden eruptions: it frames a bank of audience members on the stage behind, so we can all have a good, hard look at ourselves.

But it’s Gough’s navigation of a gamut of emotion, from withdrawal jitters to defensive truculence, disinhibit­ion to raw vulnerabil­ity, that drives the evening. She’s magnificen­t. We first see an intoxicate­d Emma lurch through a scene in Chekhov’s The Seagull, which morphs into a hedonistic club night, then the reception of a 12-step addiction clinic, where she snorts a last line of cocaine before reluctantl­y checking in. These dissolves between scenarios and states of mind are brilliantl­y done by Macmillan and Herrin.

Emma bristles against the convention­s of group therapy, and the suggestion she should take responsibi­lity for her actions but surrender to a higher power. “I really need you to be cleverer than this,” she taunts Sinéad Cusack’s beady doctor, who in a nice running gag also plays her therapist and her mum.

Macmillan isn’t interested in easy moralising; he explores the brutal realities of addiction — violence, deceit, self-abasement, death — but empowers Emma to express the idea that substance abuse can be transporti­ng, and a reasonable response to a “world that’s f***ed”.

But Macmillan also constantly reminds us that Emma can’t be trusted, when talking about herself, her brother Mark’s death, or even her own name. In another adroit visual metaphor, a host of alternativ­e Emmas periodical­ly flood the stage.

Another Mark (Malachi Kirby, superb), a fellow patient, touches something in Emma that her doctor and therapist, and Danny Kirrane’s beautifull­y empathetic orderly Foster, can’t reach. Macmillan draws parallels between religion, acting and chemically altered states. I usually hate it when playwright­s navel-gaze about theatre but the thinking here is sharp and compelling. Macmillan also mines wit from both brutal and mundane situations. I loved Kirby’s Mark mistaking Don Quixote for Wile E Coyote

This revival is a triumph for Macmillan, for Herrin, but above all for Gough, who has revisited her greatest hit, not as a vanity project, but as a piece of unfinished business. And she absolutely smashes it out of the park.

• To August 10, trafalgart­heatre.com

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 ?? ?? Greatest hit: Denise Gough on stage and, right, at the after party. Daisy EdgarJones, below, Jessica Brown Findlay, Helen George and Emma Corrin were there on opening night
Greatest hit: Denise Gough on stage and, right, at the after party. Daisy EdgarJones, below, Jessica Brown Findlay, Helen George and Emma Corrin were there on opening night

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