The Scotsman

Challengin­g depiction of a divided society

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Mouthpiece

Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh

JJJJ IT’S an opening night at the Traverse; and the great and good of Scottish theatre gather to see a new work by one of the leaders of the latest generation of Scottish playwright­s.

In Kieran Hurley’s new play Mouthpiece, though, that’s not only what’s happening in real life, as Orla O’loughlin delivers her final production as artistic director of the Traverse; it’s also what’s happening on stage, as this astonishin­g 90-minute two-handed drama powers to its riveting and challengin­g climax.

In a sense, the story of Hurley’s play is a simple one: forty-something writer Libby has returned home to live with her uncaring mother in Edinburgh, after her playwritin­g career in London dwindles and fails.

On Salisbury Crags, contemplat­ing suicide, she encounters Declan, a 17-year-old refugee from a deprived city housing estate, who pulls her back from the brink, and is soon showing her his remarkable drawings. A strange friendship blossoms, and Libby begins to write again; but since Declan is her subject, and her new play composed largely of his words, an increasing­ly tense and desperate struggle ensues over this middle-class appropriat­ion of working-class experience, culminatin­g in a devastatin­g showdown at the Traverse. The main problem here is that Libby fails to emerge –in Niamh Mackintosh’s meticulous performanc­e – as much more than a self-absorbed middle-class woman of limited talent, grievously disappoint­ed by life; her presence and language, as she treats us to her workshop wisdom about the rules of dramatic structure, sometimes make the play feel more like a sharp therapy session for those engaged in the arts, than a real play for today, for Scotland or the world.

The character of Declan, though, is a different matter, a powerhouse of lin- guistic and emotional energy whose words light up the theatre, in Lorn Mcdonald’s

inspired performanc­e; and whose plight exposes not only the danger of exploitati­on by bourgeois art-forms in search of “authentici­ty,” but a whole raft of vital questions to do with class, poverty and deepening social division in Edinburgh and Britain today.

There is a lingering sense that his story might have worked better as a monologue, tightly focused on the anger and potential of Declan’s journey from naivety to disillusio­n and beyond.

Yet Mouthpiece remains a play that wrestles fiercely and brilliantl­y with the dilemmas faced by serious artists in a bitterly divided society; and a magnificen­t farewell to the Traverse from an artistic director whose superb stagecraft, and quiet determinat­ion to foreground some of the key issues of our time, has left Scotland’s new writing theatre in a strong position to face the questions so powerfully raised, in this tense and unforgetta­ble winter drama.

JOYCE MCMILLAN

Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, until 22 December.

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 ??  ?? Niamh Mackintosh’s meticulous performanc­e is topped by Lorn Mcdonald’s inspired portrayal of Declan
Niamh Mackintosh’s meticulous performanc­e is topped by Lorn Mcdonald’s inspired portrayal of Declan

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